Village Theatre
4020 N. MacArthur Boulevard,
Oklahoma City,
OK
73122
4020 N. MacArthur Boulevard,
Oklahoma City,
OK
73122
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The Coronado Theatre was opened in the 1940’s. It was destroyed by fire on March 19, 1943. It was rebuilt but was destroyed by another fire on February 20, 1962. It was rebuilt and renamed Village Theatre which closed in 1970. It became a furniture store and was demolished in 1996.
Contributed by
Jack Hunter
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Recent comments (view all 9 comments)
Operated by Barton Cinemas in association with Gene Autry Theatres, this rather large movie house was designed in sumptuous Spanish Colonial styling with peach tone stucco walls, tan & blue terra-cotta ornamentation, and a green tile roof.
Since the late 60’s this former theatre has operated as an upscale furniture store, but some original lavish interior decoration remain intact.
Well, golly gee, seems I forgot to mention that the Coronado was razed almost ten years ago to make way for a chain drug store.
Also known as Barton’s Coronado circa 1963.
I saw Liz Taylor in Cleopatra every Friday night for what seems like months in about 1965. Didn’t matter what was playing. This is where kids from Putman City Junior High would hang. I think that officially it was the town of Warr Acres, then. Had a balcony I remember. Not far away was Wedgewood Amusement Park, Lakeview Country Club, Coronado Bowling alley. David
I was one of the Putnam city junior high school kids in 1965 that hung around the Coronado. We called it the passion pit. If you were lucky you could get the stink finger. Homer English and I cleaned the joint after hours. I can’t remember the owner’s name. Anybody know
This is the theater I grew up attending on Saturday afternoons, along with every other kid in the neighborhood, in the late ‘40s and early '50s. I would walk from my house and pick up my friend Martha at her house and we would go to the movies for a quarter. We would get Milk Duds or Holloway’s Sugar Daddies because they were chewy and would last a long time. Sometimes the film would break and the kids would put up a howl until they spliced it back together. At other times the noise level would get so loud they would stop the film and turn on the lights until the kids quieted down. The first movie I ever remember seeing was when my parents took me to see “The Jolson Story” (1946 – I was 5) with Larry Parks. A world of magic was opened up for me. Other favorites were “Words and Music” (1948), with June Allyson singing “Thou swell, thou witty…;” “The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady,” with June Haver and Gordon McCrae, all the Ester Williams movies, and many more. All seen and loved at the beautiful (but sticky-floored on Saturday afternoons) Coronado Theater.
I saw “The Tingler” here. They had a bathtub out front filled with blood. Quite an impact on a 6 year old kid. I loved it! Buzzers in some of the seats with a medical cot in the lobby, wow, those were the days! Anyone know of any pictures of this place?
Boxoffice, April 30, 1962: “Refurbishing of the Coronado Theatre in suburban Warr Acres, which was struck by fire February 20, is under way and the theatre should be back in business around the last of June. The building is owned by Bob McFarland, and is leased to the R. Lewis Barton circuit.”
Boxoffice, July 23, 1962: “Your correspondent had the privilege of attending … "The Spiral Road,” Saturday evening (14) at the newly completed War Acres. This theatre was formerly the Coronado, which was destroyed by fire several months ago … The theatre seats 646"
Fire in March 1943 Coronado theatre fire 19 Mar 1943, Fri The Daily Oklahoman (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) Newspapers.com