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Shreveport Municipal Auditorium: The Stage Where Country Legends Were Born

Exterior of Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, a National Historic Landmark and home of the legendary Louisiana Hayride.

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There are places that hold history in their walls, and then there are places that hum with it long after the amplifiers have gone silent. The Shreveport Municipal Auditorium belongs to that second category. I felt it the moment I stepped into the lobby: something deeply electric and reverent, as if the building itself was still listening for the next downbeat of a country shuffle. This National Historic Landmark in northwest Louisiana is more than a performance venue. It is the proving ground where country, rockabilly, and American roots music found their voice, and I came to walk every inch of it.

A black-and-white historical photograph from circa 1929 showing the highly ornamented brick and limestone front facade of the Shreveport Municipal Memorial Auditorium. The building features colossally-scaled pilasters, intricate brickwork balconies, and decorative bas-relief panels. Posters on the ground level advertise a concert by Roland Hayes, a pioneering African American tenor. A vintage car is parked on the street in the lower-left foreground.
Step back to 1929 at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium

A Masterpiece of Design and Sound

Before a single note was ever played here, the building was already an architectural statement. Proposed by the city council in 1926 and built with instrumental support from the American Legion, the auditorium originally cost around five hundred thousand dollars and was completed for roughly seven hundred fifty thousand, a bargain for what has endured nearly a century.

The grand Art Deco facade of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium stands as a monumental gateway to the hallowed stage where the Louisiana Hayride famously transformed aspiring musicians into global legends

Standing in the lobby, I immediately noticed the doorways shaped like Egyptian sarcophagus coffins. Ornate light fixtures echoed that motif, and imported German glass shimmered in every fixture and opera window. A ballroom directly above us, the same size as the lobby, remains available for smaller events and carries the same intricate detailing. The entire front of the building, with its atrium and wraparound corridor, was engineered for insulation, keeping the interior temperate year-round long before modern HVAC systems existed.

A wide-angle interior view from the stage of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, looking out toward the vast seating area. The image shows the main floor filled with rows of chairs, a large curved balcony, and upper gallery seating under a high, ornate ceiling. The ceiling features decorative rectangular panels and several large, glowing star-shaped light fixtures that illuminate the darkened hall with a warm, golden glow.
From the Art Deco ceiling details to the expansive balcony, every corner of this historic venue was designed to celebrate the magic of live performance

You can see kind of the Egyptian sarcophagus coffin kind of shapes, all of the light fixtures in here. Original to the building. All of the glass work is imported from Germany. It’s very, very beautiful.
— Johnny Wessler

That architectural sophistication also produced some of the most remarkable acoustics I have ever encountered. The auditorium is virtually soundproof, thanks to a design that includes a large foyer, a hallway wrapping around the main hall, a basement, and an attic. When I stepped into the seating area, every word spoken on stage reached me with pristine clarity, even from the back row. This was not an accident; it was genius.

A dramatic wide-angle shot from the back of the wooden stage at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, looking through the proscenium arch. Heavy red velvet curtains are pulled back, framing the vast, darkened theater. The warm glow of the auditorium's star-shaped ceiling lights and theater lamps illuminates the empty rows of seating and the multi-level balconies, creating a sense of anticipation and history.
From this very stage, a young Elvis Presley was introduced to the world during the Louisiana Hayride, changing the course of music history forever

Inside the auditorium, about three thousand seats face a massive stage. The ceiling reveals one of my favorite details: enormous wagon wheel fixtures that were once covered by ductwork when air conditioning was first added in 1958. In the early 2000s, during an HVAC upgrade, crews uncovered the original ceiling and decided to leave it exposed. It is that kind of discovery, that layering of history, that makes the Municipal feel like a living archive. Original seats, most dating back decades, still bear the American Legion emblem, and I learned that if anyone tries to sell a chair without that marking, it is not an authentic piece of this hall.

