Joy Theatre
200 E. Texas Avenue,
Rayne,
LA
70578
200 E. Texas Avenue,
Rayne,
LA
70578
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That would be Collins C. Diboll, Jr. and Jack J.H. Kessels.
The Acadia Theatre’s first film was “My Pal Trigger” when it opened on November 16, 1946. The architects were Diboll, Kessels & Associates in New Orleans. In October of 1953 it was converted to widescreen for CinemaScope feature presentations.
Regular films were discontinued in 1974. In 1975, it was used for weekly jamborees which proved unsuccessful. In 1976, the marquee popped and then it was converted for other purposes.
Ken: The Joy Theatre’s aka should be Acadia rather than Arcadia. Acadia Parish, Louisiana, was named for the French territory of Acadia (Acadie) situated mostly in what are now the Maritime Provinces of Canada, from which the French settlers were expelled by the British during the French and Indian War. Many of the settlers moved to Louisiana, then a Spanish possession. The modern word Cajun is an Anglo-American corruption of the word Acadian.
Joy on Flickr
CinemaTour lists the Joy Theatre at 200 E. Texas Avenue, and displays two photos, dated May, 2014, from the Adam Martin collection.
In 1946, the Joy Theatre in Rayne was being operated by New Orleans-based Ritz Theatres, headed by L. C. Montgomery. The August 10, 1946, issue of Showmen’s Trade Review had this item about the Joy:
Montgomery had a second house under construction at the time of the fire, to be called the Acadia Theatre. The April 10, 1948, issue of STR reported that Joy Houck had traded his interest in the Joy Theatre in New Orleans to Levere Montgomery (Montgomery already owned a part interest in the house) for his interests in theaters in Rayne and two other cities.What I have been unable to discover is if the Acadia Theatre opened under that name and the Joy was rebuilt, or if Montgomery opened the proposed Acadia as the new Joy. I have also been unable to determine if any of four earlier names for theaters in Rayne were aka’s for the pre-fire Joy. These names were the Moulin Rouge (mentioned 1916), the Craig Theatre (mentioned 1924), the Opera House (mentioned 1934 and 1935) and the Evangeline Theatre (mentioned 1935.) A May 4, 1935, item said that the Evangeline was to be renamed the Roxy. Another item that year mentions Earl Craig as operating a theater in opposition to the Evangeline/Roxy. That might have been the Opera House or the Craig Theatre, or Opera House might have been an aka for the Craig.
The Joy was operated in the 60s by Mr. Ted Cobena. Upon closing it was reopened by George Melancon, and then closed for good in the 70s. It was recently used as a fabrication shop for Body Masters Co.