Penn Cinemas

147 N. Main Street,
Butler, PA 16001

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Showing 26 - 40 of 40 comments

Patsy
Patsy on October 17, 2005 at 10:58 am

The Penn and the Butler were different theatres…the Penn remains, but the Butler is gone.

Patsy
Patsy on September 15, 2005 at 5:01 am

I believe the Penn Theatre and the Butler Theatre were different theatres. If that is the case, I still hope to see a photo of the Butler Theatre.

Patsy
Patsy on August 27, 2005 at 11:48 am

I would love to see a vintage photo of the Butler Theatre as I’m not sure there is a link to that theatre on CT. If so, maybe someone will contribute a photo to that link.

Patsy
Patsy on August 27, 2005 at 11:47 am

lostmemory: Thanks for the article as I am printing it now for my hardcopy file. I hadn’t planned to visit Butler this summer, but after reading it have changed my mind as I also want to see where the Butler Theatre once stood in Butler PA. It was an Eberson/atmospheric theatre and is now the location of a bank due to those 2 words…..urban renewal!

Patsy
Patsy on April 29, 2005 at 8:08 am

What was the year this theatre opened and I wonder if it could be returned to a single screen cinema?

Patsy
Patsy on April 8, 2005 at 6:49 pm

The Butler Theatre has been torn down and a PNC Bank is at that location now! :–(

Patsy
Patsy on April 6, 2005 at 12:39 pm

The above theatre I speak of is the Butler not the Penn.

Patsy
Patsy on April 6, 2005 at 12:38 pm

I have made contact with the Butler Chamber of Commerce and now the town’s historical society for photos, but would love to communicate with anyone who really can tell me more about this demolished theatre. A PNC Bank is on the location now! If so, my email is

Ken Roe
Ken Roe on April 4, 2005 at 4:29 am

The architect of the Penn Theatre is given as James E. Casale.

Ken Roe
Ken Roe on April 4, 2005 at 3:33 am

The 1943 Film Daily Yearbook, has the Penn Theatre as being operated by Paramount Pictures Inc. through the subsidiary A.N. Notopoulos.

Patsy
Patsy on April 3, 2005 at 8:49 pm

I'v tried contacting someone in Butler through the Chamber of Commerce to get more info on the Butler Theatre, but no response as yet!

Patsy
Patsy on April 3, 2005 at 8:47 pm

It’s very interesting to read about this Butler Cinema and MOST INTERESTING to read about the Butler Theatre on a separate link as it was an Eberson/art deco theatre! If this theatre is still standing, this one MUST be saved if only for the fact that it was an Eberson theatre!

pcfriars1999
pcfriars1999 on August 23, 2004 at 9:31 am

Theater receives face-lift
Group takes pains to restore former glory


By KELLY B. GARRETT
Butler Eagle Staff Writer
August 23, 2004

The old adage, “It’s always darkest before the storm,” may be better changed to, “It’s always the messiest before opening night,” for the Penn Theater and the group that is working to make it into a functioning showplace once again.
The six-member board of directors of the Butler Penn Theater Community Trust, which bought the theater earlier this year, and a handful of volunteers have been hard at work since taking possession of the Main Street Butler building in April.
Board member Bill Smith and volunteer Jillian Ramsay Stern, who is serving as the trust’s technical director, recently showed off some of the work done to the theater since spring.
Deconstruction may be a better word.
The main stage space, now called Lydia Hall, may look to some as if vandals had broken in and spent several days rampaging up and down the aisles. But in order to restore the theater to its former glory, crews and board members have had to clear changes that were made to the 66-year-old building during two earlier renovations.
A false wall that held a movie screen, but hid the theater’s original vaudevillian stage, has been torn down. On Monday crews will begin to remove two drop ceilings that were added at some point in the theater’s past.
“We tried to take down the grid the ceiling tiles rest on, but when that stuff comes down it’s like a knife and we don’t want to ruin the seats,” Smith said.
He said that after the ceilings are down, construction on the theater’s new “thrust” stage can begin. A thrust stage is shaped like a mushroom and can be manipulated into different configurations for different performances.
The walls are practically bare, except for the occasional strip of leftover faux-velvet wallpaper. Smith said they have removed
five treatments from the walls, including two layers of paint.

DONATIONS
To make a donation for the renovation of the Penn Theater, or to ask about reserving space, call 724-287-7366, or send checks, payable to “the Butler Penn Theater Community Trust” c/o First Commonwealth Bank, attention Loren Houpt, 100 N. Main St., Butler, PA 16001.

Upstairs, a company called Cinema Consultants from Pittsburgh is working to install two DVD and two 35mm film projectors in the projectionists room.
“The company, like so many others, has been really generous, helping to find inexpensive equipment for us and allowing us to pay installments instead of one large sum,” Stern said.
Stern, a longtime New York City stagehand who retired to Butler six years ago, has been working to whip the smaller, upstairs Bantam Theater into shape.
The trust’s board members want to have that theater open as soon as possible to help generate revenue for the overall project.
Stern has been concentrating her efforts on the Bantam, which will host its first event Thursday with a group of pipe organ enthusiasts who will watch a movie about pipe organs after touring nine different churches in Butler’s slowly forming Cultural District.
Outside, Smith said the trust should have word in about three weeks about what can be done to restore the building’s tile façade. A metal-skin façade was removed in June for both aesthetic and safety reasons.
“We are talking to tile makers about what can be done to repair and use the original tiles still on the building,” he said, adding that once a decision is made, the façade can be completed in about a month.
“We hope to have it done before the winter to avoid water problems,” Smith said.
The trust is moving quickly to get the building open because there is definite interest by community groups to use the space, Smith said.
“We have been contacted by ministers who want to use the theater for Sunday service, a dance studio for a recital, a film festival being planned by an Italian heritage group out of New Castle, and a group of Civil War re-enactors wants to see the Civil War epic "Glory” on the big screen,“ Smith said.
To accommodate these and other interested groups, Smith and the trust are looking everywhere for funding to get the restoration job done.
"I’m filling out grant applications right now and to get it all done we probably need about $1 million,” he said pointing to a stack of forms on a clipboard.
“When we met with the governor (Ed Rendell), he said the state wants to work with us because they like those who help themselves and we have already spent about $250,000 on the theater,” Smith added.
“We are not to the point that we need volunteers, but we do need whatever financial support people can give. It may only be $20 but we can use that for matching grants and every bit helps,” he said.
Smith said the trust is planning to open the Lydia Theater by spring.

MartyBraun
MartyBraun on January 23, 2003 at 7:28 pm

e-bay listing info from 01/23/03: Historic Penn Theatre in Butler Pennsylvania. Sale includes building, land, and contents in as is condition. Includes two auditoriums with 650+ rocking chair seats and cupholders, Large stage area with spiral staircase to dressing rooms. Partial basement (25'x36')that could be converted. Large lobby with restrooms and concession stand. Balcony (45'x67') converted to second 150 seat screening room in 1960’s – includes offices,two restrooms, projection room, janitors closet and storage. Two income producing storefronts included. Theatre remodeled in 1997. All projection and concession equipment updated with platters, surround sound, subwoofers, led readers, Xenon lamphouses, ect. City Water and Sewer. 2002 Taxes $3619.00 Theatre available for viewing by calling Clint 386-736-6830