The August 2, 1976, Boxoffice article about the Plaza Twin starts on this page. It was, as other comments have noted, a very spare theater, not at all Art Deco in style. It would be best described as Midcentury Modern, but Streamline Modern would be far more apt than Art Deco.
This web page says that the Rex Theatre first opened on May 30, 1940, operated as an independent, second-run house by Lucien Descoteaux. The Rex closed on November 15, 1958, but reopened on May 24, 1961, then apparently closed again in 1962.
Other sources indicate that at some point (probably 1962 or later), Descoteaux sold the house to the Shea circuit. Shea remodeled the Rex and renamed it the King Cinema. By 1980, it had been renamed again, to The Movies. As formermovieguy’s earlier comment notes that The Movies was still operating in the mid-1980s, that should probably be the way we list it, with Rex Theatre and King Cinema as aka’s.
The Silver Strand Theatre and its adjacent commercial, office, and residential buildings were another project built by John D. Spreckels, who had earlier built the Spreckels Theatre in downtown San Diego. The Silver Strand was not built as a playhouse, but was specifically designed for presenting motion pictures and live music.
The October, 1917, issue of The Santa Fe Magazine, published by the Santa Fe Railway as a rival of the Southern Pacific Railroad’s Sunset Magazine, had an article about Coronado which mentioned the Silver Strand Theatre several times, and describes it in this passage:
The Silver Strand Theater, erected at a cost of approximately $100,000, is a gem that would do credit to a city many times the size of Coronado. It’s equipment, including a $10,000 pipe organ, is magnificent. The indirect lighting system, by means of rich art glass ceiling panels, attracts universal comment. Although it is a motion picture theater, it is so elegant and the pictures shown are of such a high class, that it is quite a social fad to give loge parties there. During the coming winter many special musical programs, featuring stars of the first magnitude, will be arranged for the delectation of the cultured classes.“
Live music was one of the Silver Strand’s attractions from the beginning. At the formal opening on July 20, 1917, renowned contralto Ernestine Schumann-Heink sang several songs as part of a program benefiting the Red Cross. Another passage from the article praises the house thusly:
"In the Silver Strand, Coronado has undoubtedly one of the most beautiful moving picture Theaters in the whole of the United States, for Mr. Spreckels, owner of the building, has spared no expense in carrying the beautiful to the superlative degree, nor in erecting a theater which for convenience and acoustic properties cannot be surpassed. Only the finest quality of pictures will be shown and everyone in San Diego is sure of a satisfactory evening’s entertainment when he crosses the bay to Coronado.”
John Spreckels chose as architect for his Coronado project Harrison Albright, who, after a distinguished career in Philadelphia, West Virginia, and Indiana, had moved his practice to California in 1905, designing the Homer Laughlin Building (Grand Central Market) in Los Angeles, in which he established his offices. Here is an item about the letting of the contract for the Coronado project, from the June 17, 1916, issue of Southwest Contractor & Manufacturer
“CONCRETE BANK, STORES, THEATER —The Wurster Construction Co., 654 Spreckels Bldg., San Diego, has the contract to build a 2-story reinforced concrete bank and office building, 2-story store and apartment building, moving picture theater and garage at Coronado for the J. D. and A. B. Spreckels Securities Co. The site is now being cleared. Harrison Albright, architect, 532 Laughlin Bldg. The structure will have a frontage of 372 ft. on Orange Ave. and 211 ft. on Lorna Ave. The bank and office building will be 60x86 ft., garage 65x100 ft., and theater 52x130 ft., and will seat with gallery about 1000. The store building will contain 14 rooms averaging 20x50 ft. and 14 apartments of three rooms and bath each with built-in beds. The construction will be reinforced concrete with cast cement ornamentation and cement plastered exterior, composition roof, plate glass windows, mahogany and birch trim, marble and tile lobby in bank and theater, metal frames and sash and wired glass, metal skylights. There will be a steam heating and ventilating plant, auxiliary fire pump, automatic fire sprinkling system with two steel tanks of 16,000 gal. capacity, reinforced concrete bank vaults, vacuum cleaning, electric wiring.”
