Circle Theater
2711 Storey Lane,
Dallas,
TX
5220
2711 Storey Lane,
Dallas,
TX
5220
7 people favorited this theater
Showing 1 - 25 of 42 comments
Hate to mention but this is NOT open as a theatre.. Hasn’t been in a while! IT was last known as a club, Stereo Live Dallas was its' last occupant and now appears vacant again! March 2024.. Sad, seems nothing last here for too long.. Seems like being a Bingo place was one of the longest ventures.. RAC Photography (flickr) Randy A Carlisle
Facebook page for Stereo Live Dallas. Some theatre photos if you scroll past promotional ones. Website below that shows there is also a Stereo Live Houston, but not inside a former theatre.
https://www.facebook.com/StereoLiveDallas/photos/?ref=page_internal
https://stereolive.com/?fbclid=IwAR1f71AQU2lIhYO7oLeVNesWRI24jA2H1Xs9k_-v-drPBBwYHu2wz_M975s
Google has loads of photos (and some videos) from Stereo Live Dallas, many of them quite recent, and many apparently posted by DJs who have presented shows there. The original auditorium interior has been stripped and black-boxed, but the lobby has many original features intact. Judging from the size of the crowds in many photos it looks like business is thriving.
Like the comment above me said it now called Stereo Live which play EDM music that what kids now days call it or what I call it Electronic music because before people were calling it EDM they use to call it Electronic music
Drove by the other day. It is now a Stereo Live which features EDM performances. You know, DJ’s playing drum tracks with sequencers via laptops for drug-addled young people. Not my thing but better than a bingo hall.
Dallas had two Circle Theaters. The first was downtown and can be found in the entry Joy Theater, its final name. But to people who may have seen the second of the Circle Theaters still standing in the 2000s, it appears that a building was constructed in the middle of nowhere with few buildings and no housing nearby. When built, it was part of a fun retail experiment around the Tom Field Traffic Circle – hence, the Circle. The 1,000-seat theater was architected by Pettigrew, Worley & Co. and was colorful with its neon interlocking circles on the outside and its crazy murals on the inside. The theater fit the area perfectly.
A carnival-like opening with Ernest Tubb in person outside, a thirty minute live radio program promoting the opening, fireworks and the film, “Welcome Stranger” were all included in the Circle’s launch on October 30, 1947. A newsreel of the capacity drawing event was shot.
In 1962, Interstate instituted a family-only film policy. But by 1968, the theater did a 180 and went all adult / art and downgraded to a weekends only operation. The theater announced a six-week weekend test group of films from January-February to determine interest in the Circle. Apparently, there wasn’t much because the theater closed on March 2, 1969.
In 1974, the Circle became a nightclub called The Old Theater with multiple levels with films playing on various levels, movie posters and movie photographs throughout. And unlike its predecessor, it provided free popcorn. That was followed by a live music venue called the Circle Theater. That was followed by an urban cowboy inspired disco called Cotton Eyed Joe’s complete with mechanical bull. That was followed by the Ritz Club / Ritz Rock and Roll Club. It was then the Dal-Star Bingo hall with the CRCLE on the outer sign replaced by BNGO.
Things get a bit dicey as the building is home to a variety of places. It was a Hispanic place of worship; it was the Baby O All-Stars / Baby O Disco Tec (2009) / Baby O Tejano Night Club; and potentially its last occupant was a Latino nightclub, Club Carnaval, which lit of the theater until late 2012 which – while a marked departure from the original interior – was just as festive and colorful as it had been in 1947. A wrestling match by Lucha Libre in 2013 was the last known event in the space. The fence around the property in 2013 suggested an uncertain future.
Featured on the discovery channel show “fast and loud”. Vertical sign has the word carnival on it now.
Some photos I took of the Circle Theatre 2006 .. Enjoy… Randy A Carlisle – Historical Photographer
I pass this theater on my way to work. It looks like it is not a functioning business anymore. Does anyone know who the owner may be and if it is, in fact, “in business”?
matt54.. sorry for the long delay in the return response. Yep, I shoot when-ever & where-ever I can. I now have 3,000 photos up on my flickr pages! www.flickr.com/photos/racphotography .. Enjoy! RAC Photography
matt54.. sorry for the long delay in the return response. Yep, I shoot when-ever & where-ever I can. I now have 3,000 photos up on my flickr pages! www.flickr.com/photos/racphotography .. Enjoy! RAC Photography
I live on Storey Lane. Been there since the mid 1960s. When our family walked to the theatre, we would pass by the lumber yard which is across Denton Drive. In front of the lumber yard, we would pick up pecans and eat them in the theatre. I did go to the circle bowl too.
“Had I been actually driving, I’d have have been in a collision for sure.” Ha-ha, Joe, ya gotta love Google Maps!
I, too, miss the comment preview function, but I miss the ability to search for theaters specifically by their previous names even more.
Google Maps still puts the pin icon for this theater on the wrong stretch of Storey Lane, about half a mile from its actual location, which is way over by Denton Drive. I managed to move the Street View to the theater anyway (take that, Google,) though I got lost in the interchange twice. Had I been actually driving, I’d have have been in a collision for sure.
It’s too bad there is now no “preview” function, as there was with the older format. Can we get that back?
Hey, Randy, how have you been? Done any shooting lately?
matt54… Thank You!!! I knew someone on here would know. IT stumped me big time when I saw the photo as I’ve looked to no avail to find that name anywhere.. Appreciate it!!
Randy, that was the name of the club that occupied it right after the theatre closed. IIRC, late 70’s?
Would anyone have a Clue why at one time, The Circle Theatre was called The OLD Theatre?? Here’s a shot a buddy of mine came across.. http://www.flickr.com/photos/sdorn/5820269500 .. Thanx.. RAC Photography
Here is a photo of the Circle Theatre as it sits today, in the block of Storey LANE (NOT Storey Street) presently identified as the 2700 block, NOT the 2100 block.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/63574356@N06/5785362657/in/photostream
Chuck – any idea where that older Circle Theatre was located?
I was in this theater several times in the late 60’s and very early 70’s – I believe its seating capacity was considerably more than 500 seats, perhaps half again that number, but no more than that.
My very first job at age 14 in 1966 was at Circle Bowl, the bowling alley just south of the theater. Mopped floors, emptied ashtrays and picked up the empty beer bottles. It had several pinballs and one coin-op pool table. I played the beer drinkers 8-ball. Across the traffic circle was the seafood restaurant which I recall was named the Bounty. Shaped like a ship. Nearby it was Perry’s Circle-D drive-in. It had 2 coin-op pool tables. Played the drunks there, too. It had dice games out side in the back. Also close by: Tower Motel’s Bamboo room, Southern Kitchen, Circle Inn. For me the theater was a place to practice making out! David
Thanks, The old books listed it as 2100 Storey St. address got changed when the interstate was built.
Google missed it shot, the Street view of the theatre is at View link