Bob Hope Theatre
242 E. Main Street,
Stockton,
CA
95202
242 E. Main Street,
Stockton,
CA
95202
11 people favorited this theater
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In June 1956, the listings became simply “Fox” from “Fox California”
Another ad: Fox California opening 11 Oct 1930, Sat Stockton Evening and Sunday Record (Stockton, California) Newspapers.com
This was opened on July 19th, 1917, as the T & D theatre and reopened as California on January 5th, 1924, and closed in 1929 for rebuilding. It reopened as Fox California on October 11th, 1930. Grand opening ads posted.
Fox California opening 11 Oct 1930, Sat Stockton Evening and Sunday Record (Stockton, California) Newspapers.com
Looking for an old theater I can convert into a full time church/concert hall but keep the historic splender of the theater. let me know if anyone can give a me leads and tips. prefered in the Northern California area. thanks.
Hello everyone I am the founder of ecps a paranormal group in Stockton the reason for my comment is were being requested to investigate bob hope/fox/California theather i was wondering if anyone has information or expirance anything unusual or some basic history that you can’t find if do please email me at
A few 2011 photos can be seen here and here.
Even though the theatre changed name to BOB HOPE THEATRE, It was good they still recognized, and left the original name on the building.
Nice picture Tom. Looks good that they left the FOX vertical on the building.
Here is an October 2004 article from the Hollywood Reporter:
http://tinyurl.com/ddubmy
Stockton is my home town. I left in 1956 at the age of 10. From my residential addresses then, my family would walk downtown to the “picture shows” in the evening or on Saturday. We usually approached from the east end of Main Street or sometimes took a bus and disembarked at the east end of the street.
Main Street contained a row of movie theaters down to the Fox (and possibly around the corner; not sure), they were all lit up at night and I suppose resembled a smaller version of what would have been a Broadway of movie theaters in Stockton. To a child who only had seen one city (except for San Francisco or Sacramento), it was what I thought was a typical smaller city. I did not know I was incorrect about that. Of course, the theaters didn’t seem small to me, and probably weren’t.
Stockton evidently is now actually identified as a tiny town version of a larger city. Its houses and buildings are smaller but as detailed in scale and in the preferred architectural styles of what would have been seen in larger cities. I thought the interiors of businesses then (banks and office buildings)were temples of beauty, with so much brass and marble. Brass made up some of the trim, plus there were other design details.
When we arrived downtown, we started to walk west on Main St., strolling by the movie theaters, sometimes crossing the street to the south, then back to the north, viewing the offerings and deciding which show we would see. I don’t remember anyone looking in a newspaper to learn what was playing beforehand, or if so, we still didn’t commit until we reached the picture show. (I am trying to use the vernacular of the time; I don’t think I ever heard the word “theater” employed to reference “picture shows” until I moved east.) We looked at the posters in the display windows, or took in the marquee, or noted what people coming out or going in were saying about the movie, before we would commit to buying a ticket. Then we would make up our minds. It seemed that was what everyone did then.
The point was, with this method, I don’t think we ever really made it to the west end of Main Street to the Fox but for a time or two by the time I was nine; unless I was taken there as an infant. There were always plenty of first rate shows; sometimes double features, to choose from, before we reached the end of the street. Came close a couple of times. Yes, I had heard the Fox was beautiful, or one of the most beautiful of the shows in Stockton.
So when I was nine or so, and there was a major feature film everyone wanted to see and we knew it was at the Fox, and I saw it, I remember thinking about the Fox, “This really is beautiful; maybe the most beautiful picture show on the street, but not my favorite, as others up the street were more familiar to me. Don’t remember the film I saw then. The Fox was, indeed, a richer, more historically ornate style than the others, I thought.
My problem now is that I do not remember the names of all of those other pictures shows up Main Street; just that they were there, both sides of the street and there were many of them and I saw many movies in them. (There were picture shows on the next street north too, which were low cost, and some showed triple features in the ‘50s; families could still feel comfortable in them. I remember seeing “Don’t Bother To Knock,” as the third film on a triple bill and the psychotic blond woman (Marilyn Monroe) scared me out of my wits (no doubt I related to the child in the film whom she almost kills), so that I never forgot that movie (pretty good critique, No?)
On Main Street I remember that I could not talk my father into taking me to see a Ma and Pa Kettle film (I had already seen it once), so we settled on “Winchester 73” with Jimmy Stewart. Also remember seeing High Noon, My Darling Clementine, Frances the Talking Mule pix, Martin & Lewis, Betty Hutton films and many more – none at the Fox; I just don’t remember which theaters by name.
I would add as to another theater on Main Street that was either constructed or, I think, remodeled about ‘53 or '54, the thing about it was that it reopened containing a Loge, which was a big deal in the advertising then, and everyone talked about it. Everyone wanted to go there to see the “Loge.” People could sit in the Loge and the armrests contained ashtrays, and they could smoke while they watched the movie. You didn’t even have to smoke, as the Loge seating was appealing in itself; it seemed more expansive, like first class on an airliner. It was, I suppose, designed in a type of 1950s moderne, but you couldn’t really see it in the dark. It was comfortable and in good taste as patrons expected first rate picture shows to be. Everyone liked that theater when it reopened, and it always did good business. I think it might have contained some wood paneling; didn’t look anything like a 1920s style movie house, which was not a common style in those Stockton theaters on Main Street by the time I was going to movies there. The shows were beautiful but of a West Coast vernacular. They emphasized values different from what I would see in the splendid heavy ornateness of movie houses in the Middle West a few years later.
