Cine 1 & 2 Theatre
225 W. Main Street,
Henryetta,
OK
74437
225 W. Main Street,
Henryetta,
OK
74437
No one has favorited this theater yet
Showing 7 comments
Opened June 16th, 1978 as Cine 2
Cine 2 opening 15 Jun 1978, Thu Henryetta Daily Free-Lance (Henryetta, Oklahoma) Newspapers.com
Charles Blaine decided to replace his aging Yale Theatre with a new and larger venue. He took an existing building and created the Blaine Theatre. At launch the Blaine had two Motiograph DeLuxe projectors and 20' tall sign with 400 bulbs. The grand opening featured Colleen Moore in “It Must be Love” supported by Our Gang in “Shivering Spooks,” a cartoon, and a newsreel called the Blaineogram on September 1, 1926. The theatre organ accompanied the films.
Under Griffith Amusement Circuit since 1928, the circuit installed Vitaphone on March 3, 1929 beginning with “Alias Jimmy Valentine.” Griffith gave the venue a major overhaul reopening as the New Blaine on March 6, 1941 with Jean Arthur in “Arizona.”
On August 1, 1954, the Blaine switched to widescreen projection to show CinemaScope titles starting with “The River of No Return.” The theatre was later renamed the Ciné in the 1970s and closed as a twin-screen facility. The Ciné was razed in 2008 following asbestos abatement and the Blaine’s organ was still in place at the time of the demolition.
The old Opera House never showed moview but it is worth a look
http://www.roadsideoklahoma.com/node/1697
This site proves that only the sloped slab of the Cine 1 & 2 (nee-Blaine) remains.
Offered on these pages are also vintage views;
http://www.roadsideoklahoma.com/node/394
From looking at Google Maps, it appears as though this theater has been demolished.
The theater is standing if you look at this view from 3rd Street:
http://tinyurl.com/yct3z9k
Once you try to zoom in, the building is reduced to a foundation.
http://tinyurl.com/ygclpkt
Such a shame.
Henryetta was hometown to Tony winning actress Alice Ghostley.
These exterior and (rare) interior shots uncover vaudeville roots for the Blaine Theatre. To view 1936 & 1940 photos type in word “blaine”…
View link