Comments from dallasmovietheaters

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dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Nile Theatre on Feb 16, 2025 at 3:55 pm

It looks like the entry above is simply a “guessy-date” entry with information not in evidence.. I think looking at the day-to-day timeline suggests a much different timeline:

November 5, 1906 - R.G. Baron opens the new-build, Bakersfield Opera House with the live racing play, “Checkers.”

In late 1918, Charles and Cornelius Grogg of the Grogg Theatre Circuit, locally, died during the influenza pandemic. Wife of Charles, Olive Grogg, took over and decided to update both opera houses seeing that movies might be the more profitable path. The Bakersfield Opera House becomes the Bakersfield Theatre on October 19, 1919 (ad in photos). Over at Scribner’s Opera House, it is basically gutted with some elements incorporated into a movie house called the California Theatre with a $10,000 Robert Morton pipe organ for playing films opening on September 14, 1920 (it has its own entry).

Olive Grogg ends Grogg Amusement’s hold in Bakerfield selling the Pastime, Hippodrome and Bakersfield to Gore Brothers and Sol Lesser of Los Angeles in January of 1921 as the transition to West Coast Theatres occurs.

February 5, 1925 the changeover ad from the Bakersfield Theatre to the Nile Theatre takes palce with John Barrymore in “Beau Brummell” in ads (put picture in ads just to suggest a different history than the entry above) with new operators.

I don’t see any evidence of the 1927 remodeling referenced above (each day has programming without a stoppage). However, George Elliot is the operator and runs it as primarily as a live house. Late in 1928, Elliot dies and the the Nile becomes / returns to a full-time motion picture house with a refresh under new management assigned, officially, from Pacific National Theatres.

The theatre is wired for Western Electric sound in 1929. It was then given a major refresh including additional wiring for Vitaphone sound at a reopening on October 16, 1929.

Under the Fox West Coast Theatre Circuit operation, its three theaters are given overhauls in 1938. The Hippodrome was given a name change and refresh and on February 19, 1938, there is a contract for a “new” Nile Theatre at 1721 19th Street which will basically gut the former opera house. The $125,000 job to the plans of architect S. Charles Lee will make the building earthquake proof. The venue’s new projectors are on display at Weill’s Department Store to get people ready for the transition. On February 27, 1938, worker John C. Latham is killed during the demolition of the old theater’s walls.

On July 28, 1938, the New Nile Theatre with its streamline moderne design opens with “I’ll Give a Million” and “Army Girl” supported by the Disney cartoon, “The Fox Hunt.” The theatre has air conditioning and its new projection system includes Simplex audio for improved fidelity.

On February 11, 1954, the Nile Theatre is equipped for CinemaScope beginning with the film, “The Command.”

A major refresh decimates the Nile as it is twinned following a brief closure on February 11, 1976. Original elements dating back to the 1930s are sold off and the shocking new look is revealed on March 26, 1976 as the venue becomes the Nile Theatre I & II launching with “Barry Lyndon” and “…I Will for Now.”

Looks like the twin’s closing date was February 26, 1995 ending things with “Interview with a Vampire” and another feature, possibly, “Street Fighter.” And that is on best evidence - following a 90-year timeline suggesting a 20-year initial lease ownership transferred from Grogg to West Coast in February 1925 all the way to an end of lease closure (likely a 30-year and two 20-year) to February of 1995.

Please understand that to most these nuances and, overall, this information is not particularly significant or worth noting; but, also, guessing dates should be listed as “guessy” instead of stated boldly as fact.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Plaza Frontenac Cinemas on Feb 16, 2025 at 7:17 am

Landmark Theatres announced a February 23, 2025 closing date as it continued to ramp down operations as streaming decimated the art house theatrical industry in the 2020s.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Kentucky Theatre on Feb 15, 2025 at 7:11 am