The interior of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium features expansive seating and intricate Art Deco details, including the original spotlight room at the back where carbon rod projectors once illuminated the legendary performers of the Louisiana Hayride.
A woman with dark hair and a brown shirt smiles in the foreground of a high-angle shot overlooking the interior of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. Behind her, the massive theater opens up, showing the main floor filled with rows of black chairs and the historic stage in the distance. The stage is framed by an ornate Art Deco proscenium arch with red curtains and white fluted columns, highlighting the immense size of the venue.
Whether you’re front row or high in the balcony, every spot in the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium is steeped in history

The Louisiana Hayride: Cradle of the Stars

The reason this building occupies such a singular place in music history began in 1948 with a radio program called the Louisiana Hayride. Broadcast every weekend on KWKH 1130 AM, a clear channel station that could be picked up from Buffalo, New York, to rural Texas, the show became the most important launchpad for country and rockabilly talent in mid-century America. With no television stations coming on board until 1952 due to a national moratorium, the Hayride was the only game in town, and the whole country listened.

A close-up of a framed "A Night at the KWKH Louisiana Hayride" vinyl record album cover displayed inside the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. The cover art features a colorful photograph of a large group of musicians and singers standing on the auditorium's stage before a live audience. A bright yellow starburst sticker on the cover lists featured performers, including George Jones and Johnny Horton. The album is flanked by a historic black-and-white photo of a crowd and a modern glass "IMAGE" award for the Municipal Auditorium.
Long before digital downloads, the KWKH Louisiana Hayride was beamed into homes across the country from this very building

This was the American Idol of its time. This is where people get discovered. If they made it, they would go on worldwide tour. They would get taken up to the Grand Ole Opry. That’s why we got the moniker ‘Cradle of the Stars.’
— Johnny Wessler

Standing on that stage, I felt the full weight of that moniker. My guide, Johnny Wessler, pointed to a small gold screw in the floorboards, center stage. That spot is where Elvis Presley stood. Where Hank Williams stood. Where Johnny Cash, George Jones, Kitty Wells, and countless others took their mark and sang into a live radio audience that stretched across the country. The stage floor is original. Unlike other historic venues that have transplanted a symbolic circle of wood to a new location, the planks under my feet were the actual boards those artists walked on, performed on, and poured their souls into.

A woman with long dark hair, wearing a brown long-sleeved button-up shirt and blue jeans, poses enthusiastically on the historic wooden stage of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. She has one arm raised in a celebratory gesture, looking out toward the vast, empty seating area. Behind her, rows of black chairs fill the main floor, leading back to the large, tiered balcony and the ornate architectural details of the historic theater.
Standing on these very boards, looking out at the ‘Cradle of the Stars,’ you can almost hear the roar of the Hayride crowd
A classic black-and-white photograph of a young Elvis Presley performing on stage at the Louisiana Hayride. He is captured mid-performance, leaning back with a dynamic, energetic pose while playing an acoustic guitar and singing into a vintage silver microphone. He wears a dark blazer, light-colored slacks, and his signature white buck shoes. In the background, a large banner with "KWKH" and part of "Hayride" is visible, along with other musicians and a man at a podium.
In 1954, a 19-year-old Elvis Presley took the stage at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium for the Louisiana Hayride
A black-and-white archival photograph of a young George Jones performing on the stage of the Louisiana Hayride. He is standing at a silver microphone, playing a large acoustic guitar with "GEORGE JONES" visible on the pickguard. He wears a striped blazer and dark trousers. Behind him to the left, a fellow musician plays an electric guitar, and a pedal steel guitar sits on a stand. In the background, a dark upright piano is visible beneath the faint "KWKH" radio station signage.
Along with legends like Elvis and Hank Williams, Jones helped cement the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium’s reputation as the place where country music legends were born

The Hayride experience was immersive and participatory. Before 8:00 every Saturday night, deejays would warm up the crowd by asking who was from Shreveport, then who was from Texas, the primary audience. When radio listeners heard that roar, they knew they had to drive in and experience it for themselves. It was a barn dance program at its core, but the talent it attracted redefined American music.

