Norka Theater
1097 E. Market Street,
Akron,
OH
44305
1097 E. Market Street,
Akron,
OH
44305
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The Norka Theatre opened April 11, 1910 with vaudeville acts including Electro, The Human Rheostat. Motion pictures were also played at the theater in its earliest days. The theater was known for its “blood red” sidewalk - called “lurid” by a local writer - in front of the venue and also the well-placed Norka Confectionery that served as its de facto concession stand. The venue converted to sound to remain viable.
Robert W. Postma, whose family had run the Rialto for generations and had built the East Drive-In in 1951, closed the Norka Theatre in the Summer of 1952 and operated the East Drive-In. Jack Flemm, who had closed the Tivoli in the Summer of 1953, took on the vacant theater on December 15, 1954 with “Drums Across the River” and “Betrayed.” Clifford Shearon took on the venue as its final operator and equipped it for widescreen presentations thinking that would be the ticket. But he closed the Norka on May 30, 1956 “Footsteps in the Fog” and “Lawless Street.”
The venue had a short run as a house of worship although, apparently, make no interior or exterior modifications. The theatre had a final operation - a salvage sale - in April of 1961. It was torn down shortly thereafter in 1961.
The Norka Theatre got a CinemaScope upgrade, as noted in this item from Motion Picture Herald of January 7, 1956: “Clifford Shearon has reopened his Norka theatre in Akron, Ohio, following a remodeling program, which included a new wide-screen and new projectors.”
This opened on January 15th, 1910
https://www.newspapers.com/clip/7325882/norka_theater_opening/
Grand opening ad in the photo section.
Reported as just opened in the February 1, 1910 issue of The Nickelodeon.
I was 10 years old in 1940 and I remember what a treat it was to attend the Norka every Saturday afternoon. My mother would drop me off and pick me up because the audience was almost all loud noisy kids. For a dime, you could buy a sack of penny candy and a sack of popcorn. What fun! I loved “Flash Gordon” serials the most! My dad worked at the Good Year Plant across the street for 15 years. The Rialto Theater was just up the street and my mother and I attended many double features and then my dad would meet us to walk together after his shift. At one time, the theater turned on the lights and allowed the audience to play “WhaHoo” like Bingo. I won a radio two different times. The Good Old Days! I also saw the Ink Spots at the Rialto.
Some background:
http://tinyurl.com/sfb7r
This little theater reopened briefly in the 1960’s after many years of closure. I passsed it each day on the way to the U of Akron so the time frame was mid 1960s.