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Guthrie Theatre

Grove City, PA
232 South Broad Street
, Grove City, PA 16127 United States
(map)
724.458.0900
Status: Open
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Movies, Movies (Family)
Seats: 376
Chain: Independent
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
Built in 1926 as a live theatre but placed a large square white plaster screen on the back of the stage and started to run silent films between shows, from there it grew into a movie house. Located in the heart of a small town, Grove City, PA at the edge of Grove City College. Just your small town theatre that is rapidly disappearing across America, warm, friendly, big screen, big sound, nice price.

Related Websites

Guthrie Theatre (Official)
Contributed by Kim D. Nagel


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Nicely written and so very true as I just visited this theatre and was taken on a tour that included seeing the "large square white plaster screen on the back of the stage". Very unusual. The marquee was lighted upon arriving at the Grove City theatre then headed to New Castle PA to see the location of the first Warner Brothers silent film theatre as Cascade Center. Go to www.firstwarnertheatre.com
posted by Patsy on Aug 25, 2005 at 3:56pm
Here is a 2006 photo of the Guthrie Theater.
posted by Lost Memory on Mar 10, 2006 at 4:13pm
Lost Memory: A nice evening photo of the Guthrie. I have visited this theatre and it is what I'd refer to as a....survivor!
posted by Patsy on Mar 10, 2006 at 4:35pm
I've lived in Sandy Lake since I was eight. This has been one of the only theaters I go to. The popcorn is good and doesn't make you sick; they have bottles of pop instead of foundatin, and the price is right. The balcony finally reopened a couple of years ago but just for the adults. Even with the new multi theater plexes, I still love going to the Guthrie!
posted by Eliza on Apr 19, 2006 at 7:15am
Eliza: Good for you! Keep frequenting the Guthrie and not those new multi theatre plexes! As you know they have NO charm!
posted by Patsy on Apr 19, 2006 at 8:15am
Here is a website for the Guthrie Theater.

posted by Lost Memory on May 28, 2007 at 4:05pm
Great theater
posted by csambuchino on Aug 31, 2007 at 12:37pm
I am writing a magazine article on the Guthrie Theatre and would love to talk with anyone who has frequented it in the past and continues to do so. Please e-mail me at chuck.sambuchino@fwpubs.com ASAP. Thanks! - Chuck Sambuchino
posted by csambuchino on Aug 31, 2007 at 12:50pm
This is a nice close-up shot of the Guthrie.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 12, 2009 at 12:28pm
LM another great find, that is most certainly another current photo. From the looks of the photo the theatre us a real beauty, and very well maintained. One of a dying breed.
posted by Chuck1231 on Jul 12, 2009 at 5:22pm
This is a nice looking theater. I hope it remains that way.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 13, 2009 at 4:15am
I got an email from Eric Thomas at the Guthrie Theatre today, he stated that they were starting renovations of the lobby and hopes that the original plaster ceiling above the drop ceiling is is good shape. I wish him luck, he really takes pide in his theatre and what a beauty it is.
posted by Chuck1231 on Jul 13, 2009 at 11:22pm
An item in the July 31, 1937, issue of Boxoffice said that J.G. Carruthers and H.M. Carruthers had bought the Guthrie Theatre from Mrs. Martha Guthrie, widow of the original owner, and would take over operation of the house on August 2. John Guthrie had opened the house ten years earlier, on August 1, 1927. The Guthrie Theatre had 870 seats at the time of the sale.

An August 7 Boxoffice item about the sale said that J.G. Carruthers had begun his theater career in John Guthrie's Lyric Theatre at Grove City, the town's first movie house, which Guthrie had opened in 1907. Carruthers mentioned the Guthrie Theatre's mascot, a stuffed eagle then mounted over the foyer fireplace, which had originally been placed over the boxoffice of the Lyric and had thereafter been displayed in each of Guthrie's theaters.

Mrs. Guthrie, who had taken over the theater after her husband's death in December, 1934, was interviewed for Boxoffice Magazine's issue of June 1, 1935. The article included three small photos of the theater, and said that Mrs. Guthrie (to whom it referred rather quaintly- or perhaps disturbingly- as "an exhibitress") had recently redecorated the theater. She described it thus:
"The stage set represents a Spanish exterior, side walls treated with over drapes and backings decorated with placques copied from the 'Guthrie' and 'Montgomery' coats of arms (Martha Montgomery having been my former name.) The curtain is appliqued with a Spanish character design. The organ grilles have balconies decorated with Spanish shawls, carrying out the same scheme as the balcony of the theatre. The foyer arch and standee rail are also draped, and double doors with glass panels were also added to the foyer, as well as a fireplace which was built in. The ceiling is covered in a canopy effect. A baby grand piano refinished in antique ivory is placed on the stage. The organ has been entirely overhauled by Mr. Herman Stahl of Erie, Pa., who built it."
The accompanying photo of the auditorium shows the expanse of fabric it sported, including the great billows suspended from the ceiling. It makes me wonder what her fire insurance must have cost, and how the place ever escaped becoming an inferno during her tenure there.

Martha Guthrie made use of her Mad Decorating Skilz later on, as the August 28, 1943, issue of Boxoffice said that she was then running an interior decoration business in Grove City. She continued to be mentioned in the magazine occasionally as late as 1948, then vanished until 1969 when the issue of July 28 carried a brief notice of her recent death. By then she had become a "former exhibitor," rather than a former "exhibitress."

posted by Joe Vogel on Nov 5, 2009 at 11:02pm
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