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Phipps Plaza Theater

Atlanta, GA
3500 Peachtree Road NE
, Atlanta, GA 30326 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Triplex
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: Unknown
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
A three screen set-up, lost when they remodeled the Phipps Plaza shopping centre. At one time the Penthouse was THE place to see a film in Atlanta. Typical Cineplex Odeon run into the ground death. While Plitt ran it it was a first class operation. Some of the seats ended up at the now closed Franklin Plaza in Marietta.

A 14-screen AMC now operates from the Phipps Plaza Shopping Centre.
Contributed by Raymond Stewart


YOUR COMMENTS

 
I saw Close Encounters here in 1977. The sound was so distorted. I asked the manager to fix it. He said the projectionist was out getting a haircut. Great experience.
posted by Don Rosen on Apr 8, 2005 at 4:48am
The address for the Phipps is 3500 Peachtree Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 30326. When ABC Southeastern debuted the Plaza 1969 it was a single "very wide" screen theatre. In the mid 1970s Plitt took over operation of the theatre and split the auditorium down the centre in one of the best “twining” jobs I ever saw. In 1973 the Phipps Penthouse was constructed adjacent to the existing theatre in the upper north wing of the mall. The Penthouse had its own ticket booth and lobby. Both ABC and Plitt ran an excellent operation a Phipps Plaza. When the mall went through a major remolding in the early 1990s, the theatres were demolished and a department store now resides in their former site. AMC opened a 14-screen theatre in the mall around 1992.
posted by JackCoursey on May 16, 2005 at 8:13pm
The Phipps Plaza Theatre was one of the outstanding movie theatres in Atlanta history, and after reading the two posts on Cinema Treasures I thought that it would be nice if the whole story was told. So, here it is, from the beginning up to the point that the existing posts take over.

The Phipps Plaza Shopping Center was built in 1968-69 across Peachtree Road from the existing Lenox Square which at the time hosted its own fine single screen first run theatre. From the beginning, Phipps Plaza considered itself more upscale than Lenox and it showed in the choice of anchor stores Lord and Taylor and Saks 5th Avenue, and the design of the theatre. The Phipps Theatre bridged a gap in theatre design between the old downtown movie palaces such as the Fox, Roxy, Grand, and Erlanger, and the modern day spaceship look of Rave, Regal, AMC, etc... Phipps could best be described as 1970's living room. The lobby was not particularly big, but was the full height of both levels of the mall. From the second mall level you could look down onto the open area in front of the boxoffice and into the lobby thanks to the two story glass wall that separated the lobby from the mall itself. The lobby was furnished in ultra modern (for the times) art and seating areas. The lounges were also very swank with a women's rest room area that did not have stalls as such but actual private rooms with wooden doors. Each stall / room had its own private basin.

Nice as the lobby was, it was the design of the auditorium that really set the theatre apart from its contemporaries. The auditorium held 860 seats, but instead of a shoebox pattern was actually wider than it was deep. Across the front was a wall to wall curved screen. I do not know the dimensions, but it must have been equal to the 34' by 65' Cinerama screen that was in the Atlanta / Erlanger at that time. The layout of the seating area was also curved to the same degree, opposite from the screen. There was no center aisle. Two aisles along the walls provided access to the very long rows of seating. The first time I saw a movie there I sat in the middle and was amazed by the way I could look down the row and see the seats curve out of sight before reaching the wall. Although this provided an outstanding field of view from almost any seat in the house, it did cause problems when the house was full, which it often was. Anyone sitting in the middle had to climb over a minimum of 15 to 20 people if they had to leave during the show. It also made it hard for the theatre to be sold to capacity because of the tendency people have to leave a seat between themselves and their temporary neighbors. Just outside the projection booth there was a small balcony the manager could look off of to spot the gaps in the patrons, and he could then use the PA system to ask the everyone move into the center of the rows so they could free up seats at the ends of the rows. The auditorium was completely covered in medium green drapes while the seats were dark red. The floor was either painted, stained, or poured black.

