Comments from raysson

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raysson
raysson commented about Salisbury Mall Cinemas on Nov 13, 2013 at 4:09 pm

Mmandarano: Cinemark’s Tinseltown Cinemas is the only multiplex theater in Salisbury and the only operational one in all of Rowan County. Salisbury Mall Cinemas last operated as a second-run discount house before it closed in 2011.

raysson
raysson commented about Salisbury Mall Cinemas on Nov 13, 2013 at 4:07 pm

Micheal Coate:
OUT OF AFRICA was generally released on December 18,1985 in the larger cities of North Carolina. Salisbury Mall Cinemas didn’t get the film until mid-January of 1986.

raysson
raysson commented about Cinema Latino on Nov 13, 2013 at 4:03 pm

The premiere attractions for the December 17,1971 grand opening of the Kendale Cinema 1 & 2 were:

CINEMA 1: It’s Sean Connery as James Bond-007
The BIG 007 CHRISTMAS PREMIERE EVENT FOR SANFORD!!!
“DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER”-On the Big Screen In Color!!!

CINEMA 2: Ruth Gordon in “HAROLD AND MAUDE”-In Color

AND THE BIG ONES ARE COMING TO THE KENDALE CINEMA:

-Clint Eastwood in “DIRTY HARRY”

-Walt Disney’s “BEDKNOBS AND BROOMSTICKS”

-John Wayne and Richard Boone in “BIG JAKE”

-Gene Hackman in “THE FRENCH CONNECTION”

-The Musical Event Of The Year “FIDDLER ON THE ROOF”

-The BIG Event of 1971 is Coming-“BILLY JACK”

raysson
raysson commented about Cinema Latino on Nov 13, 2013 at 3:55 pm

Opened on December 17,1971 as the Kendale Cinema 1 & 2 under Charlotte-based Stewart and Everett Theatres as Sanford’s first-ever indoor twin cinema with a seating capacity of 400(200 seats each in both auditoriums).

The Kendale Cinemas was in between two major anchors of the Kendale Shopping Center…to the right of the cinema was a Winn Dixie grocery store….to the left of the cinema were Roses Department Store and Eckerd Drugs along with specialty shops and services. Sat in the middle of the shopping center was Central Carolina Bank and Trust Company.

raysson
raysson commented about Cinema Latino on Nov 8, 2013 at 3:00 pm

Opened on December 17,1971 as the Kendale Cinema 1 & 2 under Stewart and Everett Theatres as Sanford’s first-ever indoor twin cinema. The seating capacity was 400 with 200 seats each in both auditoriums. Carmike Cinemas took over this theatre in 1986 and it was renamed the Kendale Twin until its closing in 2007. In March of 2008,this theatre reopened as the Cinema Latino and it was the first theatre in the state of North Carolina to show first and second run features in Spanish.

raysson
raysson commented about Oleander Twin on Nov 5, 2013 at 3:12 pm

A lot of great Hollywood blockbusters played at the Oleander Twin first-run…..

Not only did all three original STAR WARS films played here first-run(1977, 1980, and 1983)

But THE EXORCIST (May 9,1974)

AMERICAN GRAFFITI (November 9,1973)

THE GODFATHER (March 22,1972)

SUPERMAN:THE MOVIE (December 15,1978)

ROCKY (February 16,1977)

THE TOWERING INFERNO (December 16,1974)

Others mention:

THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE

THE GODFATHER:PART II

JAWS 2

CHINATOWN

Just to name a few.

raysson
raysson commented about AMC Classic Wilson 10 on Nov 4, 2013 at 5:34 pm

The only original anchors that are still there is J.C. Penney and Roses which has been there since the Parkwood Shopping Center opened as a open-air strip plaza in 1964. The Carmike 10 Cinemas, along with Dollar Tree,Kerr Drugs and other speciality shops will the only remnants of the old Parkwood Mall.

raysson
raysson commented about Regal Cinema 6 on Nov 4, 2013 at 5:24 pm

THE LITCHFIELD CINEMA 6 opened on October 28,1988 under Litchfield Theatres.

The Opening Attractions for the Grand Opening were:

-Rebecca DeMornay and Mary Gross in FEDS

-Emilio Estevez in YOUNG GUNS

-Bruce Willis in DIE HARD

-Kevin Costner and Susan Sarandon in BULL DURHAM

-BIG TOP PEE WEE starring Pee Wee Herman

COMING ATTRACTIONS TO THE LITCHFIELD CINEMAS:

-From director John Carpenter THEY LIVE!

