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Majestic Theater

LaSalle, IL
225 Gooding Street
, LaSalle, IL 61301 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 935
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Majestic Theater, which was open from at least 1915 and stood on Gooding Street at Second Street, is shown as being open and operated by a subsidiary of Paramount Pictures in the 1945 Film Daily Yearbook. It is part of the Alger Theaters chain of LaSalle by 1951 (in fact, the 1951 and 1953 Film Daily Yearbooks give the theater address as their corporate office).
Contributed by Bryan Krefft


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Seating capacities vary from year to year in editions of the Film Daily Yearbook for the Majestic Theatre; 1941=950, 1943=942 and 1950=935.
posted by KenRoe on Jul 19, 2005 at 11:46pm
Cinematour lists the theatre as being demolished. It was the main theatre in LaSalle when I was growing up in Illinois, and although I was only in it once, I have one very vivid memory of the theatre. When I was a candidate for admission to the LaSalle County I.A. local which covered my hometown of Streator, I went to LaSalle to introduce myself to the projectionists there who would have a vote on my membership. I had heard that several of them were waiting for the projectionist (an old-timer)at the Majestic to retire so they could have his job. When I went to the booth, which meant going through the Men's room, I climbed a flight of stairs and found myself up near the ceiling over a steep balcony. While the booth was fairly deep and roomy, I was shocked to see that from the viewing ports you could only see the bottom half of the screen because of a beam located just outside the booth. The light from the projection ports just cleared the bottom of the beam. The projectionists had to mark cues on the bottom of the film frames in order to be able to make changeovers. The old-timer, who may have been there since the house opened was quite proud of the booth, but couldn't see the top half of the movies he was projecting. I had this vision of him asking, "Does Greta Garbo still make movies? Boy she had a great set of legs!" The theatre went non-union when platters came in and the projectionists waiting for the job probably never got to hold it.
posted by REndres on Jul 20, 2005 at 5:16am
A Barton theater organ was installed in the Majestic Theater in 1926.

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 8, 2007 at 6:16pm
Prior to the Barton organ, a Hinners theater organ was installed in the Majestic Theater in 1915.

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 10, 2007 at 2:09pm
The majestic, was finally bulldozed from the center out, and turned into a twin cinema, GKC Showplace. Fortunately the booth was revamped, and you could see all of the screens. It closed in the mid 80s and is now a church.
posted by arnie P on Dec 9, 2008 at 7:54pm
1976 Photo

1979 Photo

posted by Lost Memory on May 16, 2009 at 12:12pm
Wow, "The Fury" is on the marquee in the 1976 photo. It's actually 1977 or `78 though. "The Fury" was filmed partially in Chicago.
We briefly met Kirk Douglas when he ran up to my car from a small Lincoln Park incline in front of the Cardinal's residence at North Ave. & State Parkway in mid `77.

I had a `57 Plymouth Plaza, (much like a "Christine" Fury which was a `58).
We had slowed down to look at some camera trucks, when Kirk ran up the hill to my drivers window and yelled "Ahhhh!". Scared the begeezus out of us. He actually grabbed my driver's door with both hands under the window. They had been filming and he was apparently goofing off during a break. I like to think that the then 20 year old car is what caught his eye.
posted by David Zornig on Feb 27, 2010 at 5:08am
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