As with everything else, the projection booth was equipped state of the art. There were two 35 /70 projectors which did not point at the screen, but toward each other into a box known as an Optiverter. This system, which I believe was called Optivision, used a system of mirrors inside the box to adjust and enlarge the picture so that by the time it came out the front it filled up the entire curved screen with amazingly sharp focus and light. This was a new and very delicate system which won an Academy Award for technical achievement, as the theatre was proud to inform you by the way of a plaque posted next to the boxoffice. As with anything of this nature, exact alignment was a must, and that was not always the case. The tech for the Wil-Kin company spent many long hours at the Phipps and the South DeKalb Twin fine tuning their boxes. Despite these problems, when the system was working right it produced a great movie watching experience, especially when coupled with 4 and 6 track magnetic sound. To add to the enjoyment, there was a vertical rack of lights behind the drapes on each edge of the screen which pointed toward the center of the screen. Whenever there was an overture preceding a movie, the curtain would be closed after the previews, the auditorium lights would remain off, and the two racks of screen lights would illuminate the closed curtain. As the overture ended, the screen lights would dim and the curtain would open. Since all previews at that time were flat and most roadshow type movies were scope, this had the added effect of almost doubling the size of the screen. The scope picture used the whole screen of course, but the flat was impressive too, using the full floor to ceiling height of the screen.

ABC Southeastern Entertainment, the operators of the Fox and Roxy in downtown Atlanta as well as the Alabama and Ritz in downtown Birmingham, opened the Phipps Plaza Theatre during the Christmas holidays of 1969. The opening movie was Bob, Carol, Ted, and Alice. The theatre and movie were an immediate hit. BCTA was followed by the not so hit They Shoot Horses Don't They? which was in turn followed by the biggest hit of those early years, M*A*S*H. By this time Phipps was established as one of Atlanta's top theatres, a place where people expected the big films to play. Other big grossing films to play in those years were Klute, What's Up Doc? and The Getaway. Business was so good that ABC decided to add a screen, and in 1973 The Phipps Penthouse Theatre was built on the upper level of the mall just to the north of the existing theatre. At 550 seats, this house was not as large, or grand as the downstairs location, but was quite a theatre in its own right. Other than sharing a manager and staff, the Penthouse was run as a completely separate theatre with its own boxoffice, concession stand and projectionist. It had a very ugly and distracting loud color scheme for its auditorium walls and seats, but it also had a curved screen with Optivision projection. The Penthouse opened on December 26, 1973 with The Exorcist. This was the height of the glory days for this location, and in fact, it proved to be the beginning of the end.

The success of Phipps convinced the ABC crowd that there was business to support another screen. But, where to put it? There was no more mall space convenient, and besides, that would mean paying more rent. The solution? Split the original downstairs theatre. I know that there is a movie theatre Hell somewhere, heavily populated by theatre owners and execs who spent the 70's carving up once proud venues into shotguns and shoeboxes, but there should be an especially hot corner reserved for who ever made this decision. In March of 1975, the run of Young Frankenstein was brought to an early end while still doing sellout business. The magnificent, wide, curved screen, curved seating area showplace, was split into two rectangular shoeboxes, each seating about 500 with flat screens and 4-16-4 seating divided by two off center aisles. While not bad theatres when compared to other criminal designs of that era, they were truly pathetic sights for anyone who knew what was destroyed to create them. The tone for the new version of Phipps was set by the premiere engagement of the new Phipps Plaza Twin, none other than At Long Last Love staring Burt Reynolds and Cybill Sheppard. Need I say more?

Despite this beginning, the location continued to do well. The summer of 1975 brought Jaws, which probably made the owners wish they had their 350 lost seats back. Following that were such hits as Logans Run, Omen, A Bridge Too Far, Jaws 2, and Empire Strikes Back. The Penthouse got into the act with the Sensurround release of Midway and in 1977 scored a first with the premiere of Dolby Stereo in Atlanta when Close Encounters opened. (I know there are people who will dispute this. There were a few other Dolby equipped theatres in Atlanta, and some of them were playing movies that had previously opened in mono, like Star Wars, but Close Encounters was the first movie to premiere in Dolby in Atlanta.) Even movies that did not do well overall did well at Phipps due to the demographics of the area. These included Lucky Lady, Barry Lyndon, and The Other Side of Midnight.

In the early 80's, I am not sure of the exact year, ABC sold out to Plitt Theatres which later sold out to Cineplex, and the handwriting was soon on the wall. I do not know the terms of the Plitt deal with Phipps. They might have just been running the location for a management fee like ABC did for years with the Fox. At any rate, they did not spend one dime on keeping the theatre up. The last movie I saw there was The Verdict in 1983. By that time the Penthouse had lost its name and identity and the place was being run as a triple. The boxoffice of the Penthouse had been turned into a giant planter, complete with plastic plants. All tickets were sold from the downstairs boxoffice, a source of no small amount of irritation to patrons in those pre elevator days. The downstairs theatre had large sections of carpet missing and a small version of Niagara Falls running down the large two story lobby wall and into buckets placed in front of the concession stand. The once proud auditorium was in similar shape with a very musty smell to boot. I never went back until the night before it closed where with the help of the projectionist I shot several rolls of film. Sadly I know of no pictures of the 1969 theatre, but the Penthouse looked pretty much unchanged from the day it opened since my pictures do not show up dirt, torn carpets or reproduce smell.

