Ashland Theatre
203 England Street,
Ashland,
VA
23005
203 England Street,
Ashland,
VA
23005
4 people favorited this theater
Showing 17 comments
New information regarding the theatre architect from the Manager: “We have an article about the opening of the building from the August 5, 1948 edition of the Herald-Progress that states: “The building was designed by Bernard Spiegel of Norfolk and built by J. Kennon Perrin Co. of Ashland and Richmond, assisted by N.W. Martin and Bro with the air conditioning and heating; L. E. McAllister of Richmond all brick work, Electrical Service of Ashland, all wiring and light fixtures, J. B. Halbleib and Son of Ashland, All plumbing and fixtures.”
Here is more information on Bernard Spiegel: https://hamptonroadscf.org/stories/enid-w-and-bernard-b-spigel-architectural-scholarship-fund
The updated website for the Ashland Theatre is https://www.ashlandtheatre.org/
In order to celebrate their 75th anniversary the Ashland theater will be showing a series of films from 1948. Tickets are only 75 cents (though I am sure donations are more than welcome). These will continue monthly through next spring. Whoever is picking these films has good taste. They are: September 18th: Max Opul’s LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN October 16th: Orson Welles’ MACBETH November 13th: Frank Capra’s STATE OF THE UNION December 11th: Powell and Pressberger’s THE RED SHOES January 22nd: John Huston’s KEY LARGO February 12th: Alfred Hitchcock’s ROPE March 25th: Charles Walters’ EASTER PARADE April 15th: Laurence Olivier’s HAMLET May 13th: Preston Sturges’ UNFAITHFULLY YOURS June 10th: Anatole Litvak’s SORRY WRONG NUMBER July 15: Vitorio DeSica’s BICYCLE THIEVES August 12: Vincente Minnelli’s THE PIRATE FOR MORE DETAILS: https://www.ashlandtheatre.org/events
I went last night for the showing of LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN which drew a good sized crowd. Everything was well done with digital projection and good sound. This is a real gem.
Had a chance to visit the Ashland over vacation .This one is a beauty. There is great video posted on their web page I highly recommend a visit to this theater & their web page.
According to the main website for the theaters, it will be reopening full time this year! They are remodeling and updating the entire building from what the photographs show. As a small child, my family would walk to this theater since we lived right down the road (near the old Brown Bag store of you remember that). I recall seeing Return of the Jedi, ET, Superman 3, The Burbs, Pet Cemetary, Forrest Gump and the original Jurassic Park here. This makes me so nostalgic and happy.
The actual opening date is 1948 and the website is Ashland Theatre
This theater is showing movies and having events again. Just saw a movie there last night and seeing another next weekend. I went here as a kid to see matinee showings of Disney and others children’s films. I saw The Lion King, when it was first released here in 1994. It was and is a great theater.
I worked at the Ashland in the late eighties as a projectionist when it was a dollar theatre. They had Brenkert projectors with 6000-foot reels and Brenkert arc lamps that had been converted to xenon. The screen was curved. There was no curtain and the masking was opened and closed manually. The flat picture (1.85:1) was beautiful, but the scope picture was barely wider than the flat picture and a lot was cut off on both sides. Getting a sharp focus was impossible. The house lights along the upper side walls didn’t work, so a couple of amber spotlights on the back wall lit the theater. The reason it closed is that the landlord raised the rent to where the theater couldn’t be profitable. The outside front of the building was beautiful at night when the colored neon inside the glass bricks was turned on.
My buddy was interested in buying this place about 3 years ago, but when we inspected, we found that asbestos needs to be removed from the heating + cooling system. The seller refused to adjust his price to allow for the removal, so the deal fell through.
The interior lobby and bathrooms are in nice shape, but the projection area needs updating and there is no real concession area, due to there being a café adjoining the theater back when it was built.
Outside, on the eastern side of the theater, there are remnants of old washrooms, like the kind you see at gas stations, so the story about “colored only” bathrooms may be true.
It’s a great old theater, but it needs at least $50-100k to get it right, and that doesn’t include the asbestos removal.
for sale $400,000
I HATE LISTINGS WITH NO PRICE……….NO I AM NOT CALLING TO FIND OUT………………CRAZY…. FOR SALE BUT WE WONT TELL YOU THE PRICE!
theater for sale …loopnet
More info and photos of the Ashland here:
http://www.hanoverhumanesociety.org/theater.htm
The theater is “currently CLOSED due to repairs.”
There seems to be a film showing here almost every weekend for fund raising purposes for different worthy causes.It is great that this venue did not die off completely,as was the plan of some.
I haven’t been up to see it yet, but the Ashland is apparently open and operating. The Hanover Humane Society is regularly (every weekend in Feb/Mar 2005) scheduling second-run films at the Ashland as benefits.
The latest schedule is posted here: View link
There is a phone number for movie info on that site.
Photo on this link:
View link
As a child I would spend my summers in Asland on my Grandparents farm. A small and decent theatre. During the 70’s The Ashland showed first run movies. During the 80’s it would become a second run dollar movie house. I belive the Rock Horror Pitcure Show ran there for several years.