Starland Theatre
626 Main Street,
Winnipeg,
MB
R3B 0L8
2 people favorited this theater
Additional Info
Previously operated by: Universal Chain Theatrical Enterprises Inc., Western Theaters Ltd.
Previous Names: Royal Theatre
Nearby Theaters
Originally the Royal Theatre stood just to the south of this address and it was renamed Starland Theatre in 1910. A second Starland Theatre opened in 1911 and was closed and demolished in 1921.
A third Starland Theatre opened later in 1921. It was equipped with a 2 manual Warren organ. By 1929 it was operated by the Universal Pictures chain. In the 1941 edition of Film Daily Yearbook, the Starland Theatre is listed with a seating capacity of 1,500 and in the 1943 edition of F.D.Y. the seating capacity is given as 1,349. It was operated by the Western Theaters Ltd. chain.
It was closed in the 1960’s. In early-2008, plans were in the works to demolish this building and other buildings on Main Street to make way for an office complex. The Starland Theatre was demolished in April 2008 despite being a Heritage Listed building.
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Recent comments (view all 25 comments)
Demolition has begun today. :–(
Two more photos are on this page. Rest in peace.
http://tinyurl.com/6hospc
Here is another photo from themuralsofwinnipeg.com:
http://tinyurl.com/56stsg
I find all this information very interesting. The other day I was working in one of Winnipeg’s historical hotels right in the area of the Starland. I have never paid much attention to what used to be “theatre strip”. This is very fascinating! It seems as though more and more interesting historical facts are comming to light. I cannot beleive how much history is right here in my home town!
That’s a question I don’t know the answer to.. How does one update a theatre entry on Cinema Treasures? Even the ones I have submitted myself there doesn’t seem to be a way to edit them as far as I can see…
Once comments have been submitted there’s no way of editing them unfortunately.
As far as changing the status of the theatre, the site administrators review comments periodically and will eventually change it from ‘Closed’ to ‘Closed-Demolished’.
By the way, apparently the Starland went out in a blaze of glory with the front facade collapsing onto Main Street. The west side of Main is temporarily closed to traffic in the vicinity.
A brief demolition video is here:
http://tinyurl.com/64rwte
This I find very sad. My mother is from Winnipeg and her dad was in the movie business there, working for Rothstein theaters, which booked movies into the theaters in much of Canada. His offices were on the 2nd floor of the Marlborough Hotel, I always remember going there as a kid and seeing tons of posters , pressbooks and promotion materials he was sending out to the theaters.
My Uncle Sammy (my grandfather’s brother) was manager of the Starland and Regent (next door) for many years. In 2007 my mother and I went to Winnipeg and we spent 3-4 days touring her old homes, synagogues and other places she grew up and we went by these 2 theaters and told me my uncle managed these theaters for more than 40 years. I went to show these to my brother on Google maps today and couldn’t find them, and came here and saw they were demolished. How sad, family history and 2 classic theaters gone.
The organ was a 2 manual Warren and it is now part of the organ in the obrien renfrew ontario
April Fool’s Day, 1926, was a bad day to attend the evening performance at the Starland Theatre, judging from this item in the April 17 issue of The Moving Picture World:
There were three separate Starland Theatres on this site. The first one was the one originally known as the Royal which became the Starland in 1910 - it actually sat just south of this address. The second opened in 1911 and was closed and demolished in 1921. The third one opened later in 1921.
http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/sites/starlandtheatre.shtml