Terrace Theatres 1 & 2

902 E. Innes Street,
Towne Mall Shopping Center,
Salisbury, NC 28144

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Previously operated by: ABC Theatres, Cineplex Odeon, Plitt Theatres, Wilby-Kincey

Previous Names: Terrace Theatre

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Terrace Theatres 1 & 2

The Terrace Theatre became Centra Piedmont’s only Ultra Vision theatre that became a new magnificence in movie magic. Years ahead in cencept and design, the Terrace Theatre was a single screen theatre seating 750. It was complete with the latest ultra modern designs when it opened, becoming the first suburban theatre that was an alternative to the downtown indoor movies houses at that time.

The Terrace Theatre was Salisbury’s gem of a theatre and the first ultra-modern cinema in all of Rowan County that featured luxurious seating, a 6-channel stereophonic surround sound, beautiful decor and the latest furnishings, along with a huge widescreen that was capable of showing films in 70mm and 35mm formats.

The opening attraction at the Terrace Theatre was the Richard Burton, Clint Eastwood movie “Where Eagles Dare” on May 29, 1969. A lot of great movies played at the Terrace Theatre, where it was the place to go to see a good movie.

That would change in the mid-1980’s when its main auditorium was split into two screens, creating smaller screens and shoe-box auditoriums. Last operated under Cineplex Odeon, it remained that way until it closed on February 14, 1991.

Contributed by raymond

Recent comments (view all 17 comments)

Mike Rogers
Mike Rogers on April 20, 2012 at 10:32 pm

I bet spliting the theatres made it look horrible,Theatre owners in this era loved ‘sheetrock".

NightHawk1
NightHawk1 on August 11, 2012 at 5:54 pm

I passed by this theater in July 1986 on a trip to Charlotte. The Terrace looked like it had already closed at that point – no movies listed on the marquee, part of the Terrace sign was missing, empty parking lot. This must have been the time the auditorium was split into two theaters. After July 1990 the Terrace would not have been under Cineplex Odeon as that chain withdrew from North Carolina that month, selling most of its NC locations to Carmike (the Cardinal in Raleigh and Carolina in Chapel Hill were closed).

katmdo
katmdo on January 4, 2013 at 7:40 am

I started working at the Terrace Theatre in 1977 as a cashier/concessionist. It cost 2.75 for adults and 1.50 fro children. It was ABC Theatres back then and had 599 seats. (one seat was broken and taken out). It then changed to Plitt Theatres and later Cineplex-Odeon. If you look at the Park Terrace in Charlotte and the Thruway Theatre in Winston-Salem, they looked similar. The Thunderbird Drive-In was also part of the theatre chains.

My partner and I bought the business in 1982 and twinned it (250 seats each side(. We put in Dolby stero and running lights on one side and Kintec sound and running lights on the other. The first side opened with Never Say Never Again (James Bond) the end of September 1982. One week later the other side opened. We sold the business 1985-86 to the same people who opened the Rowan Cinemas which became the Salisbury Mall Cinemas.

raysson
raysson on January 5, 2013 at 6:42 pm

Nighthawk1: After July,1990,theatres that were under Cineplex Odeon sold most of it’s North Carolina locations to Carmike with the exception of several theatres that had the same architectural structure as the Terrace Theatres in Salisbury. If you look at the other Terrace Theatres in Hickory,Asheville,Greensboro and Burlington,the Cardinal in Raleigh and the Cardinal Theatres in Jacksonville and Rocky Mount,and Fayetteville and the Center in Durham basically had the same similar design and concept. When Carmike took over and bought out Cineplex Odeon,several theatres including the Cardinal in Raleigh,the Carolina in Chapel Hill,and the Thunderbird Drive-In in Salisbury and The Fort Drive-In in Fayetteville closed it’s doors forever under Cineplex Odeon. Carmike took over the remaining cinemas(including the Park Terrace and the Thruway,and all of the Terrace and Cardinal theatres in the state).

raysson
raysson on January 5, 2013 at 6:44 pm

Kleesburg Theatres by 1986 acquired the Terrace Theatres from Cineplex Odeon. Kleesburg Theatres basically operated the Rowan Plaza Theatres 1 & 2 that closed in December of that year becoming the Salisbury Mall Cinemas which opened around Christmas Day of 1986.

katmdo
katmdo on January 6, 2013 at 10:32 am

Carmike never bought the Thunderbird in Salisbury. We closed it in the late 80s and used the land when we started rebuilding wrecked and theft recovered IROC cameros. The Rowan Cinemas were built and run by Tom Maines who also added more screens to the theatre.

raysson
raysson on January 9, 2013 at 3:57 pm

Chuck1231 and Katmdo: You’re absolutely right….Carmike didn’t buy out Cineplex Odeon. They purchased some of the theatres that were once under Plitt Southern Theatres. By the early-1990’s the theatres including the Cardinal in Raleigh,the Carolina in Chapel Hill,and the Thruway in Winston-Salem closed. Also under Plitt were the closing of the Thunderbird Drive-In in Salisbury and the Fort Drive-In in Fayetteville(both were under Plitt and ABC Theatres)…..the Terrace in Greensboro and the Terrace Theatres in Burlington were acquired under Janus Theatres. So here are the theatres Carmike purchased or acquired that were formerly Plitt/Cineplex Odeon……

Durham: Center

Raleigh: Tower Twin

Rocky Mount: Cardinal 3

Fayetteville: Cardinal 3

Jacksonville: Cardinal

Winston-Salem: Marketplace 6

Asheville: Terrace 1 & 2

Raleigh: Tower Merchants Cinemas 6

Raleigh: Waverly Place 6

Rocky Mount: Golden East Crossing 6

Gastonia: Gaston Mall

Charlotte: Park Terrace

Charlotte: Matthews Festival Cinemas 10

Hickory: Terrace 3

raysson
raysson on January 9, 2013 at 4:02 pm

This was one of the several ULTRAVISION theatres that operated under Wilby-Kincey Theatres in 1969 and later on by ABC Southeastern and Plitt Southern Theatres. By the mid-1980’s,Kleesburg Theatres took over the Terrace’s operations until it’s closing in 1991. This theatre was NEVER under Cineplex Odeon when it closed.

katmdo
katmdo on January 15, 2013 at 4:30 am

Plitt did not close the Thunderbird in Salisbury. Tom Maines bought the business and ran it as a $5 per carload before my partner and I bought the business. People didn’t want to sit under the stars anymore to watch a movie.

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