Berea Theatre
201 Front Street,
Berea,
OH
44017
201 Front Street,
Berea,
OH
44017
2 people favorited this theater
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Reopened with 3 screens on December 20th, 1978
grand opening ad uploaded here
The “BEREA” letters have two colors of neon, green and bright pink. Originally the flashing sequence was green, then green-pink, then pink, then back to green. Sometime perhaps in the 1980’s that was modified to continuous pink with slow flashing green, then at the very end to ‘no neon’ backlit with spotlights which looked horrible. There was three flutex glass panels on each side of reader board, the center seen in the night time shot later covered with ‘LOEWS’ signage. These had vertical neon tubes of several colors actuated with a fast scintillator making a vibrant, eye catching ‘color organ’ display. If there was any other animation on this marquee I cannot recall it, as I did pay close attention. It really was the dominant visual landmark in Berea in it’s heyday, nothing approached the visual impact at night when driving up or down Front street. Somewhere there is a night time long news shot from across the street showing the marquee animation which aired quite a bit at the time the projectionists strike began (late 70’s – early 80’s?), which then went on for years. Berea residents no doubt recall the single picketer who picketed for years every weekend night, and in most weather. CW
Thanks CWalczak.First I have heard of LOEWS BEREA.
I suppose, since Loew’s once operated it, it counts as a “Loew’s” theater, but for those of us who are or were Clevelanders at the time, it was basically a Loew’s-in-name-only.
The last truly genuine Loew’s built and operated theaters were Loew’s East in Richmond Heights and Loew’s West in Rocky River both of which opened in 1966. After the closing of the last of its former great downtown theaters (Stillman, State, and Ohio), Loew’s apparently wanted maintain a strong Cleveland presence, and so acquired a small chain of upper tier theaters around 1975 located in the suburbs of Cleveland which (if memory serves) included the Berea, the Yorktown, the Stillwell, the Riverside, and two fairly new theaters, the Showplace and the Village. When these closed over the next twenty-five odd years or so, the famed Loew’s name once synonymous with high class moviegoing in the Forest City, disappeared.
Tlsloews, another LOEWS theatre.“INCHON” and “GAME OF DEATH” two stinkers one ripping off GEN.MacAuthur and the other a Bruce Lee mess.
In the night photos above it looks like most of the neon was no longer working. The underside of the marque originally was fully light with neon tubes in various shapes. It created a bright and very theatrical front to the theater. Also, there was a lot of flashing neon around the reader board. Sad to see it in such poor repair.
The Berea Theatre was featured in an article by Hanns Teichert in Boxoffice, July 1, 1950. The article credited the design of the house to Paul Matzinger, of Matzinger & Grosel. The Art Moderne decor was by Rex M. Davis of the Teichert Studios.
In the 1950’s and 60’s It was one of four suburban theaters to show single features right after their first run in downtown Cleveland. The others were its twin in Willoughby-the Vine and also the Stillwell in Bedford and the Willow in Independence. These theaters had late shows on Saturday nights with the last showing about 11:30 pm.
This was a very nice theatre with a huge screen. i saw BEN HUR and WEST SIDE STORY here with totally packed houses. They’d drop us kids off, and pick us up later after the show. ON THE BEACH, many others. It did have a great wide marquee.
This was a beautiful theatre when it first opened and very well run. Later they added a very large Cinemascope screen. A very comfortable theatre indeed. The marquee was a flashing neon wonder to behold. Too bad it when downhill in the end. Triplexing a building of this size must have be a disaster as the post above indicates.
I think by the time I moved to this area, the tri-plex was in place. Only memory…“Tucker, The Man and His Dream”, screen too darn small and my shoes sticking to the floor of what I’ve since called the “Berea Sticky Theater” (not a very comfy place to be).
It was originally owned by a local chainlette called Community Circuit Theatres. They sold the business to Loews, who triplexed it in the late 70s or early 80s. The property remained owned by the Lefkowitch family, who had been the principles in the Community Citcuit theatre operation.