Terrace Theatres at Friendly Center

3120 Northline Avenue,
Greensboro, NC 27408

Unfavorite 1 person favorited this theater

Showing 26 - 32 of 32 comments

Mike Rogers
Mike Rogers on March 28, 2011 at 7:34 pm

Yeah,Steve those Union Guys really made it easy to run the floor.

filmbooks
filmbooks on August 8, 2010 at 4:49 pm

86-88 Cineplex bought the Plitt chain and operated the Terrace. I was the last manager before it was sold to the Janus. It was a shoebox quad – the two big screens had been split down the middle. Some will remember Alvis Morehead – the greatest projectionist who ever lived. I never had to worry about the booth.

raysson
raysson on April 6, 2010 at 12:17 pm

The Terrace Theatre opened in 1965 as a single screen theatre that was owned and operated by Wilby-Kincey Theatres with super widescreen format that was capable of showing either 35MM or 70MM films. The auditorium was incredibly huge with a seating capacity of 800.
It remained a single screen theatre until the early-1970’s when a second auditorium was built that added over 600 seats when it was still under Wilby-Kincey Theatres.

By the late 1970’s a third screen was added,taking the second auditorium by split it down the middle,keeping the original 800 seat auditorium intact. Also the original auditorium was install with a six-track Dobly Stereo system in 1980 for the showing of “The Empire Strikes Back”,which was shown in 70MM when it was operated under the Plitt Southern Theatres banner.

By the mid-1980’s,the original auditorium was split down the middle as well making a fourth screen…by either the mid-1980’s or early 1990’s,two more screens were added with Janus Theatres acquired the Terrace Theatres from Plitt Southern Theatres until its closing in the late 1990’s. The theatre has since been demolished in early 2000 or 2001 to make way for expansion of Greensboro’s Friendly Center. Another theatre replaced it with a huge 16-screen megaplex that was located on the opposite end of Friendly Center.

Ralph Daniel
Ralph Daniel on October 31, 2009 at 2:36 am

The opening of the Terrace spelled doom for the downtown National Theatre on Elm Street. At the time, Wilby-Kincey operated ALL of the indoor theatres in Greensboro, and was apparently under a court order to divest itself of at least one of them when the Terrace opened. So they chose to close the National, the oldest of the group. No other operators came forward to take over its operation, so it was demolished within two years of the opening of the Terrace.

Coate
Coate on March 31, 2009 at 12:25 pm

Regarding the “Empire” retrospective article and corrected web address from the previous two comments…

Wouldn’t it make more sense to cite the exact page? Citing only the site’s homepage requires readers to needlessly hunt for the article. The specific page is: http://www.in70mm.com/news/2003/empire/index.htm

raysson
raysson on November 29, 2008 at 3:48 pm

The TERRACE THEATRES at Friendly Center closed in the late 1990’s. The original site on where the cinema stood is now a Romano’s Italian Restaurant. The TERRACE was replaced by the Grande Cinemas at Friendly Center,which is a huge 16-screen theatre that opened in early 2001.