It is unfortunate that Harrison Albright’s original interior for the Silver Strand Theatre has been lost, but at least the building itself has survived. Still, I have to wonder if any of the auditorium’s original features were intact when the dark house was taken over by the Lamb’s Players in 1994. It wouldn’t be the first time a theater company had opted for an economical “black box” configuration rather than bankroll a costly restoration of vintage features.
I’ve set Street View to the approximate location of the Vaudette Theatre. Google chooses to number that spot 124 Georgia State Bicycle Route 45, but it’s still Peachtree Street SW.
Google Maps will be unable to find the correct location from the old address. A long stretch of what is now Peachtree Street SW used to be Whitehall Street (from Spring Street SW north to the railroad tracks about midway between Marietta Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.)
In addition to the renaming, the numbers have been changed. Comparing the 1911 Sanborn Map (in Volume 4, on sheet 465,) what was then 82 Whitehall St. SW did not become 82 Peachtree St. SW, but is in the next block south, between MLK JR. Drive (formerly Hunter Street) and Mitchell Street.
That block now has addresses from 100 to 134, but the entire even side of the block has been rebuilt with a massive single project, so the modern address would be a guess. The Sanborn map shows 82 about the middle of that block, which then had numbers from 66 to 102 Whitehall. If the lot the Vaudette was on still had its own number it would probably be approximately 116 Peachtree St. SW.
The 1911 map also shows movie theaters in buildings at 98 and 100 Whitehall SW. Whatever theaters they were would have modern addresses of approximately 128 and 130 Peachtree SW.
Sanborn Maps for Georgia can be found at this page of the Digital Library of Georgia, but the format they are presented in does not make them very easy to use. I’m grateful to DLG for making them available, but I wish they’d used a format more like the one the University of North Carolina uses for their collection.
This is interesting. The May, 1917, issue of The Cornell Countryman, a University publication, published a reminiscence about earlier days at the College of Agriculture that has these lines:
“Our largest auditorium was what was then known as Library Hall. This hall is in the Cornell Library Building in Ithaca, and is the room now occupied by the Happy Hour moving picture theatre.”
This page from the University web site has information about the early days of the Cornell Public Library, but doesn’t mention the Happy Hour Theatre. It does say that the building was designed by Albany architect William Hodgins. The text under the thumbnail of a photo of the library (top of sidebar, right) says that the building was sold to a bank in 1960 and demolished shortly after.
Dave Kenney’s Twin cities Picture Show tells how Liebenberg & Kaplan got the job of remodeling the Arion Theatre in 1923. The Arion was then owned by Louis Rubenstein and Abe Kaplan, and Abe Kaplan was architect Seeman Kaplan’s brother. It was a serendipitous bit of nepotism that launched Liebenberg & Kaplan’s long, distinguished career as theater architects.
Dave Kenney’s Twin cities Picture Show says that the Calhoun Theatre was converted into a ballroom by owners Finkelstein & Rubin. They had taken over the house in 1918, and then took over the larger and newer nearby rival, the Lagoon Theatre, shortly after.
Sometime between 1930 and 1935, the building was converted from a ballroom into a showroom for a Nash automobile dealer. The Hennepin County Library has a photo made at the time of the conversion (I don’t know if this link will work, as the library doesn’t provide designated permalinks.)
Text on the photo’s page gives the address as 1400 W. Lake Street, which is certainly the correct current address. The building is still standing, but has had additional windows punched into it, and Clifford McElroy’s beautiful tapestry brick facade has been painted over.
In a classified advertisement in the May 9, 1914, issue of shoe trade journal Boot and Shoe Recorder, the Refowich Brothers offered for rent: “Store room in the new Refowich Vaudeville Theatre, Freeland, Pa. Best corner in town, best town for its size- 7,000 population.”
Here is a photo of the Rialto which appears to be from the 1930s. The second of two frame houses up the block appears to still be standing in Google street view.