A historic black-and-white photograph of Elvis Presley performing on the Louisiana Hayride stage at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. Elvis, in a light-colored suit, sings into a vintage microphone and plays guitar. He is accompanied by Scotty Moore on electric guitar and Bill Black on upright bass. To the right, an announcer in a cowboy hat and western wear stands at a podium holding a script. A large "Lucky Strike" cigarette advertisement banner with the slogan "Be Happy Go Lucky!" hangs prominently above the performers next to the KWKH station sign.
With the Lucky Strike banners hanging high and the KWKH mics live, this was the epicenter of the music world every Saturday night

Walking Where Legends Stood

Backstage, the Municipal Auditorium feels suspended in time. I was led into a small dressing room designated as Elvis Presley’s. The original vanity tables and mirrors are still there, and I could not resist sitting down and flipping the makeup light switch. It all still worked, casting a surprisingly flattering glow. For a moment, I was not interviewing a guide; I was a performer getting ready for my debut.

A vibrant interior room within the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium dedicated to Elvis Presley memorabilia. The room features several life-sized mannequins wearing iconic Elvis-style jumpsuits, including a white "eagle" design. A large black-and-white backdrop shows a young Elvis performing. Shelves are lined with framed photographs, awards, and various collectibles. A life-sized figure of Elvis in a white jumpsuit sits in a chair to the right, and a small teddy bear sits on a red-clothed pedestal in the center.
From iconic jumpsuits to rare archival photos, the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium houses a treasure trove of Elvis history

Just next to that dressing room, a little collage on the wall stopped me. A program from December 31, 1955, New Year’s Eve, listed Elvis Presley, Johnny Horton, George Jones, David Houston, and Johnny Cash. The ticket price was sixty cents. Sixty cents for a lineup that would shape the next half-century of popular music.

A black-and-white vintage advertisement for "KWKH's Louisiana Hayride" at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. The poster lists a 1950s-era lineup featuring Elvis Presley at the top, along with Johnny Horton, George Jones, and special guests Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two. Ticket prices are listed at the bottom: 60 cents for adult general admission and $1.00 for reserved sections.
Can you imagine seeing Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, and George Jones all on one stage for just 60 cents? This vintage show bill proves that on any given Saturday night, the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium was the center of the musical universe

We have a program from December 31st, New Year’s Eve, 1955, and you have Elvis Presley, Johnny Horton, George Jones, David Houston, and Johnny Cash for sixty cents. That’s crazy.
— Johnny Wessler

The building holds countless small, profound stories. Section A of the auditorium is where Elvis’s parents sat, and it is the same section where Colonel Tom Parker watched him and decided to buy out his contract for ten thousand dollars, an unprecedented sum at the time. A single door leading to the wings became a silent witness to mutual admiration. Elvis stood there studying Johnny Cash perform, and Cash stood in the exact same spot watching Elvis, each absorbing lessons from the other.

A black-and-white photograph in a black frame, hanging on a textured white wall. The photo shows a young Elvis Presley performing on the Louisiana Hayride stage. He is front and center, singing into a vintage microphone and playing an acoustic guitar. To his left, Scotty Moore plays a hollow-body electric guitar, and to his right, Bill Black is visible with his upright bass. In the background, a portion of a "Lucky Strike" banner is visible at the top of the frame.
Historic photos like this one, showing Elvis in his early prime, serve as a constant reminder of the groundbreaking talent that has graced this stage since 1929

Elvis was standing at this door because it’s got such a good vantage point, watching Johnny Cash play. And Johnny Cash was standing here watching Elvis Presley. So they both got tips off each other how to play. This door is very, very significant.
— Johnny Wessler

