Waikiki 3
2284 Kalakaua Avenue,
Honolulu,
HI
96815
2284 Kalakaua Avenue,
Honolulu,
HI
96815
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Here is a website I created showing what replaced the Waikiki Theater:
http://bobster1985.tripod.com/waikikitheatertoday/
This is a photo of the Waikiki Theater a few months before it was demolished.
This is a vintage photo of the Waikiki Theater.
Regarding the status of the shuttered Waikiki 1-3 and the IMAX auditorium (from the 6/21/05 edition of the Honolulu Advertiser):
Full-time, year-round circus on tap in Waikiki
By Andrew Gomes
Advertiser Staff Writer
A troupe of contortionists, acrobats and high-wire artists is coming to Waikiki with plans to dazzle visitors and residents with regular performances in the former IMAX theater on Seaside Avenue.
Mystika Hawaii LLC recently signed a multiyear lease with landowner Robertson Properties Group and is expected to begin twice-daily shows as early as next spring in a deal that will add another new attraction to O'ahu’s primary visitor destination.
“It’s really going to add a nice entertainment flavor to the area, not only for tourists but for the local people,” said Greg Swedelson, Robertson Properties vice president of acquisitions and leasing.
Details of the show are being kept under wraps by Mystika’s Florida-based organizers, but it will be sort of a “mini Cirque du Soleil” with vaudeville-style acts including gravity-defying stunts and other amazing human performances, Swedelson said.
Mystika is affiliated with the Moscow State Circus, a traveling troupe out of Sarasota, Fla., that has toured in Hawai'i. But Jamie Brown, a local real-estate broker who represented Mystika, said the new show will be of a higher caliber than Moscow State Circus acts.
“It is completely different,” Brown said. “It’s going to be much more like a Vegas Cirque du Soleil kind of show.”
Mystika is expected to provide the Florida-based group another show with a more permanent venue, while adding a new attraction to the wave of renovation and redevelopment of Waikiki hotels, shopping centers, roads and beaches over the past several years.
Rick Egged, executive director of the Waikiki Improvement Association, said Mystika will complement the handful of live productions that include comedy, magic, music and Polynesian shows.
“I think it’s a great addition to our entertainment fare,” he said.
The IMAX theater, which opened in 1991 with a towering screen and 420 seats, was closed two years ago by Consolidated Amusement Co., a Robertson Properties affiliate that acquired the theater in 1999 from Utah-based Destination Cinema.
Robertson Properties is Consolidated’s real-estate development sister company, replacing the Waikiki III theater on Kalakaua Avenue with a two-story retail complex housing Foot Locker, California Pizza Kitchen, Whaler’s Market, a steak-and-seafood restaurant and about 80 kiosks.
The California-based development company also is seeking a large retail tenant to occupy the former Waikiki I and II theater building next to the IMAX on Seaside. Swedelson said Robertson Properties is talking to a couple of big-box retailers for the 26,265-square foot site, but it is still available.
To answer your question, Bklyn Cinemas, a FOOT LOCKER and a PIZZA PARLOR !!! I used to like Foot Locker and California Pizza Kitchen;
you can be sure I will never buy another shoe at any Foot Locker nor
and any more pizzas at any California Pizza Kitchen location!
Speaking about Brooklyn, I assume you are from New York. Any possibility that the great BEEKMAN THEATRE in New York will be saved? It is still open and in perfect shape; however, I understand the wrecking ball is scheduled this year. Like the Waikiki, it is listed in the Library of Congress photos.
This is a true sad event. I passed by this theater about 5 or 6 years ago, although was never inside.
Very sad that such a gem is now gone. What is coming in its place?
Hard to believe architect C.W. Dickey’s theatre masterpiece is now
just a pile of rubble.
Scott, I am not surprised to hear those amplifiers are still cooking. Joe Schmidt (remember him) and I installed them all over Oahu in most of the Royal theatres. They were his design, very reliable, inexpensive, and put out a very nice quality. I actually moved a couple of them from the Royal, when it closed, to the newly twinned King theatre. I donated the blue travelor curtain to a local high school to dress up their stage, and the gold curtain was
moved to the Kapiolani. I got away from Consolidated before the axe fell, I heard Sol retired, and last I heard, Wes was managing the Pearlridge. Too bad you are not in Hawaii to help with the organ removal. I am sure they could use your expert advice about doing it carefully and with respect. It was a great place to work in those days, lots of magnificent theatres. I miss that.
I can imagine…Lloyd Myers was very proud of that theatre and rightly so. Sol retired many years ago. Wes is still around…he’s managing a theatre now after being downsized (as I was). Believe it or not, I have several of the former Royal power amplifiers in my living room.
And of course, who as a projectionist at the Waikiki, myself included, could forget Mr. Richards. Much of the old “Earthquake” sound equipment survived many years before before being chewed up by termites. I could always tell if I was on time for work at the Waikiki if the earthquake was happening just as I was getting out of the elevetor in the parking garage. The Waikiki was the last bastion of showmanship in the islands…the ambiance, the lighting, the organ…the likes of it will never be seen again on a regular basis.
