Comments from dallasmovietheaters

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dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Waco Drive-In on Jan 24, 2025 at 12:25 pm

April 16, 1949 opened as Goldsboro Drive-In. During the 1951 season, the new operators held a name changing contest. The name picked was Waco beginning on May 11, 1951.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Constantine Theater on Jan 24, 2025 at 11:51 am

Under new operators in 1927, the Constantine Theatre held a naming contest. Mrs. S.F. Shira took home the prize with “Ki-He-Kah” named for the nearby cross avenue and Indian for Chief. The operators did a major refresh at that time including a $10,000 new Robert Morton pipe organ. The theatre went with the tagline, “Where pictures and music meet.” The rebranded Ki-He-Kah Theatre opened May 15, 1927.

In December, the Ki-He-Kah hosted an auction on leases of Osage Indian lands in which 20,000 acres representing 125 tracts of land were auctioned off, another in the infamous auctions conducted by Colonel Ellsworth Walters in the Pawhuska area during the big oil era.

In 1929, the Ki-He-Kah joined the State Theatre in showing talking pictures. The third silent venue of that era in Pawhuska, the Mills Theatre, didn’t convert suffering a business-ending fire in January of 1930. In August of 1930, the venue switched to Western Electric sound-on-film technology and lost the dashes in the venue’s name becoming the Kihekah Theatre.

In 1950, the theater was damaged by fire and its bookings moved to the State and the State’s to the Circle A which had closed. When the theatre reopened, the dashes returned as the Ki-He-Kah Theatre - likely making Mrs. S.F. Shira happy. The dashes lasted into 1963 but it returned to dashless, Kihekah Theatre in name that year. The Kihekah was still advertising in 1977 playing movies five days a week.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about State Theatre on Jan 24, 2025 at 10:27 am

In 1909, Albert Jackson took a lease for the ground floor of the new-build Floyd Building for Jackson’s Theater, a 640-seat auditorium. The third floor housed the Elks Lodge. The Hatfield Confectionery moved from across the street to be the de facto concession stand for the Jackson.

Under new ownership, Momand Enterprises Circuit, the building became the State Theatre on July 16, 1928 with audiences wowed by its new $25,000 Wicks Pipe Organ played by Lloyd Hamilton of Tulsa. On March 14, 1929, the venue added Vitaphone to play sound films. Assuring audiences that the “talkies” weren’t a distraction, the fad caught on. The State Theatre closed on February 26, 1956 with Randolph Scott in “Ridin' Shotgun” and Gary Cooper in “Blowing Wild” as the Coral Drive-In Theatre season started. It does not appear to have reopened. The building was demolished in March of 1963.

The untrue line in the entry is: Built inside existing retail space the State Theatre offered little in the way of ornamentation, depending instead on the strength of the current picture playing to draw a crowd. It was a theater at the building’s inception, remaining vacant from 1956 to demolition in 1963. Not a retail store - ever.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Center Theater on Jan 24, 2025 at 6:13 am

This $245,000 Center Theatre was architected by W. Pope Barney. It launched March 5, 1937 with “Gold Diggers of 1937” on a grind policy. It featured double features of Hollywood fare continuing its grind policy into the early 1970s. In 1969, however, the theatre went strictly with M-rated mature art and action films ensuring an adult only audience.

In 1972, the theatre programming switched to porno chic, playing double-features of X-rated films. It then gravitated to showing one rated X porno chic film along with one unrated, what were referred to as “XXX” adult films. In 1978, the policy switched to double-features of only unrated, “XXX” films.

On February 13, 1981, the venue abruptly changed policies to a Chopsocky grind house called the Bruce Lee Center Theater (as noted above) with Bruce Li in “Call Me Dragon” and Chen Kuan-Ti in “Dirty Chan.” On April 30, 1982, the venue closed with John Woo’s “Manhunt” and Bruce Li in “Dynamo” undoubtedly at the expiry of a 20-year and a renewed 25-year leasing agreement. There are no more listings after that other than it became a retail hat store. It was later demolished.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Richey Suncoast Theatre on Jan 23, 2025 at 3:04 pm

-Reopening ad as the New Port Richey Theater with “True Confession” on January 21, 1938 in photos.

-Reopening as the Vogue Theatre on December 8, 1939 in photos.

-Rebranding as Cinema Theatre with “Gone with the Wind” on April 29, 1961 with widescreen equipment to present CinemaScope titles in photos. The Cinema Theatre closed in 1968 likely at the end of a 30-year leasing cycle.

