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Plaza Theatre

Orlando, FL
425 North Bumby Avenue
, Orlando, FL 32803 United States
(map)
407.894.9057
Status: Open
Screens: Twin
Style: Unknown
Function: Performing Arts
Seats: 900
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Clearwater-based Salthouse Group purchased the 39-year-old venue in September 2002 for $1.7 million. Renovations of the 26,509-square-foot facility continued into 2003. The 900-seat theater retains the original "space age" exterior design.

Opening in 1963, The Plaza was Orlando's first two-screened movie theater. The theater was later purchased by Cineplex Odeon Corporation in 1985 and declining ticket sales made the theater a prime location for showing second-run movies. In 1992, it was sold again and became The Dove Family Entertainment Theatre, which performed Christian-themed shows.

In 1996, it underwent major interior renovations to become a performance hall for local shows. The Salthouse Group plans to continue bringing more family-friendly theater to the area such as comedies, concerts and musicals.

Related Websites

The Plaza Theatre (Official)
Contributed by TC


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Here is a recent photo of the Plaza Theater.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 19, 2007 at 5:05pm
Another photo of the Plaza Theatre.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/pulp-o-rama/431256366/sizes/o/
posted by Chuck1231 on Mar 22, 2009 at 11:13pm
It was know as the Rocking Chair Theatre. Located behind Colonial Plaza on Bumby, Florida State Theatres opened their premiere attraction on November 23rd 1963, the day after President Kennedy was killed. The picture they opened with was "McLintock". It had a large auditorium on the right side and a smaller one on the left. The large side had an enormous curved screen. Each of the side walls had a large, rear-illuminated porthole. The smaller side was less ornate with a standard Cinemascope screen. Both sides had a traveling curtain with amber wash lights. The large side ran a grind operation, usually 1:30 to 11:30. The small side ran evening and weekend shows only. Both sides would run the same picture with the same film print! Here's how it worked: The show times were staggered by one hour. After the projectionist finished running reel one, he would rewind it and walk it 50ft to the other side and hand it to the other projectionist. They did it this way for 11 years until they automated.

I was a relief projectionist from 1974 to 1980. Upstairs they had a nice setup. On the large side, they had Norelco DP70 projectors with Ashcraft Core-Lite lamphouses. The small side had Century's, Photophone 9030's and Peerless Magnarc's. The Norelco's were the early Todd AO type with the double motor capable of running at 30fps. They had originally been installed in a Miami theatre in 1957 and then reinstalled in the Plaza. I walked in late one night in September 1974 just as John Lovejoy and Art Pope were removing one of the Ashcrafts. Scattered on the floor were the large 70mm magazines. They were in the process of converting over to 60min reels, xenon lamphouses, automation control boxes and sensing tape. Sometime during the night Lovejoy glanced up to me and said, "I'll tell ya, Rick, this is one cheap damn way to run a motion picture". In a way he was right. That was the last night of the 20min changeovers. From then on, they ran a different program on each side.

The story of the Plaza isn't just about the building but the people who operated it. Former managers like Walter Colby and Red Tetter, projectionists like Pope, Lovejoy, Earl Rowland, Phil Sullivan, Gene Ragsdale, Wayne Masters, Dudley Washington and several names I can't remember anymore. It was a great old movie house and I had good memories there.
posted by epcotfilmguy on Aug 2, 2009 at 8:45pm
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