Oasis Theater

182 E. Main Street,
Hermiston, OR 97838

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Additional Info

Functions: Retail

Previous Names: Cozy Theater, Electric Theater, Roxy Theater

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Oasis Theater

According to one document I found, there was a blacksmith shop in downtown Hermiston, Oregon in the late-1880’s until it was demolished in 1910 to make way for a movie theater, the Cozy Theater. It remained the Cozy Theater from 1910 to 1960. It would then have a number of names over the years: Electric Theater, Roxy Theater, and finally the Oasis Theater which closed in 1975.

One source says the theater was demolished, although the brick structure described in that article is still present in what it is today, a computer repair store and by 2025 a tattoo parlour. On the corner of the block where the theater used to be is the Cozy Corner Tavern, so at least one aspect of the theater’s era still remains.

Contributed by John Book

Recent comments (view all 3 comments)

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on April 2, 2025 at 5:44 am

The Oasis Theatre closed in 1975

SethG
SethG on April 2, 2025 at 8:42 am

I am positive the address is wrong. The picture that shows the theater closer up is looking at the back of the building at 201 E Main. Downtown is so ugly, and nearly everything in both pictures has been torn down, but I think the address is somewhere around 239-243 E Main.

I don’t see a blacksmith on the May 1910 map. ‘Downtown’ is tiny, and the area where the theater was is vacant. I suspect it was just a little wooden shack if it existed at all.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on April 14, 2025 at 1:33 pm

The May 5, 1923 Moving Picture World had this item, which might reveal another aka for this house: “The Playhouse, Hermiston, Oregon, formerly operated by J. L. Morfitt, has been reported closed.”

However, I’m skeptical of the 1910 opening date. This item is from the September 11, 1920 Exhibitors Herald: “HERMISTON, ORE.— A new, modern $12,000 motion picture house, built by local capital, is nearing completion here.” If a town as small as Hermiston (the population never topped 1000 until the 1940s) already had a substantial theater built in 1910, I doubt another would have been built in 1920.

The 1927 FDY lists for Hermiston only a 300-seat house called the Legion Theatre, probably also an aka for this place. Given the name it also seems likely that the house doubled as the local American Legion hall.

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