Paramount Theatre

136 2nd Avenue S,
Saskatoon, SK S7K 1K5

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Famous Players

Architects: T. Brammall Daniel

Firms: Thompson, Daniel and Colthurst

Functions: Retail

Previous Names: Daylight Theatre

Nearby Theaters

Daylight Theatre Saskatoon in 1940

I used to work in the Daylight Theatre in the early-1960’s. I did secretarial work during the day and worked in the box-office in evenings. It was across the street from the very elegant, palatial Capitol Theatre on 2nd Avenue in Saskatoon. I knew nothing about styles of design back then, so have no idea what style it was.

The Daylight Theatre was opened on January 1, 1914. Famous Players closed it in 1965. It was remodeled and reopened on September 1, 1966 as the Paramount Theatre, screening “My Fair Lady”.

I haven’t lived in Saskatoon for years. Other old theatres in Saskatoon that are listed on this site are the Tivoli/Odeon Theatre, also on 2nd Avenue and the Victory Theatre on E. 20th Street. I used to frequent all these theatres, along with the Roxy Theatre and Capitol Theatre as a child, and I am now in my sixties, so the theatres were pretty old.

The Paramount Theatre was closed on August 28, 1983 with Mark Hamill in “Star Wars:Episode VI-Return of the Jedi”. As of July 2009, a business called Paramount Optical is among the cluster of shops which occupy its former address.

Contributed by Mary Ann

Recent comments (view all 14 comments)

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on November 25, 2010 at 4:43 am

According to this online photo exhibit from the Saskatoon Public Library, this house was the second theater in Saskatoon to be called the Daylight. Photo #6 shows the original Daylight Theatre which opened at 321 22nd Street East in 1912.

The second Daylight Theatre opened at 136 Second Street South on January 1, 1917. It is featured in photos #9, #10, and #20 of the library’s exhibit. In 1966, the Daylight was drastically remodeled, losing its Palladian facade, and was renamed the Paramount Theatre in August that year. The exhibit has no photos of the house as the Paramount, but there’s one here.

The text accompanying photo #10 of the library’s exhibit says that the “…interior of the Daylight Theatre was originally likely designed by the architectural firm of Thompson, Daniels and Colthurst.”

A 1911 Saskatoon City Directory has the firm’s name correctly listed as Thompson, Daniel and Colthurst, and gives the individual names as Norman L. Thompson, T. Brammall Daniel, and G. Buller Colthurst. When I searched for additional information about these architects, the results included the Cinema Treaasures page for the Red Triangle Theatre in Plaistow, London, England, which was located in a 1919 building designed by T. Brammall Daniel. A directory of British architects working between 1834 and 1914 says that Daniel began practicing in Saskatoon in 1911, after having worked in Manchester, England, for a number of years. He must have returned to England not long after the Daylight was built, but the directory doesn’t say.

rivest266
rivest266 on November 25, 2010 at 3:23 pm

This opened on January 1st, 1917
you can see its ad at View link

ScreenClassic
ScreenClassic on October 6, 2013 at 6:41 am

The Paramount Theatre building is actually not demolished, but was simply renovated for retail use after the theatre closed. Compare this photo [link] and this photo [link] with the building in the Google street view above – this is the same building in all three views.

DavidDymond
DavidDymond on October 6, 2013 at 12:22 pm

The Paramount (formerly Daylight) in Saskatoon as well as the atmospheric Capitol Theatre were built and jointly operated by the Daylight Theatre Company Limited (owners Butler and Byers family) jointly with Famous Players Canadian Corporation. The Daylight Company was originally in partnership with the Allen Family. When the Allens went bankrupt, the receiver sold their interest in these theatres to Famous Players Canadian Corporation. The local families had to approve the sale.

rivest266
rivest266 on February 22, 2014 at 2:36 pm

Both grand opening ads uploaded in the photo section.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on February 22, 2014 at 3:13 pm

ScreenClassic is correct. The building has not been demolished. If you move Street View two clicks to the left you can still see the same roof-line it had as the Paramount.

23skidoo
23skidoo on August 1, 2014 at 11:23 am

This theatre has special significance to me as my mother was an usher there circa 1957 when she met my father. One of the last movies to be shown at the Paramount was Return of the Jedi.

23skidoo
23skidoo on October 1, 2024 at 11:15 pm

The building has undergone quite a bit of refurbishment and no longer resembles even the original refurbishment that converted it into a business block - you can see the difference by comparing 2024 images on Google Street View with ones from 2017 or earlier. The back alley view (also visible on Street View) doesn’t actually seem to have changed much from when it was the Paramount.

50sSNIPES
50sSNIPES on October 2, 2024 at 1:56 pm

Closed on August 28, 1983 with “Return of The Jedi”.

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