Vogue Theater

8459 Vine Street,
Cincinnati, OH 45216

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rivest266
rivest266 on June 13, 2022 at 1:19 pm

The Vogue theatre opened with “The Daytime Wife” on October 11th, 1940. Grand opening ad. Closed 1967

Chuck
Chuck on August 25, 2017 at 10:14 pm

Thank you, minimomoser. BTW do we know each other? How about you Wyomingkid? I tell my grandkids about the Vogue all the time, and how cool it was to have a little movie theater right in the neighborhood.

Ken_Faig_Jr
Ken_Faig_Jr on April 22, 2017 at 5:06 pm

From 1955 to 1965 my parents lived on Fleming Road in Springfield township, so I often got dropped off to see movies at the Vogue. I never knew Mrs. Chase by name, but I remember her. One time I got into trouble with the ticket taker by accidentally knocking over the box which held the ticket stubs for the big Saturday drawing. As a boy I went to a few of big Disney releases at downtown theaters, but the Vogue was where I did most of my movie-viewing. Alas, I never had a girl friend to take along. For some reason, I remember the candy display counter, with the dots and black crows. (I don’t think the latter sold very well, but I liked licorice, & sometimes the black crows could be pretty well hardened.) I am not sure which cost more—the movies or the candy.

minimomoser
minimomoser on June 11, 2016 at 2:19 pm

Chuck – I emailed you a pic.

Wyomingkid
Wyomingkid on October 22, 2013 at 9:56 am

I remember The Vogue, Mrs. Chase, and the Saturday prize giveaways (pulled from ticket stub numbers) very well, having lived on Oregon Trail in Wyoming in the early to mid 1960’s. My friends an I would ride our bikes down either Reilly or Fleming Roads, then along Springfield Pike (Vine St.) to the Saturday morning movies. Admission was 35 cents if you were under 12 years old, and 50 cents if you were 12 or over. My 50 cents a week allowance back then bought me admission, a ten cent bag of popcorn and a nickel candy bar!

Chuck
Chuck on July 20, 2013 at 6:34 pm

Okay… First of all, the Vogue Theater was not next door to the Vogue Cafe. The Vogue Cafe was, and still is, on the SW corner of Vine and Mary Streets. The theater was north of there, about halfway to West Mills Avenue. In the photo above, the theater would have been to the extreme right of the photo, next to that gray apartment house. The cafe is at the extreme left, just off the photo. There were several buildings in between them. The building immediately next the the Theater was an old storefront in use only as storage for Barthel’s Hardware, which was across the street on the SE corner of Vine and Hillsdale.

As to the stage curtains; yes, they were still there in the 60s and I remember paying a quarter to get into the Saturday matinee. Correct, no balcony.

I am looking for an actual photo of the old theater. If anyone has one, how about sending its image to me at . Thanks!

Old_wiz66
Old_wiz66 on February 20, 2012 at 6:07 pm

My father was booking agent for the Vogue theater when it closed. He told me that the supermarket behind the theater wanted the theater to expand their parking. Mrs. Chase said to my father that she got tired of them asking and named what she thought was a ridiculous price, and they met it her so she sold it. I never heard the name Harris related to the Vogue.

tector
tector on September 25, 2011 at 8:42 am

mrs chase was not the owners wife, btw. albert harris was the owner, and i knew his wife a little. definitely not ms chase. she did however have a sister who helped her behind the popcorn counter, taking tickets, etc. years after it closed i looked her up in the phone book and tried to call ms chase (we called her “miss” i think) but didnt connect.

tector
tector on September 16, 2011 at 9:20 am

my friend salvaged a framed picture of the vogue circa 1940 – the marquee shows “boom town” with clark gable playing. could have been much later, because they showed stuff long after it first appeared. “the slender thread” was the last film shown – i was there that night. not long after we all played in the rubble.

tector
tector on September 16, 2011 at 9:17 am

miss chase was the manager who gave away prizes every saturday matinee, and one if you said it was your birthday too. when we were young teenagers, she did not allow you to put your arm around your girlfriend, and she called my parents more than once for other serious infractions.

tector
tector on September 16, 2011 at 9:15 am

albert harris was the grandfather of a best friend of mine growing up in wyoming. i didnt know, though, that he was the owner of the theater until after he had it torn down – otherwise i might have called him a few choice names.

hanksykes
hanksykes on December 22, 2009 at 5:04 pm

Joe Allen; The late Vogue Th. was on Wyoming’s town line and Vine Street. Mrs. Chase was the owners wife and manager too. Chase’s, plus another partner couple owned a theater in the Dayton area as well.

Joeallen
Joeallen on September 13, 2009 at 3:17 pm

You guys are a wealth of information.I have heard of the Vogue but did not know all that stuff. That is in the Hartwell area of town.

hanksykes
hanksykes on October 7, 2007 at 1:56 pm

A new brain cell is born….,“BOOK NIGHT”,appears to be a promotion to attract more cinema customers ,we think this is how it worked,each participating theater listed in their newspaper ad (the numbered free encyclopedia) they were giving away and on which days of the week that would happen. After several weeks of free giveaways the theaters began to charge a small fee to complete your full 26 volumes a-z which then could grace your home library. These encyclopedias were simple versions not Funk&Wagnall tomes! Seems to me that’s how my mother bought a set at our local New England IGA for 25 cents a week for 26 weeks. These promotions dated back to the originals like ,“Dish Nite”,and ,“Country Store Nite”, just a new wrinkle on the cinema block to attract patrons cash. I think there was also ,“Bank Nite”, where small amounts of cash were offered.

hanksykes
hanksykes on April 27, 2007 at 1:32 pm

The Vogue Cafe opened as Pinky’s in 1925.

hanksykes
hanksykes on April 13, 2007 at 1:52 pm

Oops slight date correction here, The Vogue theater was built in 1940 with the architect builder listed as Albert Harris. Opening ad for the Vogue was Oct. 12,1940 and the closing was Nov. 28,1967. Closing ad read ,“Thanks for 27 years of loyal patronage…Mrs. Chase.” I don’t know if Mrs. Chase was the owner or the manager of the Vogue. Theater site has long been a parking lot. Last film shown was entitled “The Slender Thread”‘ starring Sidney Poitier and Anne Bancroft. The Vogue sometimes held an evening billed as “Book Night”’ whatever that was.