My friend in Hawaii reports that day 5 of the the demolition seemed to concentrate on taking down the pipe organ cnambers…with great difficulty!
Great hearing from you Scott! Westley, Sol and I dismantled the Royal when it was sold. It was a very unpleasant experience, being a part of killing it and watching it die was very sad. I hope never to have to do that again.
We had fun at #3 with “Earthquake” in Sensurround and running the spotlight for dear ole John on the weekends. It sure was lonely up that projection room late at night. Of course, who could forget the great “Buck” Richards, our beloved manager and his Aloooooooooooha.
Hey there Vito…yep…remember the Royal very well. Last time I was on the property it was a Perry Boys Smorgy. Don’t know what it is now. I left Honolulu for Hilo in 2000, left Hilo for the Pacific Northwest (where I am now) in 2003.
Hi Scott,Yup I heard the same thing. It’s hard to believe all the Waikiki thetares, #1,#2,#3,Cinerama and Kuhio are all gone.
Remember the Royal? (also gone)
My goodness…seems a couple former co-workers are posting here. Received word from a friend in Honolulu that demolition has begun. Won’t be long now and the location will be just another retail space on Kalakaua Ave.
The theater was beautiful in 1977 when I saw a film there. Sort of an Atmospheric/quonset hut design.
Old interior photos of the Waikiki Theater:
View link
Charles, it’s happening all over the country, beautiful old theares are being torn down. Waikiki is especially troubling to me since God knows they do not need any more retail space on kalakaua. I would have thought perhaps it could be preserved much like the Hawaii for film and,with an added stage space,live shows. Sadly, on my next trip to Hawaii there will be yet another grave site for me to visit.
Vito,
The battle is between the college and a group to save the Varsity. The college wants to demolish the theatre for more dorms. The group wants to restore it to its original single screen theatre. The Varsity is really the only Art House in Honolulu. It would be another big loss to Hi. Seems we are down to the Hawaii Theatre as for as the old movie palaces. I remember the Kohio with its large marquee and all the neon. I remember when I went there to see the movie “Arthur” I dropped my sun glasses and stepped on them and on the way out there was a nice litte sun glass shop right across from the box office toward the side street. Bought me a new pair. Just two years later TWA started non-stop service from St. Louis to HNL and I was one of the first pilots to innaugarate the service. Have been flying the route ever since. I just don’t understand how they could let the Waikiki theatre be destroyed with its rich history.
Charles, I was there for the twining of the Kuhio. I worked it as a single screen, and later, with my friend Ron, as a twin. Kuhio was a 70mm house and had a couple of roadshows there although most of them were at the Cinerama. The Varsity is already a twin, do they want to resore it or keep it open as is?
Actually the Waikiki Theatre (Waikiki 3) is not on Kalakaua Ave. The Waikiki 1 and 2 are but the Waikiki was located at 321 Seaside, around the corner from the entrance to 1 & 2. The IMAX is across the alley from the Waikiki.
Vito when you worked in Hi. was it before or after they transformed the Kuhio to the Kuhio 1 & 2? Also there is a push to preserve the Varsity.
THis is horrible horrible news. and what… for a Footlocker. IS there anything that can be done to stop the horrible demoliton. A slice of Hawaiian culture is going to disappear
No Patsy, I am retired now and live in New York. I have many friends in Hawaii and visit often. Sadly, most of the theatres I worked in,
Waikiki 1,2,3, Cinerama, Royal, Kuhio are gone. The Varsity still exsists, but it is a twin now and I hear it’s on it’s last legs.
I am happy to see the Hawaii has been restored and is used mostly for live events.
vito: Cute story and aloha! And thanks for your many years of service as a theatre projectionist! BTW, are you in Hawaii still?
He he, no Patsy did not see any ghosts, but it was at times a very lonely job. I used to think the world could come to an end and I would not know it. Sometimes at #3, except for maybe an usher bringing me a soda, during a double shift I was alone for 12 hours a day. The booth was three flights up, so even the manager rarely came up to visit. We would never start the movie until the manager called on the intercom to say it was ok to start. I can still hear manager Buck Richards, at about 11pm when it was time to start the last show of the day, call and say “ok vito,let’s go home” to which I would reply “AL ooooooooo ha”
vito: Have to ask…….do you have any ghost stories from being a lonely projectionists?
The Waikiki complex was a great place to see a movie (#3 in particular had a lot of charm), and it’s a shame that the theaters couldn’t survive. The reason given by Consolidated was that the theaters didn’t attract much tourist traffic and residents preferred the new megaplexes (Dole Cannery and Ward Stadium) that were easier to access and offered better and cheaper parking options.
Note that the IMAX theater located next to the Waikiki closed in the summer of 2003 and remains vacant. I saw “The Matrix Reloaded” at the IMAX, which turned out to be the final attraction there. Consolidated’s reason for the closure: the location was unpopular with residents (traffic and parking hassles) and the IMAX attracted insufficient tourist business.