The Auditorium Theatre operated as a movie house from 1931 to 1954, according to this web page about entertainment in Freeland. There is a photo, the caption of which says that, after closing as a theater, the building was converted into a recreation center. Google has no street view for the location, but a Bing Maps bird’s eye view shows that the building is no longer there. It appears to have been replaced by a modern structure.
The renovation of the Alamo Theatre for Northeast Historic Film was designed by Boston architect Thomas Bakalars. Bakalars was a member of the Board of Directors of NHF. The Winter, 2001, issue of the organization’s newsletter, Moving Image Review, featured an article about the project (PDF here.) A digitized archive of the newsletters from Winter, 1988, through Winter, 2007, is also available here from the Internet Archive and Open Library.
The firm Thomas Bakalars Architects has designed numerous theaters, including at least two for Hoyts.
The Westborough Stadium 12 was one of at least two multiplexes designed for Hoyts Cinemas by the Boston firm Thomas Bakalars Architects. There are a few photos at the firm’s web site. There are also photos of Hoyts Cinema 10 in Augusta, Maine.
Thomas Bakalars also designed the renovation of the Alamo Theatre in Bucksport, Maine, as the headquarters of Northeast Historic Film.
According to Architect, the magazine of the AIA, the entire Patriot Place complex, including the cinema, was designed by the Boston architectural firm Arrowstreet, Inc.
Arrowstreet designed several multiplexes for Hoyts America from the mid-1990s until 2003, when most of that circuit’s locations were sold to Regal Entertainment.
A 1917 photo of the Champlain Theatre in Swanton appears in the Summer, 2003, issue of Northeast Historic Film’s newsletter, Moving Image Review: Archive.org.
This 1918 photo shows the original Majestic Theatre in the background.
I notice that the caption of the 1916 auditorium photo uploaded by CharmaineZoe says that the Majestic had a cry room. That’s the earliest instance of that particular convenience I’ve seen yet.
For some reason Google Maps is sticking the pin icon for the Campbell Theatre in West Hazleton. It should be on Broad Street between Wyoming and Laurel Streets in downtown Hazleton. Currently, the building can still be see in Google’s street view, but its site is a vacant lot in the more recent satellite view, so we can mark this one demolished.
Deception, with Bette Davis, and the coming attraction Wake Up and Dream were both released in the latter part of 1946, so the photo most likely dates from 1947. A small town like Whitney Point would not have gotten a movie for anywhere from several weeks to a few months after its release in major markets.
The destruction of the Palace Theatre was reported in the July, 1917, issue of Safety Engineering:
“April 26, 1917. Hazleton, Pa. Palace theater and C. Sasso’s department store. Wyoming and Green streets. Vaudeville and motion pictures; department store. Two 2- and 3-story buildings destroyed. Walls, brick. Floors, wood. Roofs, slag. Cause, unknown. Fire started in rear of stage in theater. Discovered by passerby about 3:45 a. m. Alarm, box. Duration, 10 hours. Stopped at department store. Fire was favored by metal ceilings in both buildings. Private fire apparatus, several lines of hose and extinguishers. Persons in building, none. Injured, 1. Means of escape, fairly good. Value of buildings and contents, $220,000. Property loss, $85,000.”
The August 2, 1976, Boxoffice article about the Plaza Twin starts on this page. It was, as other comments have noted, a very spare theater, not at all Art Deco in style. It would be best described as Midcentury Modern, but Streamline Modern would be far more apt than Art Deco.
This web page says that the Rex Theatre first opened on May 30, 1940, operated as an independent, second-run house by Lucien Descoteaux. The Rex closed on November 15, 1958, but reopened on May 24, 1961, then apparently closed again in 1962.
Other sources indicate that at some point (probably 1962 or later), Descoteaux sold the house to the Shea circuit. Shea remodeled the Rex and renamed it the King Cinema. By 1980, it had been renamed again, to The Movies. As formermovieguy’s earlier comment notes that The Movies was still operating in the mid-1980s, that should probably be the way we list it, with Rex Theatre and King Cinema as aka’s.