At 211 North Main, the Kentucky Theatre launched by Strand Enterprises Circuit and Gordon D. Rowland on December 15, 1925. Schine Circuit took it on in 1938 as Schine’s Kentucky Theatre. It closed in 1941. The circuit was forced to sell the Viv theatre promoting it to reopen August 8, 1942. It closed during the War.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Plaza Cinemas at Chapel Hill on Feb 15, 2025 at 5:27 am

The Plaza Cinemas closed at the expiry of a 25-year leasing agreement with “Critique du Soleil: Worlds Away,” “Alex Cross,” The Perks of Being a Wallflower,“ “Sinister,” “Skyfall,” “Playing for Keeps,” “Flight,” and “Rise of the Guardians.” The building was demolished in February of 2013.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Chapel Hill Mall V on Feb 14, 2025 at 12:35 pm

First draft architectural drawings of this venue are attributed to Wengber, Teare & Fischer; Opened October 19, 1966 (not 1965)

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Shoregate Cinema I & II on Feb 14, 2025 at 12:31 pm

First draft architectural drawings are attributed to Wengber, Teare & Fischer

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Polaris Christian Church Cinema on Feb 14, 2025 at 12:21 pm

An ambitious $18 million project announced in 1957 was the Brunswick Plaza, a shopping and residential mecca with the 34-store Brunswick Mall, as drawn in planning stages. The facility opened theatre-less as the Brunswick Plaza - eschewing the enclosed mall route for a shopping center. Fast-forward to 1971 where the Jerry Lewis theatre circuit made its foray into Northeastern Ohio right here in the Brunswick Plaza.

Ernest and John Konkil were the lucky franchisees of the Lewis single screener with 350-seats and automated equipment making ownership a snap… at least according to the sales literature. The Jerry Lewis Cinema opened on February 20, 1972 with John Wayne in “Rio Lobo” & Ron Ely in Tarzan’s Deadly Silence". Lewis stated of his chain of franchised theaters, “I want to leave my children something (and) I’ll leave them dollars; but I wanted to leave them something standing.“ So this was it!

And this location’s lasting Jerry Lewis signage would outlast a number of other locations with his face - 14 full months! By that point, The Lewis Circuit’s parent company, Network Cinema Corp., had disconnected its phones leaving franchisees miffed. Sorry Jerry’s real kids, the Lewis signage was removed for its rebranding on May 18, 1973 as the Brunswick Cinema.

Multiple lawsuits were the end of Jerry Lewis Cinemas. Network Cinema Corp. filed for bankruptcy on June 14, 1973 with the Lewis circuit imploding a year later. The Brunswick location had likely broken its initial lease opting for a renegotiated lease at its rebranding. The Brunswick Cinema closed at the end of its 30-year leasing agreement on May 1, 2003 with “Piglet’s Big Movie” and “Bringing Down the House" bringing down the house.

The venue became Polaris Christian Church Cinema on December 26, 2003 with a screening of Gus Van Sant’s “The Elephant.” That cinema effort was short-lived. It then became Faith Walk Church in 2014 lasting into 2024.

So while Jerry’s kids did not have any standing, branded theaters with his likeness upon his death, at least that had the money he had promised them decades earlier… that is until the will was read. Lewis' will stating, “I have intentionally excluded Gary Lewis, Ronald Lewis, Anthony Joseph Lewis, Christopher Joseph Lewis, Scott Anthony Lewis and Joseph Christopher Lewis and their descendants as beneficiaries of my estate, it being my intention that they shall receive no benefits hereunder.” Both Jerry’s disinherited kids and bamboozled cinema owners were strange bedfellows who were not laughing with the “king of comedy.”

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Scotsland Cinema 1 & 2 on Feb 14, 2025 at 8:47 am

(It was an outparcel building, btw)

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about West End Theatre on Feb 14, 2025 at 8:43 am

The Chuck entry above seems a bit vague / off. My research indicates that Grover Wise of the Alcazar, Odeon, and Royal theaters decided the time was right for Birmingham to have a new-build, suburban movie house. Based on plans by architect B.B. Burnham, he opened the modernistic and suburban West End Family Theater on December 24, 1923. The 450-seat venue was a new-build theater costing some $45,000 and dropping “family” immediately. The venue was equipped with sound to remain viable and received a streamline moderne makeover in the 1930s which could explain the increased seating count or might not. On September 27, 1957, it was renamed Gary’s West End Theater" under new operator Arnold Gary. That continued until July 1963 when it resumed under the West End Theatre nameplate.

