
St. Malachy's Church, located in the heart of New York's theater district
By Sopan Deb and Johanna Cerutti
Rock Center
It is about 10:30 on a Saturday night at the Nederlander Theatre in New York City and Andy Richardson is in the midst of his frenetic weekly routine. Richardson is tired, sweaty and bowing; soaking in the cheers from an appreciative audience to his eighth performance of the week playing Romeo in the hit Broadway adaptation of “Newsies the Musical.” The curtain closes and he rushes off to the dressing room.
Richardson doesn’t have much time. He tears off his costume – boots, knee-high socks, knickers, an undershirt, a vest, a microphone, a microphone belt, a hat and other assorted items.
The 17-year-old runs downstairs, out the stage door, where he stops to sign a couple of autographs. He continues to greet his fans while walking briskly at a pace resembling a jog.
He has to get to church.
“How many churches have an 11 p.m. Mass?” Richardson asks.
St. Malachy’s Church, located in the heart of New York’s theater district, is the only one.
Nicknamed “The Actors’ Chapel,” St. Malachy’s has stood tall for more than a century as the spiritual home for actors, playwrights, directors, stagehands, stuntmen, pit musicians and anyone who is involved in the entertainment industry.
The list of well-known celebrities who have attended the church is long. Martin Sheen, Antonio Banderas and Mario Lopez are among those who have expressed their admiration for St. Malachy’s.
Florence Henderson, who played Carol Brady on “The Brady Bunch,” once wrote a letter to the church that said, “It’s very hard for me to put into words what St. Malachy’s has meant to me. It was ‘my church’ and my place to go and regain my strength, my confidence and my soul.”
The Rev. Richard Baker has headed the church since 2003. The church was given its name because St. Malachy’s was one of the many successors of St. Patrick and the church was located in a highly Irish concentrated neighborhood. One of St. Malachy’s unofficial patrons is St. Genesius, who Baker refers to as the “Jay Leno of his time.” Genesius was an outspoken comedian in the 3rd century who was put to death after declaring he was a member of the Catholic Church during a performance.
Thirty minutes before the curtain rises on Broadway, the church’s bells ring and tourists on the street, in an odd moment of recognition, jerk their heads upward.
That’s because the bells play “There’s No Business Like Show Business” from the musical “Annie Get Your Gun.”
The Rev. George Moore, who took over the church in 1976, installed the bells in the late seventies to serve as an audible reminder of the church’s presence.
In those days, Times Square was ripe with drugs, pornography and prostitution – not exactly the ideal place for a church. There were questions raised as to whether St. Malachy’s could even continue to survive. In the first two years of Moore’s tenure, instead of shutting the church down, he reached out to the owners of pornography shops, the theater runners and local businesses in an attempt to change the area.

“I think maybe because he was a priest, he had the ability of bringing people together who were faced with a lot of challenges or struggles,” Baker says. “Maybe he brought an element of hope to it.”
“There is always going to be a revival if you bring that hope to it.”
You might not know John Roney, but you have likely seen him – or at least parts of him. He is a stuntman with a diverse portfolio who appears in Tina Fey’s new movie, “Admission.” Like any good stuntman, he has been cast a victim on “Law & Order” multiple times. Roney started attending St. Malachy’s more than 30 years ago after graduating from college in Philadelphia and moving to New York City.
He discovered the church after hearing the quirky bells outside his window.
“For me, Philadelphia was like Mars compared to here,” Roney says. “And I think when I moved here, to find a place I could identify with, it’s gratitude primarily.”
“It’s like this lightning bolt moment where I know it’s something I can rely on.”
After taking over the church, Baker learned that Roney was a stuntman and asked him to go above and beyond his normal churchgoer duties.
“To get to the light fixtures in the center of the church, you have to go to the crawlspace in between the actual ceiling of the church and the false ceiling that you see,” Baker says. “The false ceiling is just a decorative gothic plaster work to make it look like there are these gothic arches that are holding the roof up. You have to go out on the roof of the church and climb up a ladder that is angled on the roof, you have to open the hatch and crawl into it.”
