Comments from apace

Showing 4 comments

apace
apace commented about Schine's State Theater on Mar 2, 2013 at 1:04 pm

Tinseltoes, yes it is one and the same. I saw many a film there as a kid in the 50s and 60s. A great wide screen experience. The Beatles in A Hard Days Night on a large screen. Incredible!

apace
apace commented about Schine's State Theater on Mar 2, 2013 at 12:26 pm

A great and beautiful theatre. I saw King of Kings, The Longest Day, A hard Day’s Night and so many Saturday matinees. It was sad to see it torn down.

apace
apace commented about Temple Theatre on Mar 2, 2013 at 12:10 pm

From this street view of the front of the building, second floor level you can see how the building was divided. The wider section on the right from street view has 3 windows. A business called “The Cortland Press” housed that side. The Temple Theatre side, at the left only had and entrance and ticket booth. That is where the front entrance is located plus the small diagonal window. There was a small marquee over this section. The Shine State Theatre located on Main St. used the displays for movie posters even after the my family bought the building. In exchange their children got to see Saturday afternoon features for free. It was a nice deal.

apace
apace commented about Temple Theatre on Mar 2, 2013 at 11:31 am

The Temple Theatre closed on July1, 1952. Shortly after that the Pace brother (Ethan, Dom and Tony) who operated Dom’s Grill, the Tudor style building at the far right of the photo, bought the building. In 1964, the family began demolition of the interior. I remember my dad and uncles bringing down the balcony. At that time the street front of the building was 3 floors. The building was turned into a restaurant that opened its doors in November of 1966 and was operated as a restaurant by the family until Dec. 19, 1979 when it was sold to the local Elks Lodge who had lost their building to a fire the previous year. This is the correct building. The entrance on the left is the original theatre entrance location. The original stairs to the balcony second floor still exist. The Pace family installed a second floor these stairs led to. In tribute to the old theatre, the Pace family commissioned a mural in cartoon form of all the Hollywood actors from film history along the wall from the front entrance to the balcony staircase. The mural was used on the placemats for the dining room for years where customers could guess who the stars depicted were. The mural still exists. In 1985 a severe wind storm blew down the walls of the main room dining room and second floor banquet hall. The Elks chose not to rebuild the second floor, only the first floor dining room and removed the third floor at the street side of the building. They did find the old theatre doors in the basement and had them refinished and installed in their original location. The Elks continue to run their club from the location. The main dining area is the location of the room that was the original screening room of the theatre.