Phipps Plaza has undergone a complete rebuilding since those days. The AMC 14plex occupies a completely different spot from the old theatre. The area where the theatre was located was completely demolished. If you go to Phipps Plaza today, walk to the far western end of the ground floor of the mall where the two story Parisians Department Store is located. That is roughly the spot. Go to the upper level, stand in front of Parisians upper entrance and look to your right. That is about where the Penthouse was located. As with so much in Atlanta a sad end to a once fine place. I only wish I had time and room to tell all of my Phipps stories.
posted by StanMalone on Jun 5, 2005 at 1:22pm
Are your photos posted anywhere on the web? It would be great to see the place again. What ever became of the Stone Mount? I can't recall if it was an ABC or Plitt operation, but do remember that it wasn't too bad of a venue.
posted by JackCoursey on Jun 5, 2005 at 7:11pm
Wow, thanks for the story Stan! I never visited the Phipps before the twinning/penthouse, I bet it was a great place as a single. Back in those days there were so many theaters here in town, I hate to look in the AJC and see the few theaters left that are not megaplexes.
posted by raymondstewart on Jun 7, 2005 at 7:53pm
The Penthouse... in 1977 scored a first with the premiere of Dolby Stereo in Atlanta when Close Encounters opened. (I know there are people who will dispute this. There were a few other Dolby equipped theatres in Atlanta, and some of them were playing movies that had previously opened in mono, like Star Wars, but Close Encounters was the first movie to premiere in Dolby in Atlanta.) (StanMalone)
***************************************

This isn't a dispute, just an elaboration.

You're correct re "Star Wars." It opened in Atlanta in mono on June 29, 1977, then upgraded to a Dolby Stereo presentation around Christmas. ("Exclusive Engagement: For The First Time In Atlanta -- DOLBY SOUND -- You May Have SEEN 'Star Wars' But For The First Time HEAR It!")

The first Dolby install in Atlanta was at a place called Films, Inc. However, I don't think this was a commercial cinema, so your statement re the Phipps Penthouse being the first to present to the public a film in Dolby Stereo appears to be correct...though only by a matter of days.

Around the opening of "Close Encounters" (Dec. 14 or 21, 1977), four Atlanta area theatres had Dolby Stereo (CP50): Phipps Penthouse, Buford Hwy Twin, Mableton, and Stonemount.

During the week of Christmas 1977, three movies were playing Dolby Stereo engagements in the Atlanta area: (1) "Close Encounters Of The Third Kind" at Phipps Penthouse, (2) "Saturday Night Fever" at Mableton, (3) "Star Wars" at Buford Hwy.

posted by Michael Coate on Jun 8, 2005 at 3:42am
Thanks for the information. Films Inc was a private screening room used mainly for bid screenings for southeastern film bookers. For years this duty was handled by the Columbia Pictures Screening Room and Universal Screening room which were across the street from each other downtown.

As for the Stonemont and the correct Dolby date I have no explanation. In those days, films were released in both Dolby and non Dolby prints. It is possible that ABC was going to open Close Encounters in Dolby at both locations but could only get a mono print for Stonemont. Perhaps the Dolby website refers to the date of equipment purchase or order. I do not have access to that type of info, but have to rely on my fading memory of the times. I do remember the manager telling me that he was finally going to get Dolby equipped for Sgt. Pepper.

Talking about the mono version of Close Encounters reminds me of a day running movies at the Fox. We had an all day Stephen Speilburg festival of Jaws, Raiders, and at 8PM, Close Encounters. The Close Encounters print was a survivor from 1977, and mono to boot. And it sounded like it.