The Silver Strand Theatre and its adjacent commercial, office, and residential buildings were another project built by John D. Spreckels, who had earlier built the Spreckels Theatre in downtown San Diego. The Silver Strand was not built as a playhouse, but was specifically designed for presenting motion pictures and live music.
The October, 1917, issue of The Santa Fe Magazine, published by the Santa Fe Railway as a rival of the Southern Pacific Railroad’s Sunset Magazine, had an article about Coronado which mentioned the Silver Strand Theatre several times, and describes it in this passage:
Live music was one of the Silver Strand’s attractions from the beginning. At the formal opening on July 20, 1917, renowned contralto Ernestine Schumann-Heink sang several songs as part of a program benefiting the Red Cross. Another passage from the article praises the house thusly:John Spreckels chose as architect for his Coronado project Harrison Albright, who, after a distinguished career in Philadelphia, West Virginia, and Indiana, had moved his practice to California in 1905, designing the Homer Laughlin Building (Grand Central Market) in Los Angeles, in which he established his offices. Here is an item about the letting of the contract for the Coronado project, from the June 17, 1916, issue of Southwest Contractor & Manufacturer It is unfortunate that Harrison Albright’s original interior for the Silver Strand Theatre has been lost, but at least the building itself has survived. Still, I have to wonder if any of the auditorium’s original features were intact when the dark house was taken over by the Lamb’s Players in 1994. It wouldn’t be the first time a theater company had opted for an economical “black box” configuration rather than bankroll a costly restoration of vintage features.I’ve set Street View to the approximate location of the Vaudette Theatre. Google chooses to number that spot 124 Georgia State Bicycle Route 45, but it’s still Peachtree Street SW.
Google Maps will be unable to find the correct location from the old address. A long stretch of what is now Peachtree Street SW used to be Whitehall Street (from Spring Street SW north to the railroad tracks about midway between Marietta Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.)
In addition to the renaming, the numbers have been changed. Comparing the 1911 Sanborn Map (in Volume 4, on sheet 465,) what was then 82 Whitehall St. SW did not become 82 Peachtree St. SW, but is in the next block south, between MLK JR. Drive (formerly Hunter Street) and Mitchell Street.
That block now has addresses from 100 to 134, but the entire even side of the block has been rebuilt with a massive single project, so the modern address would be a guess. The Sanborn map shows 82 about the middle of that block, which then had numbers from 66 to 102 Whitehall. If the lot the Vaudette was on still had its own number it would probably be approximately 116 Peachtree St. SW.
The 1911 map also shows movie theaters in buildings at 98 and 100 Whitehall SW. Whatever theaters they were would have modern addresses of approximately 128 and 130 Peachtree SW.
Sanborn Maps for Georgia can be found at this page of the Digital Library of Georgia, but the format they are presented in does not make them very easy to use. I’m grateful to DLG for making them available, but I wish they’d used a format more like the one the University of North Carolina uses for their collection.
This is interesting. The May, 1917, issue of The Cornell Countryman, a University publication, published a reminiscence about earlier days at the College of Agriculture that has these lines:
This page from the University web site has information about the early days of the Cornell Public Library, but doesn’t mention the Happy Hour Theatre. It does say that the building was designed by Albany architect William Hodgins. The text under the thumbnail of a photo of the library (top of sidebar, right) says that the building was sold to a bank in 1960 and demolished shortly after.Dave Kenney’s Twin Cities Picture Show says that the 1932-33 rebuilding of the Strand Theatre was the work of architects Liebenberg & Kaplan.
Dave Kenney’s Twin cities Picture Show says that in the early 1930s the Faust Theatre was given a modern makeover designed by Liebenberg & Kaplan.
Dave Kenney’s Twin cities Picture Show tells how Liebenberg & Kaplan got the job of remodeling the Arion Theatre in 1923. The Arion was then owned by Louis Rubenstein and Abe Kaplan, and Abe Kaplan was architect Seeman Kaplan’s brother. It was a serendipitous bit of nepotism that launched Liebenberg & Kaplan’s long, distinguished career as theater architects.
