These gritty pictures show Times Square’s journey from porn mecca to family friendly

42nd Street went from ’The Deuce’ to the dud in 20 years

Rian Dundon
Timeline
3 min readOct 14, 2017

--

A Times Square billboard being installed in 1965. (joe Schilling/Life Images Collection/Getty Images)

Times Square was already lost by the time Debbie did Dallas. Decline, which begun during the Great Depression, had slowly shifted the “crossroads of the world” from an epicenter of show business and publishing to a magnet for crime and prostitution. By the 1970s, the area was synonymous with sleaze and depravity—a pimp’s paradise where flesh and drugs were peddled openly as apathetic cops did their best not to get involved. New York was teetering on the verge of bankruptcy and 42nd Street was the festering wound in the heart of a dying city.

This being America though, even the smut sellers found ways to innovate. Amidst the unregulated wash of exploitation on 42nd were the rumblings of a nascent porn industry, which by the mid 1970s had transformed from underground “blue movies” and thinly disguised science films to a widely popular genre of adult cinema. Though it manifests very differently today, the multibillion-dollar porn industry gained much of its traction on a single stretch of 42nd street known colloquially as “The Deuce.” The block between 7th and 8th avenues—which even as early as 1960 had been labeled by The New York Times as the “worst in town”—was lined with theater marquees advertising screenings of films like Deep Throat, The Devil in Miss Jones, and The Nun’s Bad Habit.

42nd Street theaters in 1977. (Boris Spremo/Toronto Star via Getty Images)

To the rest of the country, Times Square represented the darkest edge of American nightmare. A place populated with lost cowboys and lunatic cab drivers. A reason to stay in the suburbs. But that image never took into account the culture occurring alongside the seediness. Eventually even the filth would come to be missed as New York sanitized itself into the 21st century.

Gentrification came creeping in the 1980s. The Marriott Marquee, which broke ground on top of five former theaters in 1982, provided shelter for thousands of tourists whose needs, over time, the area adapted to accommodate. Religious groups crusaded against pornography and pressured city officials to crack down on the area’s already dwindling sex trade. Today the forty deuce is family friendly, lined with gift shops and wholesome musical productions. It’s a cleaner, more expensive New York, where nostalgia for the bad old days is all part of the selling point.

A male sex worker in Times Square, 1965. (I.C. Rapoport/Getty Images)
A crowd of men gather under a neon-lit marquee advertising sex films on 42nd street in 1967. (Bettmann Archive via Getty Images)
Men and women on 42nd street, New York, in 1975. (Anthony Barboza/Getty Images)
House of Paradise, Times Square, 1976. (Leland Bobbé/Museum of the City of New York)
Times Square, 1976. (Leland Bobbé/Museum of the City of New York)
Times Square Howard Johnson’s and burlesque in the 1970s. (National Archives)
Men stroll outside a peep show in 1984. (Joe Schilling/Life Images Collection/Getty Images)
A shop display with pornographic movies and magazines in Times Square in 1986. (Ted Thai/Life Picture Collection/Getty Images)
Professional athletes in a protest against pornography in New York’s Times Square, June 16, 1987. The protest was working towards obtaining stricter enforcement of obscenity laws in order to provide a better moral environment for children. (AP/Mario Cabrera)
Construction of the Marriott Marquee in Times Square, 1982. (Photo by Joe Schilling/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images)
A bus full of tourists passes through Times Square on April 17, 1997. Times Square has been totally renovated and most sex shops and crime have disappeared and been replaced with theme restaurants and financial companies. (Per-Anders Pettersson/ Getty Images)

--

--

Rian Dundon
Timeline

Photographer + writer. Former Timeline picture editor.