The ballroom opened on March 23, 1923, under the management of owners Joe Barry and George McCormack.[1] The final event held was the New Year's Eve Dance on December 31, 1961. After it was closed on January 1, 1962, the building became a furniture store but was then completely destroyed by a fire on June 12, 1970.[1][2]
Building
The ballroom was located on Fairfield Avenue near Davidson Street and Courtland Avenue.[3] The wood for the dance floor was originally the ice skating rink at the Parlor Rock Amusement Park in Trumbull, which had been moved to the Brooklawn Pavilion, another hall owned by Barry and McCormack.[1][4] The hall set a record attendance of 1,724 people in 1943 for a Stan Kenton show, and again that same year with a similar sized crowd for Duke Ellington; a ticket was priced at $0.88.[5] However, in 1950 a one-night event with big band leader Ralph Flanagan drew 3,054 people at $1.50 a ticket.[6]
On January 2, 1938, the final show of Glenn Miller's first band was held at the Ritz. Miller would then go on to form the Glenn Miller Orchestra.[9]
Bunny Berigan
In January 1939, jazz musician Bunny Berigan was famously charged $117 by the city of Bridgeport for permission to play the ballroom after missing a concert at the city's Pleasure Beach Ballroom.[10]
WVOF hosts a weekly radio show featuring music, commentaries and interviews from the venue. Host Jeffrey Williams has also written a book, "Home of Happy Dancers" - The Story of Bridgeport, Connecticut's Ritz Ballroom, on the venue, and declared 2011 the "Year of the Ritz" in honor of its being 50 years since it closed.[7][12] A "Ritz Supper Club" featuring big band music and jazz still plays local venues as of December 2011.[13]
References
^ abcAndrew Pehanick, Bridgeport: 1900–1960, Postcard history series, Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia, 2009, ISBN978-0-7385-6251-3, p. 117.
Jeffrey C. Williams. "Home of Happy Dancers": The Story of Bridgeport, Connecticut's Ritz Ballroom. Virginia Beach, Virginia: Donning, 2011. ISBN978-1-57864-722-4