Address was 102 N. Main Street.
Confirmed demolished.
Now the site of Bank of Eufaula.
The cross street is Foley Avenue, which is the dividing line between North and South Main Streets.
The street numbering is even numbers on North Main Street, and odd numbers on South Main Street.
Hence the Chief Theatre on the same side of the street but across Foley Avenue, has an odd numbered address which I also updated.
Street view shows the address is 111-115 S. Main Street.
The Eufaula Indian Journal office is in 109, and it is next door to the left.
The brick work on 111-115 S. Main matches where it is painted white in the 1940 photo.
Grand and Playtime Grand should be added as previous names as mentioned above.
Two photos as Grand Theatre added to the gallery, courtesy Colleen Moore.
Ran across a postcard image that appears to show a former theatre marquee, at 180 N. Main Street. It had been converted to Ketchum Drug by the late `50s. But I cannot find any record of a theatre ever being at that address originally.
Originally opened in a basement at another location in 1933. Reopened at the East Street location in 1937.
Advertised as “Cave Cooled” drawing air from Stockton’s famous underground caverns.
Burned down on March 12, 1962. Article and other images added to gallery, courtesy Blackhawk Barber whose grandmother Maxine Spencer was operating the Stockton Theatre at the time.
Early `50s and 1961 photo as Dome Theatre added courtesy Marian Lynne Kirchner-Rohanand.
December 1962 photo added courtesy Matt Walker. Open House with “In Search of the Castaways” as the grand opening film.
1977 & 1980 photos added courtesy Marian Lynne Kirchner-Rohan.
Per Rob Duncan: “downstairs was originally one theater, a 70mm screen. The 70mm film format did not last and eventually the downstairs was turned into two theaters. I saw movies downstairs in the mid-70s on the wide screen.
Per Matthew Boeschen: “It had 2 screens downstairs and a third screen upstairs.”
Per Rollin Robinson: “The walkers owned the video vaska showcase and the 82 drive-in
Thanks. I’ll add a page for the Pastime then.
Address was 102 N. Main Street. Confirmed demolished. Now the site of Bank of Eufaula. The cross street is Foley Avenue, which is the dividing line between North and South Main Streets. The street numbering is even numbers on North Main Street, and odd numbers on South Main Street. Hence the Chief Theatre on the same side of the street but across Foley Avenue, has an odd numbered address which I also updated.
Street view shows the address is 111-115 S. Main Street. The Eufaula Indian Journal office is in 109, and it is next door to the left. The brick work on 111-115 S. Main matches where it is painted white in the 1940 photo.
Article about saving D.C. theatres.
https://www.theeagleonline.com/article/2020/02/the-movement-to-save-d-c-s-independent-movie-theaters?fbclid=IwAR2lQ09XOtMkvfUTHvcaQVkiQYmB6uiIEiuv46gE8NdkHvyZFOCA0eEl1-s
1942 photo as D&R Theatre added credit Puget Sound History Facebook page.
Full width crisper version.
Facebook link with multiple photos of the 2018 Roxy Theater Story Walk Event.
https://www.facebook.com/gsalo/media_set?set=a.10214417015113683.1073742044.1067698939&type=3&uploaded=29&hc_location=ufi
Grand and Playtime Grand should be added as previous names as mentioned above. Two photos as Grand Theatre added to the gallery, courtesy Colleen Moore.
1965 photo added, with link to Los Angeles Theatres Blogspot that will not post here because CT reads it as spam.
Ran across a postcard image that appears to show a former theatre marquee, at 180 N. Main Street. It had been converted to Ketchum Drug by the late `50s. But I cannot find any record of a theatre ever being at that address originally.
Photo credit Joe D. Cole, Shaw’s Studio. Cropped off from original.
Originally opened in a basement at another location in 1933. Reopened at the East Street location in 1937. Advertised as “Cave Cooled” drawing air from Stockton’s famous underground caverns. Burned down on March 12, 1962. Article and other images added to gallery, courtesy Blackhawk Barber whose grandmother Maxine Spencer was operating the Stockton Theatre at the time.
1959 photo credit Sonny Horton Collection, courtesy Blackhawk Barber.
1946 “A Stolen Life” with Bette Davis & Glenn Ford.
1946 “So Goes My Love” with Don Ameche and Myrna Loy.
It was Crawford Avenue at the time, postcard confirms such. Crawford Avenue still exists today.
Official Facebook page for the Vaska Theatre.
https://www.facebook.com/Vaskamovies/?tn-str=k*F&hc_location=group_dialog
1948 opening story image added courtesy Marian Lynne Kirchner-Rohan.
Early `50s and 1961 photo as Dome Theatre added courtesy Marian Lynne Kirchner-Rohanand. December 1962 photo added courtesy Matt Walker. Open House with “In Search of the Castaways” as the grand opening film.
1977 & 1980 photos added courtesy Marian Lynne Kirchner-Rohan.
Per Rob Duncan:
“downstairs was originally one theater, a 70mm screen. The 70mm film format did not last and eventually the downstairs was turned into two theaters. I saw movies downstairs in the mid-70s on the wide screen.
Per Matthew Boeschen: “It had 2 screens downstairs and a third screen upstairs.”
Per Rollin Robinson: “The walkers owned the video vaska showcase and the 82 drive-in
1920s photo added courtesy Marian Lynne Kirchner-Rohan.
“The Affairs of Julie” on the marquee.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051235/?fbclid=IwAR0usKJ3C6J4-8Slnw6XzbIZnXzNT2khn4BY_UtKK09Jpc5GI0vZtNGt_bE
Article about upcoming closing.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/naperville-sun/ct-nvs-ogden-6-theatre-closing-costco-naperville-st-20200203-gwmtcwie2jh4rma4kwy3q7fl6a-story.html?fbclid=IwAR3ZyppyCA02bwH6voitUq_qGWZhV0m1QI0PTqWSmTXkMvhqPW6OLQ6ysa8
Article about “Joker” with screen shots of the “Newart”.
https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/movie-poster-of-the-week-the-posters-in-joker?fbclid=IwAR272uX2clL7gbBrmAVGVasKNapa44d1-r9Xd8wETK3yh0nf5kq1KpRiLpI
Demolished in 1990.
Auditorium image added.