Bayne Theatre

1606 Atlantic Avenue,
Virginia Beach, VA 23451

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Bayne Theatre

There is not an abundance of information on this former boardwalk cinema which was located at Atlantic Avenue and 16th Street.

The Bayne Theatre opened sometime around 1933. It was renovated in 1965, and closed in 1978. The theatre might have operated under another name before it was converted into Captain Clines Pirate Adventure Ride. It was demolished in November 2015.

Contributed by John Coursey

Recent comments (view all 14 comments)

igorvonstrange
igorvonstrange on January 1, 2011 at 9:00 am

I still work in the building the Bayne was in,It operated as a theater until 1978 Jaws was the last movie played there,then it became the Royal London wax Museum……after that it became the time machine and today it is the pirate ghost ride……I am a maintainance man of sorts for the building and the ride and have spent Many an overnight in the building not saying its “Haunted” but it does have and energy of its own.The stage and balcony are both stil intact and I’m forever finding little treasures from the theater era everything from 33 cent tickets to film reels all empty of course……lol.any quesstions about the the theater?please feel free to ask

JackCoursey
JackCoursey on January 1, 2011 at 9:48 am

Have you any interior photos you could post? Was there a balcony?

igorvonstrange
igorvonstrange on January 1, 2011 at 10:46 am

yes I have some photos I’ll have to dig them up and yes there was a balcony when it was in operation as a theater there was seating up there but now its really used for storage I havent ever been able to locate any photos as it was back then Ive been on the hunt for old photos for years lol i kind of have a love affair with the building and have since the first time i stepped into the building it def has a lot of charm but I’ll dig some photos up and post them soon

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on February 16, 2011 at 5:50 am

The Bayne Theatre probably did originally open in either 1932 or 1933. Its interior was remodeled in 1965, and an article in Boxoffice of April 12 that year said that the theater was 33 years old. In 1965 the house was being operated by Crockett-Pender Theatres, which was spending $35,000 for the renovation. The Bayne was scheduled to reopen on Easter Sunday.

Entertainment Buff
Entertainment Buff on May 1, 2012 at 12:14 am

I remember seeing the 1975 film “Jacqueline Susann’s Once Is Not Enough” at the Bayne Theatre. It was 1976 or ‘77, so by the mid 1970s, it was definitely a second run movie theatre.

Ret. AKC (NAC) CCC Bob Jensen, Manteno, Illinois
Ret. AKC (NAC) CCC Bob Jensen, Manteno, Illinois on May 25, 2012 at 6:49 am

PREVIOUSLY OPERATED BY:

ABC SOUTHEASTERN THEATRES, INC.

Jay_McKenna
Jay_McKenna on February 5, 2013 at 4:14 pm

Mr. Alfred Willis, Do you have old newspaper copies (Virginian Pilot or Ledger Star) w/ box Ads for the Beach and the Bayne that you would be willing to sell? I grew up in Va Beach during the 60s and have many happy memories of the Beach and the Bayne. The Beach got the better movies, the Bayne the “B” features. The Beach was parent-approved and the Bayne was “off limits” as 16th street was the “bad section” of town. All the more fun to sneak down there. I would love to see the little Box Ads for the Beach and the Bayne from the Movie page of the Norfolk papers again. Please let me know.

Romanipat
Romanipat on July 14, 2015 at 6:34 pm

I may have something to add to the conversation. I was the last movie projectionist at the Bayne before it closed as a movie theatre in October of 1981. When I came aboard in May of that year, the house was incapable of keeping a show on the screen. The manager at the time interviewed me by taking me to the booth, where I noticed that the regular guy had set up the 1930’s vintage Peerless projectors to hold 60 minute reels,which are designed for flat,not vertical, operation. We lost the matinee performance of “Cannonball Run” that day, but between that show and the 6:00 showing I respliced the reels onto the vintage 20 minute reels that I found in the storage room, with leaders and tails,naturally, and we didn’t lose a viewing after that. With the house no longer having to refund the gate at every show, we actually started turning a profit, but it was too late. Plitt Southern decided to sell the building to the wax museum, and the employees were offered positions at the multiplex at Hampton Roads. I joined the Navy instead. Those xenon machines have no soul;the monkey just has to flip a switch. There was a balcony, but when I was there it wasn’t open to the public for structural reasons. In my snooping, I found an envelope with photos from the'30s of the building at its opening. I gave them to the manager, who framed them and hung them in the lobby that last summer. We really thought we could save the place, since it was a palace, but as it turns out that dream was Quixotic. Those photos were still in the lobby the evening of our farewell costume party. The theme was Movie characters. I went as Sam Spade, sporting my preemptive Navy haircut, and the concession girl I was crushing on was dressed as Marilyn. Man, what a night!

backpocketblues
backpocketblues on January 30, 2018 at 1:15 am

Romanipat could you please contact me about your time at the bayne theater? Thank you!

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on April 13, 2018 at 5:02 pm

The Bayne Theatre was demolished in November, 2015. Here is video posted at YouTube by the demolition company.

This article from The Virginian Pilot of December 18, 2015, has an early aerial photo of the Bayne.

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