After a refresh by a new operator, the 42-year old theater became the Cinema Theatre on March 21, 1965 using the motto, “We bring the good ones back.” The venue was trying to capitalize on the suburban theater trend by having the veneer of a new cinema. It opened with “Incredible Journey” and “Advance to the Rear" on July 8, 1965. But patrons saw through the facade and the Cinema Theatre appears to have ended on January 6, 1966 with “The Checkered Flag” and “Trigger Happy.”

The venue was retrofitted for retail purposes. That ended on June 2, 2005 when a neighboring store caught on fire ending the retail Spivey Hobby store and took the former theater with it.

The Chuck entry can certainly stay as is and this can be an alternative viewpoint.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Westgate Cinema City on Feb 14, 2025 at 6:36 am

Screen I - 375 seats
Screen II - 350 seats
Screen III - 186 seats
Screen IV - 160 seats Total: 1,071 seats

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Scotsland Cinema 1 & 2 on Feb 13, 2025 at 2:52 pm

A group of investors decided in 1971 the time was right to convert the Copp Farm to a Shangri-La ski resort, tennis club, health spa, and lakefront residences. Professional Investors Syndicate would build a 150' ski hill and associate a hotel on the property. The planned Scotsland Resort Hotel would also include a twin-screen cinema. This was not uncommon in the suburban theater boom of the late 1960s and 1970s featuring one and two screen cinemas with reduced seat count, luxury seating, and - in some cases - large format and/or stereo presentations.

Back in the early 1970s, the rise of hotel-site cinemas was a big thing. Three conditions allowed that. The first was the use of safety film leading to far fewer fatal movie theater explosions that decimated theaters and, often, neighboring buildings. The second was a switch to automated projection booth equipment allowing operators to circumvent or lessen the reliance on union projectionists. And third was that the downtown theaters were in retreat due to limited parking, decaying interiors, and too-high seat count that made some movie outings seem eerily empty. So hotels, casinos and other properties built automated theaters to take advantage of abundant free parking and a nearby clientele.

And the Scotsland group found an operator who would open a clean and modern two-screen cinema. But then the project stopped suddenly in 1973 with unpaid bills and court dates. When the project resumed and the investors mostly looking from the outside in, James D. Gudmundson and his independent Scotsland Cinema I & II opened on April 5, 1974 with “The Sting” and a double-feature “Superdad” and “Son of Flubber”. Ad in photos. Auditorium I had a total of 435 seats and II had 306 seats for a toal of 741 seats. The exterior was modern and the interior was a rustic-designed venue to fit in with the Scotsland Resort Complex which wouldn’t open until the theater’s third week operation and its grand opening May 1, 1974.

The cinema survived the chop that Scotsland found itself in. Just seven months into its run, Princess Hotels became the new operator of the resort. In September of 1976, the complex was rebranded as the Olympia Resort Hotel. It had new operators in 1980 and somehow lasted far longer than it should have. The Cinema closed permanently as the Scotsland Cinemas on March 10, 1996 with “Muppet Treasure Island” and “Broken Arrow.” (BTW, I see no evidence that it was ever called the Scotsland Theatres.) The hotel skidded to closure in January of 2018 in disrepair and dated. The resort was mercifully demolished in 2021.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Strand Theatre on Feb 13, 2025 at 8:22 am

April 14, 1921 opening ad in photos with “The Greatest Love”

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Blue Fox Drive-In on Feb 12, 2025 at 4:21 am

May 31, 1959 grand opening ad with Pajama Game and Beautiful but Dangerous in photos