Dave Kenney’s Twin cities Picture Show says that the Calhoun Theatre was converted into a ballroom by owners Finkelstein & Rubin. They had taken over the house in 1918, and then took over the larger and newer nearby rival, the Lagoon Theatre, shortly after.
Sometime between 1930 and 1935, the building was converted from a ballroom into a showroom for a Nash automobile dealer. The Hennepin County Library has a photo made at the time of the conversion (I don’t know if this link will work, as the library doesn’t provide designated permalinks.)
Text on the photo’s page gives the address as 1400 W. Lake Street, which is certainly the correct current address. The building is still standing, but has had additional windows punched into it, and Clifford McElroy’s beautiful tapestry brick facade has been painted over.
In a classified advertisement in the May 9, 1914, issue of shoe trade journal Boot and Shoe Recorder, the Refowich Brothers offered for rent: “Store room in the new Refowich Vaudeville Theatre, Freeland, Pa. Best corner in town, best town for its size- 7,000 population.”
Here is a photo of the Rialto which appears to be from the 1930s. The second of two frame houses up the block appears to still be standing in Google street view.
The Auditorium Theatre operated as a movie house from 1931 to 1954, according to this web page about entertainment in Freeland. There is a photo, the caption of which says that, after closing as a theater, the building was converted into a recreation center. Google has no street view for the location, but a Bing Maps bird’s eye view shows that the building is no longer there. It appears to have been replaced by a modern structure.
The renovation of the Alamo Theatre for Northeast Historic Film was designed by Boston architect Thomas Bakalars. Bakalars was a member of the Board of Directors of NHF. The Winter, 2001, issue of the organization’s newsletter, Moving Image Review, featured an article about the project (PDF here.) A digitized archive of the newsletters from Winter, 1988, through Winter, 2007, is also available here from the Internet Archive and Open Library.
The firm Thomas Bakalars Architects has designed numerous theaters, including at least two for Hoyts.
The Westborough Stadium 12 was one of at least two multiplexes designed for Hoyts Cinemas by the Boston firm Thomas Bakalars Architects. There are a few photos at the firm’s web site. There are also photos of Hoyts Cinema 10 in Augusta, Maine.
Thomas Bakalars also designed the renovation of the Alamo Theatre in Bucksport, Maine, as the headquarters of Northeast Historic Film.
According to Architect, the magazine of the AIA, the entire Patriot Place complex, including the cinema, was designed by the Boston architectural firm Arrowstreet, Inc.
Arrowstreet designed several multiplexes for Hoyts America from the mid-1990s until 2003, when most of that circuit’s locations were sold to Regal Entertainment.
A 1917 photo of the Champlain Theatre in Swanton appears in the Summer, 2003, issue of Northeast Historic Film’s newsletter, Moving Image Review: Archive.org.
This 1918 photo shows the original Majestic Theatre in the background.
I notice that the caption of the 1916 auditorium photo uploaded by CharmaineZoe says that the Majestic had a cry room. That’s the earliest instance of that particular convenience I’ve seen yet.
For some reason Google Maps is sticking the pin icon for the Campbell Theatre in West Hazleton. It should be on Broad Street between Wyoming and Laurel Streets in downtown Hazleton. Currently, the building can still be see in Google’s street view, but its site is a vacant lot in the more recent satellite view, so we can mark this one demolished.
Deception, with Bette Davis, and the coming attraction Wake Up and Dream were both released in the latter part of 1946, so the photo most likely dates from 1947. A small town like Whitney Point would not have gotten a movie for anywhere from several weeks to a few months after its release in major markets.
The destruction of the Palace Theatre was reported in the July, 1917, issue of Safety Engineering:
The Great Escape Omaha Stadium 16 was opened in October, 2006. It was designed by the Grand Rapids architectural firm Paradigm Design.
The MJR Westland Grand Digital 16 opened on November 4, 2011, according to this page at the web site of Paradigm Design, the project’s architects.
The MJR Cinema 14 at Partridge Creek was one of several projects designed for the chain by the Grand Rapids architectural firm Paradigm Design.
The Quality 10 GDX in Saginaw was designed by the Grand Rapids architectural firm Paradigm Design.