In May 1972 the Suncoast Young People’s Theater purchased the theater transforming it to live theater.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Cinema 6 on Jan 23, 2025 at 8:53 am

Cobb Theatres launched the 1,500-seat Cobb Embassy 6 Theatre on December 21, 1979 across from Gulf View Square Mall. The venue had four 275 seat auditoriums and two 200 seat auditoriums at launch. About five miles away, Cobb had purchased the Southgate Twin from Floyd Theatres a year earlier in an attempt to lock up the area’s movie business. The Embassy launched with “The Electric Horseman,” “Apocalypse Now,” “The Jerk,” “The Muppet Movie,” “The Rose” and “Penitentiary.”

In 1997, Regal Theatre bought Cobb Theatres and this venue became the Regal Embassy Theatres 6. Regal downgraded here to discount, sub-run films. During Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2000/1, Regal closed eigcht theaters in the general area including the Embassy 6 on December 31, 2000. Former Time Warner exec Dale Obracay identified the location for another of his Cinema Grill location. It relaunched as the Embassy 6 Cinema Grill with a soft launch December 19, 2003 and grand reopening on January 16, 2004. It closed on November 8, 2008.

Jason Dover and Chanel Castle took on the venue with second run films on August 28, 2009 with “Night at the Museum 2,” “Terminator: Salvation” and “The Hangover.” New operators took on the venue transitioning to digital projection and first-run films.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Cinema Planet on Jan 22, 2025 at 4:38 am

Built at 1,360 seats, the largest 350 seat auditoria were built to be split in case the venue needed to expand to 14 theaters. That turned out to be an unnecessary feature. The cavernous lobby space was built to accommodate up to an optimistic 100-count restaurant seating area launching October 1, 2010.

The Cinema Planet struggled into the 2020s closing in March of 2020 for the COVID-19 pandemic only to reopen. It then eroded to just four day a week operation at popular pricing with all films just $5. The Cinema Planet closed May 9, 2024 and, though said to be temporary and listed on the parent company’s website, its future in 2025 was in considerable doubt.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Hub Drive-In on Jan 19, 2025 at 9:32 pm

Completed its 25-year leasing agreement with its final show September 29, 1985 featuring “Rambo II” and “Beverly Hills Cop”

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Ward Theatre on Jan 19, 2025 at 8:44 pm

The former Ward Theatre building without its attractor and canopy.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about North Side Theatre on Jan 19, 2025 at 2:42 pm

The Theatorium opened on April 16, 1907. A second Theatorium opened in July 15, 1907 on Main Street causing some confusion to modern-day Cinema Treasures. That second theatre had a lower floor confectionery and ice cream soda fountain serving as a de facto concession stand for the second floor theatre. This entry should really be devoted to that venue - Garnette’s Theatorium - in its North Side Square location because it was the one that lasted some 14 years mostly under the name of the North Side Theatre.

The Keck Building was home to the Garnette’s Theatorium until the Garnett’s sold out on June 9, 1911 to A.R. Fawley with the venue becoming the Theatorium (taking the name of the original April 16, 1907 which had gone out of business). Fawley sold the venue to Bert Deardoff in 1912 who changed its name to the North Side Theatre on July 19, 1912 showing Marshall Stedman in “The Coming of Columbus.”

The North Side Theatre and the Grand Theatre become the two long-standing 1910s movie houses. The Grand Theatre - which had opened in 1906 and became a full time picture show in 1908 - was a competing Bryan downtown theatre which will soon have its own Cinema Treasures page and was sometimes called the Grand Theatorium by the local press. So this may be where there is some confusion in the Cinema Treasures database regarding “Theatorium.”

The Temple Theatre opened on February 16, 1921 by the operators of the North Side. They announced its closure at that point with the venue becoming a retail shoe store, the Syndicate Cut Price Shoe Store, that launched May 7, 1921. The Temple operators would then purchase the competing Grand Theatre and close it, as well, in 1922. This entry should be the North Side Theatre formerly Garnette’s Theatorium and, technically, Theatorium “#2” since there was an earlier venue using that same moniker. If any of that’s of any interest.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about Temple Theatre on Jan 19, 2025 at 8:10 am

The Temple Theatre launched on February 16, 1921 with “The Mark of Zorro.” On November 25, 1928, the Temple under L.D. Miller switched over to talkies playing “The Singing Fool” with Al Jolson using the Phototone sound system. It appears to have ceased film operations on May 1, 1952 after showings of the Bowery Boys in “Fighting Fools” and Roy Rogers in “Under Nevada Skies.”

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters commented about State Theatre on Jan 18, 2025 at 6:22 pm

December 10, 1922 grand opening State Theatre ad with Pauline Frederick in “The Lure of Jade” is in photos. BTW: The Opera House was a different theatre becoming the Arcade Theatre. Sorry.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about West Bend Theatre on Jan 18, 2025 at 6:11 pm

November 26, 1929 grand opening ad with Ted Lewis in “Is Everybody Happy?” supported by Laurel and Hardy in “Perfect Day” in photos.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Hartford Theatre on Jan 18, 2025 at 6:02 pm

June 29, 1932 grand opening ad with “Merrily We Go to Hell” supported by the Boswell Sisters in “Close Harmony” and Cab Calloway in “Minnie, the Moocher”

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Corral Drive-In on Jan 18, 2025 at 1:36 pm

June 6, 1949 seems to have opened with Tycoon (ad in photos).