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Village Theater on Feb 11, 2025 at 7:36 pm

Community Circuit launched the Village Theatre with “In Cold Blood” on Valentine’s Day, 1969; ad is in photos.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about UA Cinema 4 on Feb 10, 2025 at 4:56 pm

The Jerry Lewis Cinema was to have opened on July 26, 1972 along with the rest of the South Plains Mall. But that date became challenging when he Network Cinema Corp. was not being responsive as it headed toward bankruptcy. And after a number of grand opening dates came and went - delayed due to “construction problems,” the cinema did open on December 21, 1972. And it kept that name for just six months - closing on June 20, 1973- as the Jerry Lewis Cinema concept had failed and the company had disconnected the phones nationally. General Cinema continued the location on August 16, 1973 as the South Plains Cinema I & II.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about UA Plaza on Feb 10, 2025 at 10:07 am

Five years late… but… yes “Hunt for Red October” had a 70mm run and one of the title’s best per screen performer in the U.S.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Princess Theatre on Feb 10, 2025 at 9:01 am

Thomas E. Orr and A.B. Hooper opened the Princess Theatre in downtown Albertville in September of 1920. The theater closed January 30, 1954 and was remodeled for Lang’s Department Store opening there October 30, 1954.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Cinemark Movies 16 and XD on Feb 10, 2025 at 4:33 am

Cinemark closed this location along with all of its other locations after showtimes on March 16, 2020 for the COVID-19 pandemic. It reopened here with a soft launch on August 14, 2020 in a “test-and-learn” protocol and then a full opening on August 28, 2020. However, Cinemark closed - very likely at the end of a leasing agreement - on February 9, 2025 as theater chains struggled in the streaming era.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Ark Lodge Cinemas on Feb 9, 2025 at 2:27 pm

Closed February 2, 2025.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Dreamland Theater on Feb 9, 2025 at 1:29 pm

This entry should be the Dreamland Theater. It opened as the Snodgrass Theatre on December 21, 1914 with live programming and changed names under Claude Bobo to the Dreamland Theatre on June 30, 1921 playing movies.

The Dreamland was due to be replaced by the Bocanita Theatre that was built and essentially completed in 1929. But that theatre was heavily delayed due to a nightmare of a time trying to get a “proper” sound system. The Dreamland continued operations before closing on July 7, 1930 with the purported and much-awaited launch of the Bocanita happening three days later. Alas, the opening the Bocanita was delayed again though launching on July 19, 1930.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Holiday Cinema on Feb 9, 2025 at 12:53 pm

The Holiday Plaza Shopping Center saw its long-running Holiday Cinema launch June 19, 1970 with “Norwood.” To celebrate its 9th Anniversary, it spawned twins on June 18, 1979. To celebrate its 39th Anniversary it closed permanently on June 20, 2009 with “Imagine That” and “Up.” Imagine that.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Rainsville Twin Cinema on Feb 9, 2025 at 9:50 am

2-200 seat auditoriums for 400 total

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Surfside Cinema on Feb 8, 2025 at 4:32 pm

At launch, the venue had a 360 seat auditorium and a 240 seat auditorium for 600 seats. End of the line came on September 14, 1997 as the Surfside Cinema failed to make its 30 year lease by four years closing with “Leave it to Beaver,” “My Best Friend’s Wedding,” “Con-Air” and “Men in Black.”

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Imperial Palace Cinema 6 on Feb 8, 2025 at 4:20 pm

Final day - July 29, 2007

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Ritz Theatre on Feb 8, 2025 at 12:10 pm

The Eureka Theatre opened as a 500-seat theater in September of 1917. It became the Ritz Theatre in September of 1922. In 1930, it ran a Quizzo promotion which was challenged in court as being akin to a lottery or illegal game of chance. The Ritz lost the case ending its Quizzo promotion. It made the transition to sound to remain viable. It ceased operations on August 9, 1951 after a two-hour comedy festival of shorts and cartoons. It became Ritz Hall under new operators in 1953.