Alexandria Theatre

5400 Geary Boulevard,
San Francisco, CA 94121

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Alexandria Theatre's

The Alexandria Theatre opened on November 26, 1923 with Douglas MacLean in “Going Up.” It was built at a cost of $350,000 by Oppenheimer & (Alex) Levin; Reid Brothers were the architects. From the beginning, it was one of the Richmond district’s leading second-run theaters.

In 1941, it underwent extensive remodeling, emerging totally Moderne, with only the original stone pillars on its corner facade still exhibiting evidence of its original Egyptian roots.

It re-opened on June 19, 1942, but due to wartime blackout restrictions, much of its new neon elegance had to be subdued until sometime later. In the late-1950’s it was upgraded to a first run 70MM, reserved seat policy premiering such roadshow attractions as “South Pacific” (48 weeks), “Exodus” (20 weeks), “Can Can” (19 weeks), El Cid (21 weeks), “The Longest Day” (19 weeks), “Cleopatra” (56 weeks) & “Oliver!” (43 weeks).

On November 24, 1976, it re-opened as Alexandria 3, with the former balcony and loge sections converted into two separate, smaller auditoriums, but with the original downstairs section more or less intact.

Beneath the remodelling, rumor has it that the original dome and atmospheric ceiling still exists, retaining it’s twinkling lights, or at least the sockets, and that behind the bland walls of the lobby one can still see lotus-topped columns and colorful hieroglyphics.

The theater closed in the beginning of 2004 and its future is uncertain.

Contributed by tillmany, Juan-Miguel Gallegos

Recent comments (view all 105 comments)

CStefanic
CStefanic on March 21, 2018 at 7:16 pm

SO – judging from recent street photos the building still stands. Hmmm…

cath61
cath61 on March 21, 2018 at 11:21 pm

Apparently it’s a new aquatic center for the Alexandria Condominiums that were either just opened or are about to. http://thealexandriasf.com/

cath61
cath61 on March 21, 2018 at 11:34 pm

Sorry I was incorrect on one point, its for the public, not just the condos. Kind of a strange pairing – swimming pool in the middle of an old theatre – but at least they didn’t tear it down and it will have new life!

HowardBHaas
HowardBHaas on March 22, 2018 at 1:32 am

OMG. Certain architectural features inside would remain. Not sure what is meant by 1976 marquee that will be removed.

http://richmondsfblog.com/2016/12/13/latest-proposal-for-alexandria-theater-development-includes-swim-center-classrooms-and-office-space/

stevenj
stevenj on March 22, 2018 at 3:56 pm

From the above linked 2016 RichmondSFBlog article it sounds like the box office, marquee and blade will all be retained. The “1976 marquee” referred I believe is the “1-2-3” on each side of the blade tower that was added in 1976 when the theatre was triplexed. Nice that they will retain the upper portions of the side walls for the 3rd floor offices.

From the SF Planning Dept. website: Received Date: Oct 03, 2017 Description: 5400 Geary Ave – REPAIR MARQUEE AND SIGN ELEMENTS: REPLACE SOFFIT AND LIGHTING, REPAIR & REPAINT MARQUEE, REPLACE NEON, REPAIR BLADE SIGN, REPLACE NEON, REPAIR “PARKING” SIGN, REPLACE NEON

stevenj
stevenj on May 31, 2018 at 8:01 pm

From Frank Dunnigan’s Feb 2018 article on SF Theaters that appeared on outsidelands.org:

Alexandria

robertcampbell
robertcampbell on January 25, 2023 at 12:30 am

Today, on the SF Gate website, has an article with pictures of the vertical being removed for safety reasons, as it was unsecured and swaying in the wind.

m00se1111
m00se1111 on January 25, 2023 at 11:54 am

Here’s the link , which includes photos

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/S-F-s-deteriorated-Alexandria-Theater-loses-17733518.php

stevenj
stevenj on January 25, 2023 at 4:47 pm

Here is a direct link to the SFGate article with photos in case the Chronicle’s link stops at their paywall. The recent onslaught of storms with heavy rain and high winds caused a lot of damage in the city and beyond.

Alexandria

stevenj
stevenj on September 20, 2023 at 4:22 pm

Another plan for the theater has emerged from the same group that wanted to turn the theater into offices and an aquatic center. This time housing:

SFExaminer

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