Lyceum Cinema

3545 Fulton Road,
Cleveland, OH 44109

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Additional Info

Architects: William Koehl

Previous Names: Lyceum Theatre

Nearby Theaters

Lyceum Theater Cleveland

This neighborhood theatre opened on May 25, 1920 with Clara Kimball Young in “The Forbidden Woman”. Seating was on a stadium plan, with a raised section at the rear rather than the usual overhanging balcony. It was equipped with a Hope-Jones theatre pipe organ. It was closed in the late-1960’s. By 1971 it had reopened screening Spanish Language movies. During the 1970’s the theatre was renamed Lyceum Cinema and showed porn movies. It closed in the early-1980’s.

The Lyceum Theatre was later demolished and is now the site of the Fulton Branch of the Cleveland Public Library.

Contributed by Toby Radloff

Recent comments (view all 3 comments)

bwaynef
bwaynef on July 14, 2005 at 12:23 pm

For a time in the late 60’s, I went to the Lyceum almost every Sunday afternoon with one of my buddies. On Saturday nights, I often went alone or with my brother. I remember double features of “Cool Hand Luke” and “The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre,” “A Guide for the Married Man” and “The Green Berets,” “Yellow Submarine” and “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,” “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly” and “Hang ‘Em High” (a strange man placed his hand on my 12 year-old knee), “The Boston Strangler” and “The Secret Life of an American Wife,” “Night of the Living Dead” and “No Way to Treat a Lady,” “Horror of Dracula” and “Curse of Frankenstein,” “The Oblong Box” and “Premature Burial,” “Fistful of Dollars” and “For a Few Dollars More,” “Thunderball” and “From Russia With Love,” “Lady in Cement” and “Deadfall,” “Coogan’s Bluff” and “A Lovely Way to Die,” “The Impossible Years” and “Hot Millions,” “Wait Until Dark” and…what did I see it with?

For a time, they were open Wed-Sun, but for the most part it was a Fri-Sun operation. The last attraction was supposed to be a double bill of “Support Your Local Sheriff” and “Support Your Local Gunfighter” but the theater closed before they played. It was marginally more high class than the Garden on W.25th off Clark Avenue which had a hole in the screen for a long time and closed around two years earlier. The Garden was the second run (or was it third run? Yeah, third-run) theater I went to most often, and when it closed I started to patronize the Lyceum more often than I did before.

ppherber
ppherber on November 11, 2013 at 11:03 pm

My patronage of this theatre was when they were showing porn in the mid-70’s. It was probably the biggest XXX cinema in the Cleveland area. A nice,roomy main floor and balcony. No forced proximity with gay hook-up types. The flicks were standard fare for porn of the time.I checked out most of the theatres in the area back in that day, and this one may have been the nicest and most comfortable of the bunch.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on December 19, 2024 at 8:32 pm

William Koehl of Cleveland architectural layout from 1920 in photos.

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