-Steven Seagal and Pam Grier in ABOVE THE LAW

raysson
raysson commented about Regal Cinema 6 on Nov 4, 2013 at 5:16 pm

It was known as the LITCHFIELD CINEMA 6 under Litchfield Theatres. It opened on October 28,1988 as Wilson’s first-ever multiplex theater. Regal Cinemas took over this theater by the late-1990’s and renamed it the Regal Cinema 6. It closed in 2007 when Carmike Cinemas opened a huge state of the art all stadium seating multiplex near the main entrance of the Parkwood Mall.

raysson
raysson commented about South Square Mall Cinemas I, II, III, IV on Nov 4, 2013 at 2:37 pm

This cinema closed in 1994 when Carmike Cinemas built a huge 10-screen multiplex theater located near South Square Mall at the intersection of Shannon Road and Martin Luther King Parkway that opened later that year.

raysson
raysson commented about South Square Mall Cinemas I, II, III, IV on Nov 4, 2013 at 2:34 pm

THEATRE HISTORY:

1975-1987 CinemaNational Theatres

1987-1992 USA National Theatres

1992-1994 Carmike Cinemas

raysson
raysson commented about South Square Mall Cinemas I, II, III, IV on Nov 4, 2013 at 2:33 pm

CORRECTION: The South Square Mall Cinemas officially opened on December 26,1975 as the Triangle’s newest modern design theater and Durham’s first multiplex cinema under CinemaNational Corporation and later operated under Boston-based USA Theatres. The seating capacity was 800.

The Opening Attractions for the Grand Opening of the South Square Mall Cinemas on December 26,1975 were:

Screen 1: Burt Reynolds in HUSTLE

Screen 2: Al Pacino in DOG DAY AFTERNOON

Screen 3: Michael Caine in THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING

Screen 4: Sidney Poitier in LET’S DO IT AGAIN.

Seating capacity for Screen 1 was 250

Seating capacity for Screen 3 was 250

Seating capacity for Screen 2 was 150

Seating capacity for Screen 4 was 150

raysson
raysson commented about Northgate Twin Theatres on Nov 4, 2013 at 12:30 pm

Chuck1231: This theatre couldn’t hold back the capacity crowds when they played “SUPERMAN:THE MOVIE”(1978)…not to mention the lines snaked around the cinema for “RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK”, “E.T.”,“TEMPLE OF DOOM”, “FIRST BLOOD II”,and “BACK TO THE FUTURE”.

raysson
raysson commented about Parkwood Mall Triple on Oct 31, 2013 at 3:10 pm

At the time of the Parkwood Cinema’s opening in 1968,the original Parkwood Shopping Center opened in mid-1964 as a open-air strip plaza that became one of the largest suburban shopping centers in Eastern North Carolina. It’s original anchors included Roses, Penney’s,Kerr Discount Drugs and a Winn-Dixie supermarket. The expansion of turning Parkwood Shopping Center into a indoor mall didn’t come until 1978 when Belk Tyler’s department store moved from Downtown Wilson into Parkwood Mall along with the anchors J.C. Penney,Kerr Discount Drugs and Roses and other speciality shops,which left Parkwood Mall by the late-1990’s/early-2000’s not long after the Parkwood Cinema closed in 2004. The rest of the mall has been demolished leaving two of the original anchors J.C. Penney and Roses along with the new Carmike Cinema 10. The Belk Department Store is now over at Heritage Crossing Center on the opposite end of Ward Boulevard.

raysson
raysson commented about Parkwood Mall Triple on Oct 31, 2013 at 3:01 pm

The original theater was a single screener with 560-seats. It was twinned on November 9,1974 adding 323 seats,bringing the total to 883,and was renamed the Parkwood Cinema 1 & 2. By November 21,1984,it expanded from two to three screens and was renamed the Parkwood Cinema 1-2-3. Carmike took over in 1986 and renamed it the Parkwood Mall Triple until it closed in 2004.

raysson
raysson commented about Parkwood Mall Triple on Oct 31, 2013 at 2:39 pm

From the Wednesday August 7,1968 edition of the Wilson Daily Times:

WILSON NEW 560-SEAT THEATER-CEREMONIES SCHEDULED

THE NEW PARKWOOD CINEMA WILL OPEN THURSDAY

Grand opening ceremonies for Wilson’s new 560-seat Parkwood Cinema will be held at 8:00pm tomorrow at the modern theater facility in the Parkwood Shopping Center.

Master of ceremonies will be Bill Bunn of radio station WGTM-AM. Participating in the ceremony will be Roddy Brown,president of the Parkwood Merchants Association;William A. Bridgers,Jr.,president of the Wilson Chamber of Commerce,and Wilson’s Mayor E.B. Pittman;Miss Irma Jewel Smith,Miss Wilson,and the Rev. Larry Patterson,associate pastor of First Christian Church who will deliver the invocation.