“So, only the most daring of persons would do that. Well, who best than a stuntman?”
St. Malachy’s might be the only church in the world where a professional stuntman changes the light bulbs.
Matthew Gumley, 15, has been attending the church almost as long as he’s been on television, where he’s appeared on Nickelodeon and the hit ABC show, “Modern Family.” His first television appearance was when he was four on a Sci-Fi Channel show called “In Search Of.”
The biggest draw for Gumley to St. Malachy’s is the music. Gumley is a cantor on Sundays, which means he occasionally leads the music throughout Mass, a task usually performed by a choir.
“What keeps me going there is the fact that the music is just absolutely glorious,” Gumley said. “With the new pipe organ, it sends chills down my spine every time I walk in that church and it’s just someplace that I just want to keep going back and I want to keep hearing it.”
The church choir is filled with professional Broadway singers, but Baker doesn’t frame the music of St. Malachy’s in those terms.
“Music is not performance when it comes to liturgy at all,” Baker says. “It’s a real transition from performance to service. Very, very different. It is very difficult even for some of our cantors, to get up there and to sing the song without performing. To not sing the notes, but to sing the words. It’s very difficult to do, but it’s an absolute priority here and I made that the basis of the music program here.”
When Baker delivers Mass in front of hordes of professional entertainers, he has to, in essence, give his own performance. He is not a physically imposing presence. However, peering through his glasses, he delivers an animated sermon that fills the room and keeps the actors coming back for more.
Baker studied music in graduate school at Catholic University, specializing in voice and church music, which he says helped him relate to his parish.
“I understand what it means to practice, to rehearse, to keep an instrument up or talent up,” Baker says. “So I guess I bring that integrity to the whole game. It doesn’t bother me, per se, but when it comes to Mass itself, that’s where I’m free to use my gift.”
The demographic of the parish might make for some unique prayers.
“I think they’re praying that they sustain their talent,” Baker said. “I think they’re praying to help them through the amount of rejection that comes with being in this field. They’re praying that it is worth it, to go through it.”
“Because I see the suffering these people go through for the sake of their craft – incredible. In society today, it’s all about the star, and the real stars are the ones that nobody knows their names because they’re the ones that are really, really struggling. They’re the ones who really believe in their craft so much that they will give up so much to be able to sustain it and keep it going.”
And through it all, Baker says he does not get caught up in the fact that he is the head of the so-called Actors’ Chapel.
“I encounter real people. Real people with real faith and when I see them on TV - to know the person – ‘That guy comes to church!’ It’s enriching. When they are here, are not treated in any different way.”











St. Malachy's Church. A Church the Gay community (Actors and non actors) avoid like the plague.
You'd be surprised.
When it comes to Same Sex I think the church (Courage Apostolate) has a very good grasp about it after 2000 years. Im at JeansBistro2010's blog. Ive written and collected information on Same Sex and blog for Right to Life and teach the faith through video on my blog sight. Come on over and visit and peruse the sight for information anytime. God Bless.
St. Malachy's church is extremely welcoming to the gay community and artists of all kinds. I've been a parishoner there for years.
St. Malachy's is extremely welcoming to the gay community and artists of all kinds. I've been a parishoner there for years.
I don't know where you get the information that the gay community avoids our wonderful church. You obviously don't come to our services or else you're angry at another part of the Catholic Church. Come and see the diversity....young and old, straight and gay, every color. And the music is magnificent.
What a sad joke. This church's leader is a bully. My friend's attempted to have a brunch next door to this place with Drag performers singing. Father Baker left voice-mails on employees phones, and had members of the congregation email people involved in the brunch. Threatening to call the community board etc. These people and Father Baker had no clue what they were criticizing. This brunch was for families, children, and anyone who wanted to attend. this church hides behind a false sense of diversity. Father Baker is an ego-maniac and a bully. The Roman Catholic church should concentrate its attention on the pandemic of child molestation it has covered up for centuries and it's ever declining following. Leave some drag queens alone.
May God bless Father Baker and St. Malachy's Church.
