Now, I have slightly more than the usual number of pictures to close out our trip to the Fox Theater and seeing a Solitary Buggle and the Best Buggles Ever play with Seal.

Careful you don't fall into the spatial distortion! This is looking down the not-quite-spiral staircase from the balcony all the way down to the bathroom floor.

The Gentlemen sign looks just a little fancy in a way that feels very 1920s to me.

Back down in the anteroom of the men's bathroom, well, tiles. And intersting tiles, the kind you don't get anymore. I get the lyre and the flower, not the Creature From The Black Lagoon tile.

My best attempt at getting a picture of the stairs leading down to the Gentlemen's room without someone in it. Even a fair bit after the show it stayed busy.

That is one ornately housed trash bin!

Paired dragons on the wall above one of the doorways (I think it was).

And a last look at the main lobby and some of the seated, judgemental figures watching over us.

Oh, and the vestibule still had the old box-office booths, like here.

And here we come to the exit. Hope you enjoyed; we did.
Trivia: On the 2nd of August, 1973, the Skylab 3/2 crew inhibited the reaction control system engines of the Service Module, closing the isolation valves on a second leaking quad. NASA would define acceptable methods to deorbit and reenter the Command and Service Module given the two RCS problems. Source: Skylab: A Chronology, Roland W Newkirk, Ivan D Ertel, Courtney G Brooks. NASA SP-4011.
Currently Reading: Cartoon Confidential, Jim Korkis and John Cawley. Late-80s/early-90s (they talk about The Little Mermaid and The Simpsons, but The Jetsons movie and Fish Police are merely things to come) collection of essays about various aspects of animation and animation history. Feels very much like it was collected from a magazine.
PS: What's Going On In Mark Trail? Wait, is Sally Scorpius an established character? May - July 2023 Yes, I ask a question I can't answer in the hopes of drawing people in to not learn the answer from me.