In 1922, the elephants that graced the stage of the Hippodrome since its opening moved uptown to the Bronx's
Royal Theater. On arrival, stage worker Miller Renard recalled, the elephants were greeted with extraordinary fanfare: The next day the Borough President gives them a dinner on the lawn of the Chamber of Commerce up on Tremont Avenue, with special dinner menus for the elephants. It was some show to see all those elephants march up those steps to the table where each elephant had a bale of hay. The[n], the Borough President welcomes the elephants to the Bronx, and the place is just mobbed with people. And that was the worst week's business we ever done in that theatre. In 1925, movies were added to the vaudeville, but within a few years, competition from the newer and more sumptuous movie palaces in the Broadway-
Times Square area forced
Keith-Albee-Orpheum, which was merged into
RKO by May 1928, to sell the theater. Several attempts to use the Hippodrome for plays and operas failed, and it remained dark until 1935, when producer
Billy Rose leased it for his spectacular
Rodgers & Hart circus musical
Jumbo, which received favorable reviews but lasted only five months due to the
Great Depression. After that, the Hippodrome sputtered through bookings of late-run movies, boxing, wrestling, and jai alai games, then was demolished in 1939 as the value of real estate on
Sixth Avenue began to escalate. It closed on August 16, 1939, and was demolished. World War II delayed re-development, and the Hippodrome site remained vacant for over a decade. ==Legacy==