As for the Buford Highway Twin, it was an old Jerry Lewis location later bought by Septum. I remember those ads well. They picked up Star Wars the day after its 5 month mono run at the Tara ended. They also used the ad line "Loudest Sound In Atlanta"
posted by StanMalone on Jun 8, 2005 at 10:02am
Since posting this Phipps comment I have gotten a lot of feedback both here and from friends and former co workers. With this new infromation in mind let me make a couple of corrections, an elobration and fill in an omission. To answer Jacks question, my Phipps Pictures are not online although there is one of the Lenox on the Cinema Tour site. I have tried a couple of times to post pictures here but either my computer is not sending the pictures or I am not doing it right.

As for correcting I will start with the seating configuration of the "twin." When I put 4-16-4 I was thinking of the Penthouse, although that too is wrong. It was 4-14-4. The twins had staggered rows in the center section, so one row would be 4-10-4 and the next 4-11-4. The total of 500 seats is correct. Also, my pictures were not taken on the closing night. When I heard of the closing I made plans to take the pictures then. About a week before, I got a call saying that asbestos had been found on the site and that demolition would be delayed until this could be cleaned up. Since I had already made plans I went ahead and took my pictures as scheduled, so they show the theatre in its operating mode. In the event, the theatres ended up staying open for several weeks or possibly months longer.

As for the planter which took the place of the Penthouse box office, it was long gone by the time of the closing, so there was nothing dividing the lobby and the mall when the sliding doors were opened.

There was also one important omission, the marquee situation. When the shopping center was built, they put two very fancy towers outside the Peachtree Road entrance which looked like squat versions of the Seattle Space Needle. On the top were very pretty fountains, especially at night when they were lit up. Just below the top were about 4 lines of wraparound plastic tracks. The southernmost tower was for mall use, and the northern one for the theatre. When there was just one theatre they used the half facing Peachtree for the film title, stars and tag line. The back half facing the mall was used for coming attractions. In those days of long runs you often did not know what your next attraction would be so sometimes the space was used to publicize the Fox or Roxy. When the Penthouse was built I think they divided the front half in half and listed the attractions side by side. When the downstairs was twinned they just started listing the titles for all three screens on stacked lines.

This whole set up was very awkward because the theatre had no access to the sign. It had to be changed by a professional crew using a cherry picker type crane. Not only was this very expensive, but it caused problems in that the sign was always changed the day before the new shows started. This was a constant cause of confusion on the final night of the departing movies run.

If anyone else has any corrections or additions to this or my Lenox or Coronet comments please post them as this is all done from fast fading memory.
posted by StanMalone on Jun 8, 2005 at 11:36am
"Around the opening of "Close Encounters" (Dec. 14 or 21, 1977), four Atlanta area theatres had Dolby Stereo (CP50): Phipps Penthouse, Buford Hwy Twin, Mableton, and Stonemont." (Michael Coate)

As for the Stonemont and the correct Dolby date I have no explanation. In those days, films were released in both Dolby and non Dolby prints. It is possible that ABC was going to open Close Encounters in Dolby at both locations but could only get a mono print for Stonemont.(StanMalone)
********************************

In checking some data, it looks like during the Dec. '77/Jan. '78 timeframe, there was another Dolby-equipped venue in the Atlanta area: a house in Jonesboro.

I don't have any opening day or week ads for the Atlanta engagements of "Close Encounters." I do, however, have one from April 1978, and both the Phipps Penthouse and Stonemont were promoting Dolby Stereo for their "CE3K" showings. "An Incredible Experience" with the "Dolby System" logo centered between the two theatre names.

posted by Michael Coate on Jun 9, 2005 at 2:03pm
Perhaps the Dolby website refers to the date of equipment purchase or order. I do not have access to that type of info, but have to rely on my fading memory of the times.(StanMalone)
*********************************

Stan,
I do not believe such info appears on the Dolby site. In fact, you'll be hard-pressed to locate much, if any, info on the old days of Dolby CP50s & CP100s. Email me if you'd like more info on install dates.
posted by Michael Coate on Jun 9, 2005 at 2:06pm
"In the early 80's, I am not sure of the exact year, ABC sold out to Plitt Theatres." (StanMalone)
************************

The switch from ABC to Plitt (Southern) took place between December 1978 and May 1980. Sorry, don't have the exact date.
posted by Michael Coate on Jun 9, 2005 at 2:10pm
The switch from ABC to Plitt was before the Promenade opened, which as best I can recall was 1979.
posted by raymondstewart on Jun 10, 2005 at 6:21am
The switch of ownership from ABC to Plitt Southern took place during November 1978.
posted by Michael Coate on Sep 26, 2005 at 2:07pm
I think that I finally have the last word on the Dolby dates question in regards to the Stonemont. I have posted it as a comment on the Stonemont page.
posted by StanMalone on Oct 3, 2005 at 5:21am
Re early Dolby Stereo presentations in the Atlanta area, another round of research and atempt to summarize yields the following:

Nov 24, 1977: "Star Wars" opens a sub-run at Canton Corners Twin in Marrieta. "Dolby System" logo + "Stereophonic Sound" text is present in the ad, with "Starts Today! Full Surround Stereo" in another part of the ad.

