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    Wells Theatre


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    Jake Wells had the looks of a matinee idol, an athlete's physique and was a star on the baseball field. Before Wells became a theatre mogul, he was a catcher and first baseman and the popular manager of the Richmond Colts. Wells entered Spence's Trunk Store in downtown Richmond to purchase a leather strap to bundle baseball bats. He inquired about the store's odd architecture. The store was the former Barton Opera House which failed as a "honky tonk" featuring disreputable entertainment. He quickly persuaded Spence to relinquish his lease, and reopened the building as the Bijou Family Theatre on January 9, 1899. Richmond's first Vaudeville house was an immediate success and Jake Wells made the transition from baseball to "Mr. Clean Entertainment." Norfolk was the first city Wells chose to expand his theatrical enterprise. Otto Wells, Jake's younger half-brother, arrived from Pensacola, Florida, to open the Granby Theatre in 1901. Ten years later the brothers operated the largest theatre circuit outside New York, and by the early 1920's Jake Wells was known as The Father of Vaudeville in the Southeast.


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