Executives of Stewart and Everett Theatres,Inc.,which owns the new movie house will attend the opening ceremony. They will include Charles B. Trexler,president;Eddie Morris,advertising manager for the company,and W.W. Cunningham,eastern division manager. Phil Wicker,president of Standard Theater Supply Company;John Shaver,sound engineer for Carolina Sound Equipment and Service Company of Charlotte;and Dean Phillips,manager of the Charlotte branch of Standard Theater Supply Company of Charlotte and Greensboro will also be special guests. They will represent the companies who installed the majority of equipment for the Parkwood Cinema.

In addition,managers of film companies have been invite. According to Haywood Brown,manager of the Center Theatre,who will also be the manager of the new Parkwood Cinema. A select group of local people has been invited to the grand opening to view Paramount’s “The Odd Couple” starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau.

The Cinema is located in the Western section of the Parkwood Shopping Center next to N.C. Highway 42/Tarboro Street exit facing Ward Boulevard. Several hundred “front door” parking spaces are available for patrons. A special 54-seat smoking section is included in the new facility. In this section,patrons may watch the movie on the 40-foot wide screen and smoke all at the same time. The smoke will rise overhead through specially installed smoking vents.

The theater,first of its hype to be constructed in North Carolina,is 127 feet in length and 60 feet wide,and is decorated in gold and pine-green olive. The Parkwood Cinema features a comfortable lounge,lobby,refreshment center,new deluxe push-back seats and the most modern sound and projection equipment. Regular showing times will be for two matinee showings and three evening shows with the last showing at 10:00pm. The Cinema will have matinees daily.

After the grand opening showing of “The Odd Couple”,the coming attractions to the Parkwood Cinema will be “Bandolero”,“Prudence And The Pill”,along with “The Detective”,“With Six You Get Eggroll”, “How Sweet It Is”,and “The Swimmer”. Other coming attractions coming soon will be the epic spectacles “The Bible”,“Far From The Madding Crowd”,and “Oliver!”

raysson
raysson commented about Colony Theatre on Oct 30, 2013 at 4:43 pm

Closed in 1983.

raysson
raysson commented about Regal Cinema 6 on Oct 30, 2013 at 4:34 pm

WaldoOliverOxenfree:

For the record,the GOLD PARK was never a three-screen cinema. GOLD PARK was a twin cinema. That record for Wilson’s only three-screen theater was at Parkwood Mall. Parkwood Triple closed in January of 2004.

raysson
raysson commented about Gold Park Twin on Oct 30, 2013 at 4:26 pm

THE GOLD PARK CINEMA 1 & 2 opened on August 19,1977 as Wilson’s first-ever modern twin theaters under Charlotte-based Stewart and Everett Theatres.

The seating capacity for this theater was at 400,which Auditoriums One and Two seated 200 each. The opening attractions for the grand opening of the GOLD PARK were on Screen 1: Richard Harris in “ORCA”. Playing on Screen 2 was “THE BAD NEWS BEARS IN BREAKING TRAINING” with Tatum O'Neal and Tony Curtis.

Carmike Cinemas took over this theatre in 1986 after their buyout of Stewart and Everett and renamed it the GOLD PARK TWIN. Due to the competition of the newer and bigger Litchfield Cinema 6,Carmike Cinemas reduced the GOLD PARK TWIN to a second-run discount house by the late-1980’s. It closed in 1995.

raysson
raysson commented about Parkwood Mall Triple on Oct 22, 2013 at 4:18 pm

From the November 9,1974 edition of The Wilson Daily Times:

CINEMA II OPENS IN PARKWOOD

Parkwood Cinema II,after five months of construction, opened Friday night next to Cinema I as Wilson’s first-ever twin theater. Owned and operated under Charlotte-based Stewart and Everett Theatres.

The new 323-seat theater is connected to Cinema I. Haywood Brown will manage both theaters. Featuring Polaris-type chairs with deep cushioning on the seats and arm rests,the new theater will have different hours than Cinema I. Brown says continous showings will be run daily with three matinee showings and two evening showings. Patrons will enter both theaters through the same doors,but Cinema II goes will exit through separated doors facing the entry door to Cinema I auditorium. Concessions will be brought at the same stand as will tickets but there will be different openings for ticket purchases at the booth.

The decor is a mixture of light and dark blue carpeting in the hallway of the new theater which features a 17 x 35 foot screen. There will be separate bathroom facilities and one for handicapped persons. The opening attraction for the grand opening of the Parkwood Cinema 1 & 2 will be in Auditorium One will be “Death Wish” starring Charles Bronson. In Auditorium Two will be “For Pete’s Sack” starring Barbra Streisand. The coming attractions will be “The No Mercy Man”,“The Harrad Summer”,“Chinatown”,and “Earthquake!”

raysson
raysson commented about Marketplace Cinemas on Oct 22, 2013 at 12:48 pm

From the Friday May 31,1985 edition of the Winston-Salem Journal:

CINEMA 6 OPENING TODAY AT MARKETPLACE MALL

The biggest moviehouse in Winston-Salem opens today,and the company that built it is already looking for a place to build one as big,or maybe even bigger.

