Crosstown Theatre

400 N. Cleveland Street,
Memphis, TN 38104

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Showing 26 - 34 of 34 comments

BarryFord
BarryFord on January 25, 2006 at 1:47 pm

There is nothing sacred left on this planet…nothing. How necessary was it for the Jehovah’s Witenesses to remove that landmark sign.

Does anyone know what they plan to do with it?

Will Dunklin
Will Dunklin on November 2, 2005 at 3:28 am

Sad news: the Crosstown’s finest exterior feature, the grand vertical sign (with its miles of neon) has been taken down by the church that has owned the building since about 1977. That sign first spelled C-R-O-S-S-T-O-W-N, and then in another color it would say CROSS-TOWN and then in a third color it would say CROSSTOWN. It hasn’t run in decades, but it was visible for blocks and blocks. Happily, the building still stands and word is that the interior is well cared for.

gorkipk
gorkipk on October 29, 2005 at 5:30 pm

The Crosstown was a classy theatre. I got kicked out of there several times!!!
Malco hired several brothers to mange their theatres. They all had small heads like the animation in Bettlejuice.
Movies I saw there:
The Innocents
Spartacus
Summer and Smoke
Tora Tora Tora
Mysterious Island
Little Big Man

Backseater
Backseater on October 15, 2005 at 2:31 am

In the picture posted above, I believe the building in the background just behind the “Crosstown” sign is the Sears Roebuck store.

Backseater
Backseater on October 13, 2005 at 5:36 pm

In 1951 the area was probably thought of as suburban…

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on October 13, 2005 at 2:39 am

Suburban? At this location?

JackCoursey
JackCoursey on October 12, 2005 at 4:47 pm

Noted in clipping from an old Memphis newspaper that Martin opened the Crosstown on May 15, 1951. With 1400 seats, the Crosstown had the distinction of being the largest and most luxurious suburban theatre in the metropolitan Memphis area. Curious to know how much, if any of the décor of the original auditorium remains intact. It supposedly was quite ornate.

Backseater
Backseater on October 10, 2005 at 4:53 pm

The Crosstown was on the East side of Cleveland a little South of North Parkway and the huge Sears Roebuck store mentioned above. Old-timers said it had been started in 1941 and construction was suspended during WWII so it was just a hole in the ground until 1946. I first saw it in 1963 as a freshman at Southwestern, which was a couple of miles East on North Parkway. Saw Jean-Paul Belmondo in “That Man from Rio” and Annette Funicello in “Muscle Beach Party” there, among others (you can tell I haven’t wasted MY life). It was still in business when I got back from the AF in 1973, playing things like “Towering Inferno” and re-releases of “2001-a Space Idiocy.” Malco wasn’t pleased with the cash flow, but didn’t want to let anybody else run it for fear of the competition, so they let it sit vacant for a while in the late 70s. They were looking for a way to unload it to someone who wouldn’t use it a movie theater. Enter the Jehovah’s Witnesses. By the time I left Memphis in 1983, they had taken over not only the theater for a conference center, but the entire surrounding block for offices, classrooms, and so forth. They left the marquee and the huge vertical “Crosstown” sign in place. I bet it’s real clean inside…. Best wishes.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on October 10, 2005 at 5:16 am

When I was a very little kid, my mom used to take me to the Sears store at Crosstown. It seemed enormous to me at the time. Was it near this theatre, and is it still a Sears store?