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LOCATION:
Street Address is: 203 South Main Street, Memphis, Tennessee 38103.
Mailing Address is: P.O. Box 3370 Memphis, Tennessee 38173.
Tickets
/ Box office Info
Web-Site: Orpheum-Memphis.com
"The Orpheum Theatre is truly
one of Memphis' most remarkable success stories; a theatre able to overcome
a variety of adversities that ranged from several untimely bankruptcies,
a devastating fire, the decay of downtown Memphis and the threat of demolition
for the construction of an office complex. Yet the "South's Finest Theatre"
rose above all this and is the premiere performing arts center for the
Mid-South."

DESCRIPTION:
This 1928, beige brick, 5 floored
theater, complete with balcony and a 5th floor gallery, seats 2000 people,
who enjoy concerts and touring Broadway plays. Built in the 1920 ornate
style of the times, the inside showcases a very large, high ceiling, with
2000 lb chandeliers, and gold leafing everywhere. According to various
psychic research done in this theater, it seems that at least 7 spirits
have made their home here. One of them is Mary.
HISTORY OF MARY:
In 1921, another theater, The Grand
Opera House sat on the Orpheum Theater spot. A 12 year old girl, Mary,
was killed in an accident in front of The Grand Opera House, and it is
thought that her spirit decided to stay there, and even stayed on when
the new theater was built.

MANIFESTATIONS:
1) The quite psychic Yule Brenner
saw Mary sitting quietly in the balcony in her favorite seat, CF, dressed
in a 20's style white dress, during the time period when "The King
and I" was playing at the Orpheum Theater.
2) Several cast members of "Fiddler
on the Roof" saw Mary sitting in the balcony, seat CF, and was
enjoying the show.
3) A woman patron and her group
of fellow theater goers, saw a 12 year old girl, in an old-fashioned,
white dress, who was dancing in the lobby, and then vanished before
their eyes, as they watched her.
4) Mary made her presence known
to both a theater workman, and a housekeeper as well, though she never
appeared to them. A theater workman actually felt her presence constantly
around him, and described it as "A cold, erie feeling, like getting
into a bathtub of cold liver." She played childish pranks on the
housekeeper, by taking the housekeeper's tools, and putting them in
the toilet.

OTHER MANIFESTATIONS, WHICH MAY BE
OTHER GHOSTS...
1) Workmen have seen a theater door
fly open in an outwardly direction, and then shut all by itself, with
no help from the wind, or any living person.
2) While trying to repair the theater's
organ late one night, the repairman became frustrated, and decided that
he needed a break. After locking up, he went to get some coffee. Feeling
refreshed enough to do battle with the malfunctioning organ, he returned
to find, much to his surprise, that someone unseen had already fixed
the problem organ.
3) A homeless vagrant was mistakenly
locked in on the 5th floor gallery, by the night watchman. Suddenly,
the night watchman heard a terrifying scream, the sound of feet flying
down 5 flights of stairs which were in total darkness, and the crashing
open of the entrance doors to the gallery. This terrified person never
stopped running. The doors were knocked off their hinges. One wonders
what he saw.
4) One night, when the theater's
alarm system went off, police with canine units came to investigate.
The highly trained dogs refused to enter the theater, and laid down
on the ground, refusing to budge. They obviously sensed something, that
their human handlers didn't see.
PSYCHIC RESEARCH:
1) After opening night of "Fiddler
on the Roof", some of the cast held a seance in the balcony, and
made contact with Mary.
2) Other psychic research groups,
such as a Memphis State Parapsychology class, also examined the balcony
and sensed that Mary was there. Other ghosts too were sensed throughout
the theater.
Still Haunted?
Yes.
Mary and at least 6 other ghosts still
like to hang around the theater. Mary is still seen most often sitting
in her favorite seat, C5, dressed in her white dress, during plays and
musical events. Employees accept her and her harmless antics calmly, and
aren't scared of her at all. She is just an unseen patron who enjoys the
arts!



Interior Pictures from Orpheum-Memphis.com
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