With six screens and 1,700 seats,Plitt Southern Theatres Cinema 6 at the Marketplace Mall on Peters Creek Parkway is big for Winston-Salem. But Plitt builds nothing smaller than six screens these days,and his eight and 10-screen moviehouses built in the works in several other cities,John L. Huff,vice president of operations of Plitt Southern Theatres Inc.,said yesterday.

“We felt for a long time that Winston-Salem was underscreened,even though its a dynamic movie market,” Huff said. “Even with this theater and counting the expansion at the Reynolds,there will be only 17 first-run screens in the market. We are continuing to look for other locations in the Winston-Salem market especially in the Western area towards Clemmons,” Huff said.

The next Plitt complex will have at least six screens and might be 10 or so from Cinema 6, Huff said. The same film could be shown simultameously at two different theatres to different market segments,he said. It was originally envisioned as a four screen theater,but was expanded to six in the early planning,Huff said. “We would have gone to eight screens if the site had been a little bigger,” he said. Total investment is about $1.3 million,he said.

An eight screen moviehouse was proposed by another company for a site off Robin Hood Road at Polo Road last year. But construction was postponed after residents objected to a needed rezoning change. A proposed development guide for the area calls for office and multifamily residental uses in the area.

Plitt is the fourth-largest moviehouse company in the country and the largest privately owned chain,with more than 600 screens nationwide. The Southeast is one of the fastest growing areas,with 260 screens expected to be done by Christmas. Once Plitt identifies a market that will absorb more screens,it looks for a high traffic,his visibility location,Huff said. “That almost always means a shopping center or a mall,” Huff said. “The theaters,in turn,serve as attractions for shoppers”,said Michael Kelley of Marketplace Venture,Inc. “The theater is really a major anchor for the mall,"Kelley said. "It’s just what we need to make our place a strong destination location for the whole North Carolina market.”

Multi-screen theaters allow scheduling a mix of movies at the theaters,drawing audiences of all ages and tastes,Huff explained. Multiple screens also allow major movies to be shown for longer periods,drawing repeat viewers and people from outlying areas,and leaving other screens free for shorter-run films,he said.

The complex houses two 350-seat, two-275 seat,and two-200 seat auditoriums.

It will allow showings of foreign and art films that are likely to draw only small audiences,without sacrificing revenue because of empty seats in a larger hall,Huff said. If a major movie seems likely to fill more than 350 seats per showing,Cinema 6 can show it on as many as three screens,about 20 seconds apart, with the film running from projector to projector by a system of rollers.

The opening day mix at Cinema 6 includes two first-run films and four other recently released films that have played before,Huff noted. “We will run all first-run films as the release schedule of the film companies permits,but we would rather bring back a good movie that people missed the first time around or want to see it again than put in a first-run movie that we could get,but that nobody wants to see,” Huff said.

“Multi-screen theaters are our form of diversification,” Huff said. “Its just like any other form of retail:You’ve got to give people want they want,where they live,and the multi-screen complexes are the way to do it most efficiently.”

raysson
raysson commented about Carmike Cinemas 4 on Oct 17, 2013 at 3:26 pm

Seating Capacity for this theatre was at 700.

Screen 1: 200

Screen 2: 200

Screen 3: 150

Screen 4: 150

raysson
raysson commented about Carmike Willowdaile Cinema 8 on Oct 16, 2013 at 6:48 pm

Mike and Chuck1231: I was THERE when the Willowdaile Cinema had the exclusive engagement showings of “TROIS” and the only showing in the Carolinas for Tony Brown’s “THE WHITE GIRL”. These were the type of movies that brought in HUGE black audiences!

raysson
raysson commented about AMC Park Terrace 6 on Oct 15, 2013 at 5:26 pm

Cineplex Odeon operated this theatre between 1987 and 1989 when you was the general manager. Cineplex Odeon operated it until 1991 when Carmike Cinemas took over this theatre until 1995 when it was purchased by Consolidated Theatres of Charlotte.

raysson
raysson commented about Thruway 1 & 2 on Oct 10, 2013 at 11:41 am

Opened on February 16,1969 as a single screener with a seating capacity of 600. Named the THRUWAY THEATRE or THE THRUWAY ULTRAVISION THEATRE

Second Auditorium opened in 1977 with a seating capacity of 350,and was renamed the Thruway 1 & 2 under ABC Theatres.

Carmike Cinemas closed this theatre in 1994.