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Mesa Theater

Clovis, NM
206 Main Street
, Clovis, NM 88101 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Pueblo Moderne
Function: Unknown
Seats: 980
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
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Contributed by Dobbin


YOUR COMMENTS

 
There is some interest in turning the theater into a community center:
http://tinyurl.com/l95lg
http://tinyurl.com/mfch6
posted by ken mc on Mar 5, 2006 at 9:35am
Thank You, for the information,you gave on mesa theatre & Clovis nm
posted by Dobbin on Mar 7, 2006 at 3:15am
This is a photo of the Mesa Theater.

posted by Lost Memory on Apr 6, 2007 at 8:16am
Here is a more recent photo of the Mesa Theater.

posted by Lost Memory on Aug 24, 2007 at 7:19pm
A 2008 photo of the Mesa Theater can be seen here.

posted by Lost Memory on Mar 14, 2008 at 5:01pm
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A 1959 Clovis High School graduate recalls bits about lots of Clovis theatres on this page:
http://www.rednett.com/Bits.html
Search for the two paragraphs beginning
"I remember all the theaters and drive-ins"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
posted by Bob of Roswell on Jun 16, 2008 at 7:59pm
As I recall the Mesa (1950'ish), it was just across the street from the Hotel Clovis, right by the railroad tracks, and was tacitly thought of as a diversion "for transients," which would include traveling salesmen, land- or cattle-buyers, military personnel, migratory workers, and the like. One could pick up illegal whisky at the Mesa. "That end of town" was thought of as slightly sleazy, although it can't have been more than five blocks from the shiny intersection of Main and Seventh Streets, where the Courthouse, the First Methodist Church, the high school, and the wholesome commercial paradise of The Village (an early miniature mall with a soda shop, record store, and magazine stand) presided over virtuous pursuits. On those rare occasions when an "adult" movie was allowed to slip into town, it played the Mesa. My brother-in-law took me there with him to see a movie of strip-tease dancers. The performers never got farther down than to pasties and bikinis, which rankled my brother-in-law. He said that usually when he went to see such movies there, they showed whole breasts. An exception to the rule that adult movies played the Mesa was a "roadshow" called "Mom and Dad," a sort of negative instructional drama about teenage pregnancy, which played at the Lyceum. There were separate showings for boys only and girls only.
posted by Bob of Roswell on Jun 18, 2008 at 12:04pm
THE SUNSHINE THEATRE, CLOVIS, NEW MEXICO
I'm going to write my few memories of the Sunshine Theatre in Clovis and post them on the pages for the Lyceum, the Mesa, and the State, in hopes that they'll inspire someone knowledgeable to make a Sunshine page.
The Sunshine was next door to the Thrifty Drug. I worked at Thrifty, and when I was in back unloading deliveries, I clearly heard the movie playing next door.
The Sunshine was narrow-fronted and inconspicuous. I don't remember it having a projecting marquee or a "title tower," and none shows in a 1950s postcard of Clovis' Main Street in which Thrifty Drug is conspicuous.
The Sunshine got mostly Paramount, RKO, Columbia, Universal, and United Artists movies, while the State got the M.G.M., Twentieth Century Fox, Warner Brothers, and Walt Disney pictures.
Therefore, in my mind, the State is always showing a Gene Kelly, Betty Grable, or Doris Day/Gordon MacRae Technicolor musical while the Sunshine is playing a black-and-white Ma and Pa Kettle or Francis the Talking Mule or Martin and Lewis comedy. A great exception to this (very inaccurate) rule-of-memory is when I recall seeing the great color spectacle, "The Greatest Show on Earth" over and over again at the Sunshine.
Once the Sunshine showed a "roadshow" movie, "The Lawton Story," a "family movie" about the annual religious pageant in Lawton, Oklahoma. I supect some touring company just rented the Sunshine on a "four-walls" basis for this presentation, for the ticket-sellers and ushers and a man who tried to sell the audience a poster and a souvenir booklet were all strangers.
posted by Bob of Roswell on Jun 18, 2008 at 1:16pm
You can see wonderful photos of the Mesa and the State, plus several other New Mexico movie theatres, HERE. Please copy this link to other New Mexico theatre pages
posted by Bob of Roswell on Jul 6, 2008 at 8:18am
This is another 2008 photo.

posted by Lost Memory on Oct 2, 2008 at 6:18pm
I apologize if my longer comparative description of the atmosphere of the different theatres in Clovis in the 1950s was considered "off-topic, obscene, spam, or personal attacks." It was certainly not intended to be so. I wonder if anyone saved it and would be willing to e-mail it to me at rbrtptrck@aol.com
posted by Bob of Roswell on Dec 6, 2008 at 7:18pm
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