Dec 14, 1977: "Close Encounters Of The Third Kind" opens in four area theaters, three of which were promoting Dolby Stereo presentations. (1) Phipps Penthouse, Atlanta (Dolby). (2) Stonemont, Stone Mountain (Dolby). (3) Arrowhead, Jonesboro (Dolby). (4) Akers Mill Square, Smyrna (mono).

Dec 16, 1977: "Saturday Night Fever" opens. The engagement at Mableton Twin in Mableton is advertised as a Dolby Stereo presentation. ("The Only Atlanta Engagement of 'Saturday Night Fever' Where You Can Hear The Bee-Gee's In Our New 4 Channel Stereo Sound")

Dec. 23, 1977: "Star Wars" begins sub-run at Buford Higway Twin in Doraville. Promoted as "Exclusive Engagement! For The 1st Time In Atlanta -- Dolby Sound! You May Have Seen 'Star Wars', But For The 1st Time, Hear It!"

[I'll re-post this on the Stonemont page.]
posted by Michael Coate on Oct 6, 2005 at 2:08pm
Here is a photo from Mr. Stan Malone of the fantastic Phipps lobby.
posted by JackCoursey on Jan 1, 2006 at 3:48pm
Wow, that picture takes me back...Who wants to go to Harry Baron's for a sandwich? If we could only go back in time!
posted by raymondstewart on Jan 1, 2006 at 5:26pm
Here are photos of the Penthouse and here are shots cinemas I & II.
posted by JackCoursey on Mar 2, 2006 at 3:52pm
PHIPPS PLAZA PENTHOUSE THEATRE TICKET.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/24391992@N00/643364372/
posted by Dennis Whitefield on Jun 27, 2007 at 6:21pm
RE: "Films Inc was a private screening room used mainly for bid screenings for southeastern film bookers. For years this duty was handled by the Columbia Pictures Screening Room and Universal Screening room which were across the street from each other downtown. posted by StanMalone on Jun 8, 2005 at 10:02am

Since my dad worked for Columbia Pictures I was fortunate to see quite a few screenings at the Columbia Screening room at their office on Luckie Street. The Rialto Theater was within walking distance and Herren's restaurant was a famous spot for a businessman's lunch.

Box Office, the trade magazine, referred to the screening room as "Columbia's Filmrow Playhouse" and maintained that 90% of the trade and press screenings were held there. Most of the movie distributors and some of the exhibitors were in the area they called "Film Row". I think Columbia was 195 Luckie Street. It didn't seat very many people. I vaguely remember about 50 seats, but it could have been a few more (50 - 75). There was a woman that was the film censor for Atlanta at most of the screenings.


posted by David Hargette on Sep 8, 2009 at 10:24pm
Some past issues of Box Office are available to view online:

http://issuu.com/boxoffice/docs

There is usually a section for Atlanta and other Southeast cities.
posted by David Hargette on Sep 8, 2009 at 10:27pm
I think Dances w/ Wolves was the last film I saw there before they became a multiplex (first movie for the reopening was Reservoir Dogs). My mother still talks about Silverado and how amazing it looked on that big screen.
posted by thursdaynext on Sep 13, 2009 at 6:19pm
It is nice that your mother noticed the quality of the picture since it was presented in 70MM. Although it was a blow up from 35MM, like all 70MM of its day, it still looked so much sharper than the regular 35. So sharpe in fact, that in the final shootout between Paden and Cobb you can notice that in alternating shots one of Kevin Kline's cuffs changes from buttoned to unbuttoned and back.
posted by StanMalone on Sep 21, 2009 at 12:49pm
BIG AD In the ATLANTA paper PHIPPS PENTHOUSE now playing

PETER FINCH
LIV ULLMAN


THE ABDICATION rated pg


PHIPPS PLAZA running FILMED IN GEORGIA

THE LONGEST YARD. shows at 3;00 5:15 7:25 & 9:40 rated R.
posted by MikeRogers on Oct 30, 2009 at 4:48pm
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