
Strand Theatre (#2)
432 N. Main Street,
Jennings,
LA
70546
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Related Websites
Strand Theatre, Jennings (Official)
Additional Info
Architects: H. Mortimer Favrot, John Milton Gabriel, Alan C. Reed
Firms: Favrot & Reed
Functions: Live Performances
Styles: Streamline Moderne
Previous Names: Cinema
Phone Numbers:
Box Office:
337.821.5509
Manager:
337.821.5509
Nearby Theaters
The Strand Theatre, designed by Favrot, Reed, and Fred was built in 1939. The Strand Theatre was opened on July 12, 1939 with Bing Crosby in “East Side of Heaven”. Seating was provided for 375-seats in the orchestra and 200-seats in the balcony for African American patrons.
It is now a community theatre and home to the theatre group known as "A Block Off Broadway".

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Recent comments (view all 3 comments)
this is a renovation. It was the Strand for years. My dad bought it in 70’s and changed it to Cinema 1.After he closed it, the city or community bought it and renovated back to its original STRAND.
Lake Charles architect John M. Gabriel drew the plans for the alteration of the Strand Theatre in 1954.
There are two Strand Theatres in Jennings, and this was the second one.
The second Strand Theatre opened its doors on July 12, 1939 with Bing Crosby in “East Side Of Heaven” along with the Barney Bear cartoon “The Bear That Couldn’t Sleep” and the MGM News Of The Day newsreel, which contains highlights of the U.S. Army testing machinery into the fog which include shots of an eight-inch railway gun ejected a projectile into the Chesapeake Bay, and a 600-pound bomb being dropped on an abandoned barn. What’s very strange about the grand opening advertisement is that the cartoon is listed as a Captain And The Kids cartoon for some weird reason, but it was just a plain MGM cartoon before Barney Bear received stardom.
The Strand Theatre originally housed 575 seats, with 375 seats in the orchestra pit and 200 seats for the colored in the balcony, and the entire auditorium measures 47x120ft. The original draperies were plum-colored and a second curtain was also used as well. There are four fire exits, with two in the rear and two in the front, as well as a fire escape secret for the colored. The projection booth is fireproof with devices which keeps the pictures on the screen from vibrating and fireproof shutters covers the windows throughout while the film was projected on the screen. Those shutters also automatically close whenever the temperature gets through triple digits. The rest is theater safety sealed. The projection also featured installations of giant multi-cellular loudspeakers that was installed by RCA Victor engineers.