Upon entering the house you would turn to the side aisles and walk up a number of steps to the Loge and turn in. I don’t remember if once at the Loge landing, you could then walk forward, back down steps to the lower level and seating there. Maybe it was blocked off.
The only other comment I can add here is that I was born shortly after WWII. In those days, Stockton was full of ex servicemen and others relocating there, and there was a shortage of proper housing. Whole other story. People were making do in cramped quarters everywhere. Thus, that was another motivation to spend warm evenings after work, if not sitting outside on the steps, or inside listening to the radio, if one could, downtown going to picture shows. There was a lot of pedestrian traffic in downtown Stockton then; lots of “bars” including a fair number of cocktail lounges, and diners; all of a mood, plus the courthouse was down close to the Fox. A film crew came up from Hollywood to film, and had advertised in the newspaper for locals to come out that night and stand as a crowd for a film (for a newsreel footage sequence). There were no stars in the scene; although I believed I had seen Mercedes McCambridge there. We had been to a movie and coming back, with me being held by mother, stood at the back of the crowd being filmed for possible use in the movie about Huey Long, which was “All The Kings Men,” and it won an academy award too.
beautiful !!!!
Saw something funny on the news the other day…. While the temps in Stockton were hovering in the hundered and teens, the marquee on the theater was advertising the play “Some like it hot.” Great timing, eh?? :)
This building has just been named in the top 100 theatres in the Country by Pollstar.
I’M HEADING THAT WAY NEXT WEEK, CANT WAIT TO SEE IT! STOCKTON HAS MANY HIDDEN TREASURES ~
This is the latest website:
http://www.bobhopetheatre.com/
I don’t mind the name change, but I do mind the screw-up of the sign on the front of the building. It looks absolutely “tacky”. That is THE most beautiful building in Stockton. I “HOPE” they didn’t screw up the inside too as it WAS THE MOST beautiful interior of a building in Stockton too. Like the Hotel Stockton, used to have the most beautiful color of stucco before the remodel. It did need to be retrofitted though. I’ve been to one concert at the Fox, “THIRD EYE BLIND”. The balcony started shaking and I was afraid it might cave in on the people below. I also HOPE, whoever, is in charge of the booking of the concerts there, brings some talented entertainment to the venue because it is a great venue but unfortunatly there are never any great concerts that I would pay my money to go see there very often. Why couldn’t it be a packed house every Friday and Saturday night? If they would get me inthere to book those concerts I bet they would. Please feel free to contact me about it if you would like.
Hope they kept the Vertical that spells Fox.brucec
This was one of several Fox theaters (including those in Pomona and Riverside) designed by Los Angeles architects Clifford Balch and F.E. Stanbery.
yeah I could see Bob Hope Theater but Fox California Bob Hope Theater too much
The historic Fox theater will soon be getting a name change. Local businessman/developer/philantropist Alex Spanos has donated $500,000 toward the Fox’s current renovation project. The catch?? The theater has to be named after Spanos' dear friend, Bob Hope.
I’m not sure of the exact name, but I believe that it will be called the “Fox California Bob Hope Theater.”
Now aint that a mouthful???
Historic “Fox California Bob Hope Theatre” in Downtown Stockton
In May 2003, Stockton resident and developer Alex G. Spanos donated $500,000 toward the renovation of this historical theatre. At his request, the City Council voted to name the theatre after one of the Country’s best known entertainers – Bob Hope.
Tentative date for the Grand Re-Opening Celebration is September 18, 2004.
I also want to add that the Fox California Theatre came close to being demolished. In 1980,There was a proposal by the city of Stockton to tear down the Fox for a parking lot to complement the 10 story California Office Building next door, but thankfully the original owners fought the eminent domain case in court and won. Ironically the City now owns it 20 years later. Boy how times change,Thankfully for the better.
Ah my hometown theatre. A beautiful site.To add on the info above,after closing as a Second Run Grindhouse showing Horror, Science Fiction and Kung Fu Movies (Triple Feature for 50 cents), they reopened the following year showing Triple X Porno Movies such as “Deep Throat” and “Behind The Green Door” which fortunately lasted under a year before showing Spanish Language Movies in 1975. That lasted until 1977 when it was restored as a Live Venue Theatre under a new name (Fox Center For The Performing Arts) which was a flop and reverted back to a Spanish Language Movie Theatre in 1979. They closed their doors for good in 1981 and with the exception of an occasional Concert and Wedding, It remained closed until 1996 when the City of Stockton leased the building. Last year(2000), the City bought the Fox from the owners and is spending a couple of million dollars restoring the Fox to its former glory. In addition to the concerts, The Fox shows old Classic Films of Yesteryear(1930’s to 1060’s) 6 times a year. Also The Fox Theatre And The Fox California Theatre are one and the same so you should consolidate the two on your website. The Official name is “FOX CALIFORNIA THEATRE”.