A black-and-white historical photograph taken in a backstage or stable area of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. "King of the Cowboys" Roy Rogers, dressed in full fringed western regalia and a white cowboy hat, smiles as he holds a young girl securely on the back of his famous palomino horse, Trigger. The young girl wears a cowboy hat and a western shirt, smiling brightly at the camera. The background shows industrial elements like brick walls, exposed pipes, and a metal barrel, highlighting the behind-the-scenes setting.
Here, Roy Rogers and the iconic Trigger create a once-in-a-lifetime memory for a young fan backstage at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium

Artists did not enter through the grand front entrance. They came in through a modest back door, a star entrance that held none of the glamour we associate with fame today. On one hallway wall, contemporary performers who have played the auditorium in the past ten or twenty years now leave their signatures, a modern tradition layered atop the historic one. When the Louisiana Hayride celebrated its 50th anniversary, surviving artists returned through that same back door, and many were stunned to see the front of the building for the first time. Johnny showed me a photograph of Hank Williams standing right there, a ghost made tangible.

A close-up photograph of a weathered, white-painted backstage wall inside the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, covered in decades of handwritten graffiti, names, and dates from performers and stagehands. Notable inscriptions include "HAYRIDE 1/28/67," "EARL GRANT SHOW," and "JEFF HARRIS." The wall features old metal electrical boxes, exposed wiring, and two dark rectangular openings or access panels, all surrounded by layers of scribbled history.
Seeing names like ‘Earl Grant’ and ‘Hayride 1/28/67’ brings you closer to the authentic, everyday life of the legends who built this venue’s reputation

Echoes of Greatness and the Night Elvis Left the Building

Elvis Presley’s first appearance on the Hayride, October 16, 1954, is preserved in a recording that still crackles with the tension of a 19-year-old kid on what might have been his final chance. He had been rejected by the Grand Ole Opry just weeks earlier. He dressed in pink, a bold and non-traditional choice for a country Western stage, and he sang with a rhythm and blues inflection that confused the audience. Listening to that recording inside the auditorium, I could hear the nervousness in his voice, the tentative politeness when Frank Page introduced him.

A close-up shot of a rare 1954 original Sun Records 45rpm vinyl record of Elvis Presley’s first single, "That’s All Right." The record features the iconic yellow-and-brown Sun Records label and is housed in its original yellow-and-white sunburst paper sleeve. A small white card pinned to the sleeve identifies the record and notes it is "On Loan By Betty Jo LeBrun-Mooring." To the right, a portion of a wooden block with the word "Muni" carved in stylized script is visible on a white satin background.
This very record was the catalyst that brought a young Elvis Presley to the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, where he would eventually become the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll

Elvis, how are you this evening? … We’re going to do a song for you. … It’s a real honor for us to get a chance to appear on the Louisiana Hayride.
— Recording of Elvis’s first Hayride introduction, October 16, 1954

After that first set, Elvis had no idea if he had done well enough to be invited back for the second half of the show. He lay on the floor behind the backdrops, dejected, until a promoter told him to just be himself. When he returned for the next segment and launched into a rockabilly version of “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” the energy shifted. The shaking started. The rest belongs to history.

A black-and-white promotional photograph featuring a young, smiling Elvis Presley and a dark-haired woman. Elvis is wearing a light-colored Western shirt with embroidered details. The woman is holding a glazed donut up to Elvis’s mouth while he holds an open box of "Southern Maid Donuts," which features the slogan "The Magic Donut - Melts in Your Mouth."
They say ‘Elvis has left the building, but he definitely left with a box of donuts first! This charming snapshot captures the ‘Hillbilly Cat’ sharing a sweet moment with a Southern Maid Donut, a brand that’s been a Shreveport staple since 1937

Elvis signed his first year for eighteen dollars. His second year brought two hundred dollars a week. Then Colonel Tom Parker bought out his contract for ten thousand dollars, and the young audience followed him to stardom, leaving the Hayride’s traditional crowd in an attendance lurch. Yet the legend was cemented here. On December 15, 1956, Elvis gave his final Hayride performance at the Hirsch Coliseum. It was that night, with Horace Logan at the announcer stand, that a phrase was born into the cultural lexicon.

