Regal Theatre

1046 Market Street,
San Francisco, CA 94102

Unfavorite 2 people favorited this theater

Showing 15 comments

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore on October 9, 2021 at 3:14 pm

Motion Picture Herald, Feb. 23, 1952: “Jesse Levin has purchased the 393-seat Regal on Market street from Mrs. Aaron Goldberg. This was the last theatre of the Goldberg chain."

terrywade
terrywade on October 25, 2019 at 8:31 pm

The Regal Theatre building is being demolished this week (Oct 24 2019) on Market ST in San Francisco CA. Check out my current photos on the Regal photo page. Destroyed for a new condo building that will sit empty or sold for give a way prices as the street is so bad now. To think the great Paramount Theatre was just next door also gone and replaced by a new building. No more B second run movie theatres left on Market St. Glad I went to a few in the late 1960’s when they had movies at bargain prices in high school. My favorite also was the Pix and Hub Theatres. The Pix Theatre building is still there but has two stores built in. Long live the Regal Theatre SF CA. The bums now on Market ST could have watched movies all day with their wine bottles If It had stayed open. So many sailors visited the Regal Theatre in It’s hay day, It gave them movie enjoyment when on leave in San Francisco and walking on a much nicer and safer Market St.

rivest266
rivest266 on August 12, 2018 at 5:53 pm

This reopened as Regal on February 8th, 1936 and reopened by the Mitchell Brothers as the Bijou on October 30th, 1974. Grand opening ad in the photo section.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on March 18, 2017 at 10:52 am

The Pompeii Theatre was architected by Oliver M. Rousseau and Arthur Rousseau of Rousseau & Rousseau architectural firm in 1925 for Max and Louis Graf. The Grafs went out of the exhibition business in a matter of months but the theater carried on under new management.

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett on April 24, 2014 at 9:49 pm

I do hope this building is conserved so it doesn’t become more run-down, and that this theatre is eventually restored! That would be great!

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by David L. Junchen, pg. 628, the “Regal Theatre” (noted in the listing as “Opened as Pompeii Theatre”) had a two manual, six-rank Smith theatre pipe organ, installed in 1926.

Does anybody know what happened to this organ and where it (or its parts) are today? Are there still organ chambers in the theatre building?

Thanks!

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on October 30, 2013 at 6:48 pm

Here is a 1925 photo of Market Street with the Pompeii Theatre at the left.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on July 2, 2013 at 10:24 pm

A photo of the Pompeii Theatre’s entrance and marquee can be seen on this page of the March 6, 1926, issue of Motion Picture News.

GaryParks
GaryParks on May 29, 2009 at 11:42 pm

The Regal is currently closed. I walked by it last Sunday. The entrance is boarded up. The vertical sign has the name covered over. The entire building’s facade has been painted dark green for quite a few years, and looks dirtier and dirtier as time goes on. Many decorative details still survive. To the right of the theatre entrance, one storefront transom window is surrounded by remnamts of a deco remodel from the Thirties. If one looks closely little geometric embossed patterns can be seen. With a lot of money and care, the whole building could be made quite handsome once again. As I always do when walking along that part of Market Street, I paused respectfully at the little “seam” of surviving terra cotta ornament from the facade of the Granada/Paramount next door.

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on May 16, 2009 at 4:05 pm

This is a 1990 photo from the SFPL:
View link

raybradley
raybradley on October 28, 2007 at 3:21 pm

Interior decor was obviousley somewhat all original when this house operated as the Bijou.
The raked lobby was long and narrow with recessed coming attractions display cases along the left wall, while a carnival type concession stand filled up the right side.
Ticket holders entered the auditorium up a steep ramp and proceeded to either walk down a long single center isle, or go right or left where the isle split into two isles running upward along the entrance ramp. Black painted walls were lined with cast plaster, rectangular yellow frames that concealed indirect lighting. Inside each frame was a large plaster bullseye circle (reminding one of the opening credits for WB cartoons in that these circles were painted bright orange, with red highlighted edges). In the center of each circle was a single 10-watt orange light bulb. Navy blue paint dulled an intricate pattern on a gently vaulted ceiling.
Strange as it may seem, the one and only exit consisted of a sheet glass door from which pedestrians could be seen walking past along Golden Gate Ave.

GSenda
GSenda on May 12, 2006 at 6:35 am

This theatre used to run 3 films for $1.25 in the 60s.

At one time they ran 3 Godzilla films at once.

You walked by the former box office up a ramp, and bought your ticket inside.

The restroom was the strangest and smallest I have ever seen. It had a urinal which worked like a waterfall, a toilet with a stall and the usual condom machines on the wall. It was so small that 3 people could not fit in it at the same time.

For awhile after it closed as a theatre and reopened first as a peep show booth place, the name Regal Cinema could still be seen done in tile on the tiled front entrance where you used to walk in.

The Regal was further up the street from the current site of LA Girls. I know this because I went into the Bijou a few times. ( which had porn stars of the 70s and 80s appear including Long Jeanne Silver who only had one foot and did incredible things with candles) and then worked as a fill in cashier when it got changed to an adult video store in the late 90s.

Sadly I never thought about asking to look around when it was the Bijou.

George Senda
Concord, Ca

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on December 22, 2005 at 4:25 pm

The SF Public Library lists this as being outside the Paramount, but the marquee indicates otherwise:

View link

Ken Roe
Ken Roe on December 28, 2004 at 8:03 am

I have it still listed as the Bijou, operated by the Mitchell Brothers in the S.F. Chronicle dated 24 Nov 1976

Tillmany
Tillmany on May 15, 2004 at 5:39 am

The correct name of the theatre is Regal, not Regal World.
It opened in mid-1925 as the Pompeii, and was renamed Regal on February 8, 1936. For nearly thirty years it was one of several popular little Market Street theatres that provided the walk-in trade with good value for their money, worthwhile films, usually geared towards the action market, low prices, and four changes a week; in the mid-1950’s double features became triple features, and, as pointed out above, there were also 6 color cartoons on every program.
When the Mitchell Brothers took over, it was renamed the Bijou on October 30, 1974, but later was changed back to Regal.
Still in operation under the name L.A. Girls, the site now offers lap dancers, but, alas, the color cartoons are gone forever.

unknown
unknown on October 24, 2003 at 5:10 pm

This place only has live sex shows now. It was the Regal theater, which showed quadruple billed films to Market Street audiences(& even advertised “always 6 color cartoons”). In 1972, started showing hardcore films(the notorious film “Animal Lover” played here, which got booted out of San Francisco due to public outcry) and in 1973, the Mitchell Brothers took it over and showed triple bills of hard porn (initially at $1.99). The Mitchells ran this until the early 1990’s(and at that time it was the only theater they had left showing porn films, the rest either folded or, in the case of the O'Farrell Theater, went to strickly live sex shows). Deja Vu runs it now.