An early work at the house was
The Charlatan, an operetta with music and lyrics by
John Philip Sousa and a book by
Charles Klein, which transferred from the
Knickerbocker Theatre. From 1900 to 1911, the theater was known as
Keith & Proctor’s Harlem Opera House. Through the early 1920s, the venue was included in the Keith-Albee
vaudeville circuit. By 1922, it was purchased by Frank Schiffman and subsequently closed. The Harlem Opera House showed films starting in the mid-1930s. It was demolished in December 1959. ==Architecture and fittings==