Cameo Theater

1128 Pacific Avenue,
Tacoma, WA 98402

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Showing 7 comments

Lumejohn
Lumejohn on October 12, 2016 at 6:58 am

Aloha! Years ago I ended up with 4 of the brocade seats from the cameo. Still have them in storage over 40 years later.

JCL
JCL on April 24, 2009 at 5:42 pm

Thanks, once again to ‘lost memory’ for having the Cameo Theatre
pics of 1980’s, showing ‘yes indeed’ it still was operating, contrary to erroneous dating of the Tacoma News Tribune story noted
as published 12-6-08 and submitted by ‘giteam’ 12-16-08.

Photo also shows,(on right) the streetside doors that lead to the proj booth and office area above…which in turn on next level was back entrance to a great little Chinese restaurant, that had the front entrance on the above Pacific street,(forget the street name).
On the left side of photo notes part of the Turnpike cafe which was family run and had a “great breakfast” selection and a “killer
tasting” cheeseburger.

Sad to say that over the years, I have lost all my pics of the Cameo. JCL

JCL
JCL on April 14, 2009 at 6:15 pm

Re: posting by giteam and Tacoma News article.

My posting, 8-23-07 above: Tacoma News is inaccurate, or maybe discussing another ‘Cameo’ earlier years?

As stated I was operating the Cameo on Pacific into 1972. I had remodeled the entire front entrance, boxoffice and poster cases, and it was still standing a few years after ‘72. The owner of the property at the time was a local businessman, who lived in Tacoma. I cannot honestly remember his proper name,(forgive my memory) Mr.
Risotto or Rizzio? He and wife were very nice and gracious people.
JCL

glteam01
glteam01 on December 16, 2008 at 7:20 pm

Below is a December 6, 2008 article from the Tacoma News Tribune that provides some history of the Cameo Theatre:

The Cameo Theatre began as a Turkish bath belonging to two of Tacoma’s most notorious vice kingpins â€" Peter Sandberg and Vito Cuttone â€" during different generations.

Sandberg from the early days and Cuttone, who ran the Italian mob after the (second) world. Sandberg ran Tacoma’s prostitution business around the turn of the century. His payoffs of police and elected leaders eventually won passage of a City Council ordinance requiring the cops to round up prostitutes from the nice areas of downtown and segregate them in Sandberg’s properties between Pacific Avenue and A Street at South 14th Street, according to Sullivan and news accounts. Sandberg bought Tacoma Baths in 1901, added three floors and reopened in 1902 to much civic fanfare as The Kentucky Liquor Co. His full-page newspaper advertisements boasted “the largest, finest and most complete assortment of the best known brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars ever offered on Puget Sound.”

By 1920, however, a morals movement and the U.S. period of alcohol prohibition, hit Sandberg hard. He died destitute in 1931 â€" about the time of the rise of Vito Cuttone’s influence.

Cuttone bought Sandberg’s old address in 1940 and rebuilt it into the 400-seat Cameo Theater. The theater’s inaugural motion picture, “Hard Guy,” starred Jack La Rue as a racketeer who ran a nightclub where the working girls married the rich blueblood customers, then blackmailed them into annulments and cash settlements.

Cuttone, meanwhile, ran a protection racket for a range of illegal operations, Sullivan said. If you wanted Tacoma’s cops to avoid your illegal gambling operation, you rented a pinball machine from Cuttone’s company.

“You might make $100 a month on the pinball machine, but you had to pay Cuttone $300 a month to rent it. For that money, Cuttone’s people would come by and make sure the cops did not break you up,” Sullivan said.

Cuttone’s control of Tacoma’s commissioner for public safety eventually inspired citizens in 1952 to throw out their form of government in favor of the council-manager form.

By 1960, the City of Tacoma bought Cuttone’s abandoned Cameo Theater building, tore it down and built the nation’s first moving sidewalk between Pacific Avenue and Commerce Street. The Escalade won Tacoma a national award for urban progress.

JCL
JCL on August 23, 2007 at 9:22 pm

Nostalgia trip…I was in theatre management and assigned to re-open the Cameo in 1970 area. The theatre chain showed fairly tame adult films, catering largely to the military from Ft. Lewis. I was there till about 1976.

Correct at about 300 seats. A very small front and lobby area that went directly center in auditorium. A mens restroom was located way down in front, left of screen. A very small ladies room was in the lobby. The projection booth was accessed on the street up a staircase. The second floor housed the office. Also on second floor was a Chinese restaurant which had a entrance on the street above Pacific as well.

Trivia: The theatre and Greyhound bus depot,(across street) were used in some scenes from Cinderella Liberty w/James Caan, (also locations in Seattle).

Noted by DeCoteau: I did start a small (50) seat theatre for classics and foreign films several miles from downtown, it was near a college. Maybe this was a recollection of DeCouteau? Altho the Cameo may have converted to classics after 1976.

Ken Roe
Ken Roe on May 3, 2005 at 4:05 pm

There is no listing for either of these theatre names in the 1941 Film Daily Yearbook, but in the 1943 and 1950 editions of F.D.Y. the Cameo is listed with 340 seats.