The Mayan in Downtown Los Angeles is one of the cityโ€™s most distinctive historic theatres. Located at 1038 South Hill Street, it opened in 1927 and was designed in a dramatic Mayan Revival style, with pre-Columbian-inspired ornament, sculptural details and a richly decorated interior. The building began as a theatre, later went through periods as a cinema and adult movie house, and eventually became a nightclub and live music venue. Its unusual architecture gives it a much stronger screen identity than a normal club or concert hall, making it useful for productions that want a location with both Los Angeles history and a slightly exotic, theatrical edge.

The Mayan has appeared in many films and television productions, including “Sally of the Scandals” (1928), “Refinements in Love” (1971), “Save the Tiger” (1973), “Won Ton Ton: The Dog Who Saved Hollywood” (1976), “Bitter Heritage” (1979), “Rock โ€™nโ€™ Roll High School” (1979), “Flesh and Bullets” (1985), Unlawful Entry (1992), “The Bodyguard” (1992), “The Replacement Killers” (1998), “A Night at the Roxbury” (1998), “Playing by Heart” (1998), “Be Cool” (2005), “Chuck” (2007โ€“2012), “Alias” (2001โ€“2006) and GLOW (2017โ€“2019). It has also been used for music and concert material, including The Pointer Sistersโ€™ “Neutron Dance” music video and New Kids on the Blockโ€™s “Hanginโ€™ Tough Live”. The venue can function as a concert hall, nightclub, old movie theatre, adult cinema or stylised performance space, depending on which part of the building is used.

In “Save the Tiger” (1973), The Mayan appears during the period when the building was operating as an adult movie theatre. This gives the film a very different use of the location than the later nightclub and concert scenes associated with the venue. The theatreโ€™s faded grandeur fits the filmโ€™s view of a changing Los Angeles, where older entertainment spaces have lost much of their original glamour.

In “Rock โ€™nโ€™ Roll High School” (1979), The Mayan is used as a concert venue for the Ramones. The buildingโ€™s interior gives the performance scenes a strong theatrical setting, matching the filmโ€™s exaggerated rock-and-roll energy. The ornate surroundings make the venue feel bigger and stranger than an ordinary school or club location, helping turn the concert material into one of the filmโ€™s central spectacles.

In “The Bodyguard” (1992), The Mayan is used for the concert scene where Rachel Marron, played by Whitney Houston, performs despite the danger surrounding her. The crowd becomes chaotic, and Frank Farmer, played by Kevin Costner, carries her out of the venue, creating one of the filmโ€™s defining images. The theatreโ€™s intense interior design and packed performance space help make the scene feel both glamorous and threatening.

In Unlawful Entry (1992), The Mayan is used as the nightclub that Michael Carr plans to reopen. The closed theatre becomes part of Michael and Karenโ€™s future plans, making it more than just a background location. Its dark interior, stage and old show-business atmosphere give the place a sense of potential, but also vulnerability, as the coupleโ€™s life is increasingly invaded by Pete Davis.

In “A Night at the Roxbury” (1998), The Mayan appears as one of the nightclub locations tied to the filmโ€™s club-culture comedy. The venueโ€™s real nightlife identity fits naturally with the story, where the charactersโ€™ dreams and social lives revolve around exclusive clubs, dancing and the idea of being accepted inside the right room.

In “The Replacement Killers” (1998), The Mayan features prominently in the opening nightclub sequence. The buildingโ€™s dramatic interior gives the scene a strong visual identity, with the ornate architecture, stage lighting and crowded club atmosphere creating a heightened Los Angeles underworld setting. It works especially well for the filmโ€™s stylised action tone, where the location feels both real and theatrical.

In “Playing by Heart” (1998), The Mayan is used for nightclub scenes. The film follows several interconnected relationships across Los Angeles, and the venueโ€™s nightlife atmosphere fits the storyโ€™s world of meetings, conversations and emotional uncertainty. The Mayanโ€™s interior gives the scenes a more distinctive character than a generic modern club would have done.

In “Alias” (2001โ€“2006), The Mayan appears in the episode “Countdown” as a lucha libre / Mexican wrestling venue in Guadalajara. The theatreโ€™s pre-Columbian-inspired architecture and nightclub layout make it especially useful for this kind of disguise, allowing the Los Angeles building to stand in for a more stylised Mexican setting.

In “Be Cool” (2005), The Mayan appears as part of the filmโ€™s Los Angeles music-industry world. Its nightclub and performance-space character fits the storyโ€™s mix of music, celebrity, crime and show-business manoeuvring, giving the scenes a real downtown venue with a strong visual personality.

In “Chuck” (2007โ€“2012), The Mayan appears as the venue for Tyler Martinโ€™s concert in the season 2 episode “Chuck Versus the Third Dimension”. The concert setting uses the building as a real performance venue, with its stage, lighting and crowd space fitting naturally into the episodeโ€™s pop-star storyline.

In GLOW (2017โ€“2019), The Mayan appears in the episode “Maybe Itโ€™s All the Disco”, when Ruth and Sam scout it as a possible venue for the womenโ€™s wrestling show. The theatreโ€™s historic interior and dramatic stage make it believable as a place where their low-budget wrestling production could suddenly feel larger and more professional. The location also fits the seriesโ€™ 1980s Los Angeles atmosphere, where old theatres, clubs and entertainment spaces become part of the showโ€™s world.

In The Pointer Sistersโ€™ “Neutron Dance” music video, The Mayan is used as a stylised performance location. The venueโ€™s stage and theatrical interior fit the videoโ€™s energetic 1980s look, showing how the buildingโ€™s screen identity extends beyond film and television into music-video history.


Map
Films
GLOW

GLOW

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Unlawful Entry

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