A black-and-white action photograph of a young Elvis Presley performing on stage. He is captured in a wide, energetic stance, leaning to his right while strumming an acoustic guitar. His face is turned to the side in mid-song, showing his intense focus. Behind him, a drummer is partially visible, including a bass drum and a cymbal. A tall, thin microphone stand is positioned in the foreground, framing the dynamic motion of the performance.
Elvis didn’t just sing, he performed with every fiber of his being

All right. Elvis has left the building. He left the stage and went out the back with the policeman and he is now gone from the building.
— Horace Logan, as shared by Johnny Wessler

The stories do not stop with Elvis. Hank Williams Jr. took this stage at just nine years old, a full decade after his father had stood there.

A glass museum display case inside the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium featuring iconic Western wear. On the left, a white long-sleeved shirt is adorned with vibrant blue floral embroidery. On the right, a cream-colored shirt features intricate Indigenous American profile embroidery on the chest. Between the shirts sits a pair of well-worn grey cowboy boots and an open biographical book about Hank Williams. The display is set in a white wooden base against a neutral wall.
These original stage pieces, complete with Hank’s own boots, serve as a beautiful reminder of the artistry that went into every Saturday night broadcast

James Burton, who became Elvis’s guitar player and one of the two people The Beatles most wanted to meet when they arrived in America, was a mere teenager when he backed George Jones on the Hayride. Jerry Lee Lewis auditioned to play piano for the show but was turned away because they already had a guitar player, only for producers to realize years later that he could sing like nobody else. Dolly Parton, who recorded her first tracks in Lafayette at age nine, returned to this very stage on her own just to sing a cappella and soak in the acoustics, no payment, no fanfare. Johnny Cash and Johnny Horton were fast friends who fished together on nearby lakes. Webb Pierce, who logged more number one hits than anyone else in the 1950s, sang “In the Jailhouse Now,” a song that would later appear in the film O Brother, Where Art Thou? Listening to it play in the basement among original auditorium chairs and a set piece from Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey, I felt the strange, wonderful overlap of Shreveport as the onetime “Hollywood of the South” and a true music capital.

A black-and-white archival photograph displayed as part of an exhibit. The photo shows a five-piece country band performing on the brick-edged stage of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. On the far left, a very young James Burton plays a Fender Telecaster electric guitar. The other band members include a man on acoustic guitar, a fiddle player, an accordionist, and a man in a cowboy hat playing a hollow-body guitar. A small white label below the photo reads "James Burton."
Before he was the ‘Master of the Telecaster’ for Elvis and Ricky Nelson, a young James Burton was a local prodigy on the Louisiana Hayride stage

Up in the projection room, stagehands’ handwritten notes cover the walls, names, dates, entire show lineups, even a list that includes clown bikes, jugglers, elephants, and a “Great Southern Trampoline.” These markings, some now historic timepieces, remind you that before there was a polished legend, there were working people putting on a show every week.

A museum-style gallery wall inside the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium featuring a collection of framed memorabilia honoring country music legends. The top row contains several gold and platinum records alongside portraits of artists like Slim Whitman and Faron Young. The bottom rows feature framed posters and photographs, including a "Roy Acuff for Governor" campaign poster, an illustration of a guitar, and a drawing of Hank Williams. A "Little Richard" album cover is visible in the lower-right corner.
This collection features everyone from the ‘King of Country Music’ Roy Acuff to the high-pitched crooning of Slim Whitman, proving that the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium welcomed every style of star
A corner museum display titled "The Hall of Heroes" inside the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium, featuring World War I and II era military memorabilia. A large open vintage trunk is filled with items like a "War News" newspaper, a "Songs of the Service" record, and a gas mask. Above the trunk, two military figurines stand on a dark chest. The walls are covered in framed period posters, including one that reads "Food Will Win the War" and another recruiting for the public library. A poster for "The Hall of Heroes" featuring a soldier's face is also prominent.
This ‘Hall of Heroes’ exhibit showcases the intersection of military history and the performing arts, featuring vintage ‘Songs of the Service’ records and wartime memorabilia
An indoor exhibit at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium dedicated to Tex Ritter. The display features a large black-and-white mural of Ritter in a cowboy hat playing an acoustic guitar. To the left, a headless mannequin wears a sharp blue Western suit with a black tie. A white cowboy hat sits at the base of the mural. On the right, a smaller display features his Country Music Hall of Fame plaque and an album cover for "Sweet Land of Liberty," reinforcing his legacy as a patriotic American icon.
Tex Ritter’s ‘Sweet Land of Liberty’ wasn’t just an album, it was a reflection of the values that have always resonated within these historic walls