A place of peace and worship of God amidst the clamor of the entertainment world. Faith still overcomes the worries and business of this life. Nice to hear. A place of true inclusion...
Oh, ok so the God who brough all things into exsistance can only hear prayers offered in a building. Not the God I have come to know through scripture. We go to buildings because that is what makes us feel religious but what God is after is those who want a personal relationship with him which requires no walls or a box to put him in. It requires total commitment not running to a box, running to a box to meet God shows how limited we think God is. You can run to a box,pray, listen and sing, give all your money to God and in the end you still have no relationship, no understanding and no salvation. Going to a church building makes you religious but not saved!!
The church is there for guidance. Its helps to see others are just like you. Its unity among people who all come together for a cause that is in every aspect of life.
Well, I would say going to a church building makes you dry when it's raining, cool when it's sweltering, and warm when it's cold outside. My Pastor says sitting in a church makes you a Christian as much as sitting in a garage makes you a car. True-dat. But it's sure nice to have a building to meet in. Salvation of course is a whole different matter -- that's between each of us and God.
When I visit New York, I always make a visit to Saint Patrick's Cathedral. The next time I'm in New York, I'm going to make it a point to visit Saint Malachy's Church. And of course, Old Saint Patrick's on Mulberry Street. Love beautiful churches like those.
How special that there is an 11pm Mass for those of us who know the salvation of the Lord and desire to worship Him in the Catholic tradition' participatong in the Eucharist after a long hard week...May St Malachy's and those who worship there continue to be blessed. PTL
hilarious: a catholic church catering to the very homosexual performers it shuns. How rich.
Very interesting that you equate all Broadway performers with homosexuality.
Many I can see who comment are NOT catholic. Catholic do not go just to pray. A catholic mass is not just a prayer service, like a protestant (pro-testant) service. It is the reading of scripture and the consecration of the host which becomes the body and blood of Jesus - as He said in scriptures. He did not say it was a symbol. You can't find (symbol) that in any scriptures.
Homosexuals are welcome. Even "gay" people if they are not living that life. They must have gone to confession if they have and never want to do it again. There is a difference between homosexual and gay. If you act out your emotions, you are living in sin and not allowed communion. A thief if sorry in confession (as on the cross beside Jesus) is allowed communion. Try going to classes offered by the church - no strings attached - and learn about the catholic church. NO ONE should protest anything until they know the truth. and from a good priest, certainly not a fallen away "catholic"!
PLEASE GOD ENLIGHTEN YOUR "SHEEP"!
Also interesting that it's nearly always those who stand against the church that say that the church shuns homosexuals. Not true. Many/most churches welcome the homosexual person to come and consider the claims of Christ. I am Protestant and my church welcomes gay people, though does not condome homosexuality as a practice or lifestyle. It is clearly in conflict with the truth of scripture. But truth is hard as nails and does not change to suit our opinions or wishes. Christ loves the homosexual as do his true followers, but he loves them too much to lie to them that homosexual activity is not sinful and separates the sinner from God. Same is true of my own sin. The only way to bridge that gap of separation is to sincerely confess and beleive in your heart that Jesus Christ is Lord, and God has raised him from the dead. That leads to peace with God, and joy in your life despite the difficulties.
I love to visit St. Malachy's when I'm in New York. I find a special peace there. But my God is not just in a box or building, he's wherever I am and whenever I call on him. I feel very blessed to have the faith to know and believe he exists for me and for everyone who believes and calls on him - including his own homosexual children whom he created and loves!
When I visit New York, I love to stop in to St. Malachy's. I find a very special peace inside. However, I don't need a box or a building to connect with my God. He is wherever I am, whenever I call him. I feel very lucky to have been given the gift of faith. I do have faith that there is a God and he is here for me as well as all his creations - including the homosexual's that he created and loves!
This is a wonderful article! I've only been to NYC once but if I ever get back there, I'm going to find St. Malachy's because I know our Lord is truly present there! Such a great blessing for all people but especially for the people who entertain us. Thank you for your entertainment and your witness in being present at the Mass. God Bless!