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Pine Hill Drive-In on Jan 18, 2025 at 4:44 am

The Pine Hill Drive-In opened in February of 1951 for T.V. Garroway. It was his second of threee outdoor theaters. L.M. Hamilton bought the venue for their son returning from military service in 1953. In 1955, the ozoner got on a new widescreen tower to present CinemaScope films.

W.L. “Big Pic” Moseley and R.E. “Small Pic” Moseley took on the venue continuing it as the Pine Hill until “Big Pic” passed in 1968. The Pine Hill continued in the Mosley family under MLM, Co. until 1976 completing a 25-year leasing contract. It then became the Pine Hill Scrapyard. The entry should be the Pine Hill Drive-In.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Village East Twin on Jan 12, 2025 at 7:34 am

Twin 410 auditoriums (820 seats) at launch.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Cobb Brookwood 2 Theatres on Jan 12, 2025 at 7:32 am

Two 410 screen auditoriums at opening (820 seats) with “The Godfather” and “Play It Again, Sam” on July 28th, 1972.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Paramount Theatre on Jan 11, 2025 at 11:46 am

The Acme Theatre had become Goldsboro’s first movie theater launching September 19, 1907. H.R. Mason opened his replacement theater, the Mason Theatre, here on November 30, 1925 with a live minstrel show. He then closed the Acme following a December 1, 1925 screening of “The Only Woman.”

The new Mason Theatre showed its first film on December 1, 1925 with “The Merry Widow” as it mixed in live events with film content. In September of 1930, Publix took on the North State (which also opened late in 1925) and the Mason. It changed the name of the Mason Theatre to the Paramount Theatre and was responsible for its sound conversion.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Acme Theatre on Jan 11, 2025 at 11:31 am

The Acme Theatre was Goldsboro’s first movie theater launching September 19, 1907 with changes in film every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. It appears to have closed by H.R. Mason on December 1, 1925 with “The Only Woman.” The new Mason Theatre opened two days previously by H.R. Mason ending the Acme’s run. Local clothes retailer Neil Joseph purchased the facility in 1926 converting it to a retail clothier.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about North State Theatre on Jan 11, 2025 at 11:19 am

The North State Theatre described in the local press was owned by Sidney Sims “S.S.” Stevenson of Stevenson Theatres, Inc. and opened December 21, 1925 with Mary Carr in “Drusilla with a Million.” United Studios of Chicago did the decorating. Stevenson also operated the Princess and the Liberty in town. The theater had a Reproduco Pipe Organ and was managed at launch by Ken Finlay.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Sky Way Drive-In on Jan 11, 2025 at 8:06 am

The Skyway seems to have opened March 16, 1950 with “River Lady.” Its last ad is at the end of the 1976 season and last film was advertised in 1975. An article in 1978 later says that the Skyway closed “several years” prior. I would assume it closed at the end of its 25-year lease in 1975. A mobile home sales facility was in its place in 1981.

Its address is 1800 Old Jacksboro Highway.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Sky Way Drive-In on Jan 11, 2025 at 8:00 am

Seems to have opened March 16, 1950 with “River Lady.”

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Cherokee Theatre on Jan 11, 2025 at 6:53 am

December 23, 1937 grand opening with “Merry-Go-Round of 1938” in photos. Baumann and Baumann of Knoxville, Tennessee created the architectural plans. Shirley Temple, W.C. Fields, Mae West, Tyrone Power and Sonja Hennie were among the Hollywood stars sending telegrams of delight to operators W.H. Parrott and Earl Hendren then of Cherokee Amusement Company. It appears to have closed at the end of a 30-year leasing agreement with brief extension on June 18, 1968 with “The Restless Ones.” In 1968, Winkler’s Pharmacy took over the location.

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dallasmovietheaters commented about Capitol Theatre on Jan 11, 2025 at 6:42 am

Opened October 26, 1934 with “The Richest Girl in the World” for Amos, Parott, & Hendren. It was within the tiny Parott & Ausmus group of theaters including the Princess at Greenville, the Gay in Sweetwater and in Jellico, the Lenoir City Grand, and the Novelty and Capital here.

The Capitol appears to have closed May 8, 1947 with Robert Lowery in “Gas House Kids.” The lobby is used for a radio shop with the theater remaining intact. But it was completely converted to retail in 1955 after years of inactivity to a clothing store. Based on the newspaper accounts, it was in the building at 117 E. Central.