The Spirit of the Municipal Today

What makes the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium so rare is that it is not a museum under glass. It remains a working venue. Every early April, the Holiday in Dixie celebration commemorates the Louisiana Purchase with a cotillion that has been held for generations. Mid-South wrestling once packed the house with names like Ted DiBiase and the Junkyard Dog. Modern acts still perform here. Yet the building is virtually frozen in time. When an Elvis documentary needed to recreate the setting, the production team built a replica in Australia that looked nearly identical, a testament to how well preserved the original remains.

An exhibit inside the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium featuring four headless mannequins displaying diverse stage outfits against a large black-and-white mural of a "Louisiana Hayride" performance. From left to right: a shimmering gold patterned suit with a matching bow tie, a black tuxedo-style jacket with a gold vest and a decorated guitar strap, a bright blue satin long-sleeved shirt with matching bell-bottom trousers featuring decorative silver embroidery at the cuffs, and a classic burnt-orange two-piece suit with a striped tie. A vintage silver microphone on a stand is positioned in the center foreground.
These original stage costumes, displayed with a vintage microphone and historic backdrops, offer a vivid glimpse into the glamour and pageantry that made a Saturday night at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium unforgettable

Outside, on the corner of Elvis Presley Avenue and James Burton Street, a statue of the two musicians stands as a permanent reminder of what happened inside these walls. The city of Shreveport has embraced its role as a seedbed of American music, part of what locals call the “Magic Circle,” a regional hotbed that has produced artists from Kenny Wayne Shepherd to Kix Brooks.

A framed vintage promotional poster for "KWKH's Louisiana Hayride" hanging on a textured wall. The poster, set against a deep maroon mat in a black frame, features a black-and-white photo of a young, smiling Elvis Presley. The text prominently advertises "ELVIS PRESLEY with SCOTTY MOORE and BILL BLACK" at the "MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM, SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA." The date is clearly listed as "November 6th, 1954" at "8:00 P.M."
It wasn’t just Elvis, it was the magic of the trio

Where the Greatness Lingers

I made a point of standing on that gold screw at center stage one more time before leaving. The house lights were dim. The hall was quiet. And yet the energy was absolutely unmistakable. Country music has always been three chords and the truth, and the truth of this place is that it changed the sound of a nation. Any artist who wanted to test their chops, find their voice, or change their life came here. Many of them did.

A high-angle, wide-perspective interior shot of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium from the upper balcony. The vast wooden main floor is neatly arranged with hundreds of black folding chairs facing a large, historic stage. The stage is framed by an ornate Art Deco proscenium arch with red velvet curtains and white fluted columns. The theater features a deep, horseshoe-shaped balcony with multi-level seating that wraps around the entire room, all under a high, dimly lit ceiling.
Looking down from the rafters, the stage where Elvis Presley, Hank Williams, and Johnny Cash once stood seems almost sacred

To visit the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium is not just to witness music history. It is to stand in the very spot where American roots music grew up, shook off its inhibitions, and walked out into the world. And somewhere in the acoustics, if you listen carefully enough, you can still hear the applause.

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