A little more about “Mondays are dark”:
The Oxford English Dictionary has among its definitions for the adjective dark: “Of a theatre or cinema: closed; not in use.” Its first citation is from 1889, from the Sunday Sentinel, a Milwaukee newspaper: “The Standard theater will be dark during a portion of the present week, commencing tomorrow.”
I found this item from 1890:
[New York Amusement Gazette, August 11, 1890.]
And almost a century later:
[New York, April 18, 1988.]
One can find more examples in Google Books of theaters dark on Mondays. “Mondays are dark” appears in a number of issues of New York in 1988. The phrasing also pops up in The New Yorker in (1964) and elsewhere. In Las Vegas, Mondays Dark is a twice-monthly variety show raising money for charities.
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
Some Mondays
By Michael Leddy at 8:50 AM
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comments: 3
I don't know why this tickles me so. "Mondays are dark" is a phrase theatre kids learn very early on, and it's not something anyone says very often, bc once you know, you know.
I wonder then if the New York listings are making an awkward attempt to sound knowing.
Like someone speaking of “improvisational jazz.” : )
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