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Whalley Theatre

New Haven, CT
379 Whalley Avenue
, New Haven, CT, United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Retail
Seats: 945
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Whalley Theatre
Recent exterior view of the former Whalley Theatre (now a natural food store)
Photo courtesy of Roger Katz
The former Whalley Theatre later became known as the Whalley Cafe Cinema.

The building has now been converted into a natural foods store. However, both the outside and inside still resemble a cinema if you know what to look for. The former lobby area is now a coffee bar, the balcony is now a small cafe, the auditorium which has had the floor levelled is now the food section, and the projection booth is now a manager's office.
Contributed by Roger Katz


YOUR COMMENTS

 
This theatre was never know as the Paramount. It was always the Whalley Theatre and was part of a local chain run by Maurice Bailey
posted by CINEMOGUL on Feb 28, 2003 at 9:59pm
The Whalley Theatre seated 945 people.
posted by William on Nov 19, 2003 at 4:39pm
i remember from old setlists of the ct band known as max creek, they played here regularly and everytime i'm there i try to figure out by the architecture. there's a place further up on the left in the plaza whose facade looks like a marquee. this health food store is called Edge of the Woods.

i also remember a theater in new haven called the great american music hall, like the one in san francisco. i believe there was one in waterbury too.
posted by shoeshoe14 on Jan 4, 2005 at 3:36am
The photo shown is not the theatre’s front, but an entrance on the side of the building which, I believe, was constructed to accommodate the sad transformation from movie theatre to club, to food market. In it’s heyday, the theatre had a traditional facade with a grand three sided marquee suspended over the sidewalk and centered box office kiosk. In the 50s the theatre was “modernized”; the marquee removed, the kiosk gone, and the tiny lobby expanded, ironically absorbing an A&P food market on the right. As a child of the 40s and early 50s the Whalley was my neighborhood theatre and my introduction to the movies. From a traumatized Christmas night in 1947, believing everything about Abbott and Costello meets Frankenstein, to the theatres first-run transformation with Around the World in 80 Days in 1957, I fondly remember countless “Hey Kids!” Saturday matinees, free seasonal showings of MGM’s A Christmas Carol, and of course theatre manager, Franklin Fergusson, entertaining us kids between features with various contests, games and lighting effects on the stage curtain. As noted, some of the theatre’s interior remains. You can find the stage, much smaller than I remembered, and proscenium arch behind the food display cases.
posted by Universal on Feb 19, 2005 at 12:01pm
An Austin organ Opus 1474 Size 3/7 was installed in the Whalley Theater in 1926 at a cost of $7,400.
posted by Lost Memory on Oct 4, 2005 at 2:40pm
In the 60s, the Whalley became a roadshow house. My parents took us here from New Milford to see Dr. Zhivago, Gone With The Wind and Oliver!
posted by DamienB on Dec 3, 2005 at 10:30am
"Roadshow" events started in 1957 when the theatre, by virtue of ample street parking, was selected for the Southern Ct. engagement of "Around the World in 80 Days." I think it ran for 26 weeks. We were all very impressed.
posted by Universal on Dec 17, 2005 at 3:24pm
Two memories of "The Whalley": When "BEN HUR" premiered, it seemed to run here forever. Also, one night about 1069 or 70, I attended a special Halloween showing of "Frankenstein" and "Dracula". (Ididn't have a VCR then!)
posted by fedoozle on Mar 29, 2006 at 9:28am
Make that "1969 or 1970", as in 1069, NO ONE had VCRS!!!
posted by fedoozle on Mar 30, 2006 at 3:21am
Does anyone know the whereabouts or what happened to theatre manager Franklin Fergusson?
posted by Universal on May 13, 2006 at 9:49am
I was an usher at the Whalley while in high school (Hillhouse). I worked there until I went into the service (Jan. 1953). Mr. Ferguson was the manager and Mr. Tarren was the assistant manager. Mr. Ferguson's father was the manager of the Whitney. Mr. Ferguson passed away some time ago.
posted by mortm on Jul 29, 2007 at 10:51am
I didn't know the upstairs was ever open. I went upstairs and there's a small food court sitting area by the projection booth which is the office. At the other end of the theater is another register (upstairs) and there's some nice decoration - 2 Ionic columns, one on either end, the color scheme is pink, blue and white with a small arc leading from one column to the other, like a rainbow.
posted by shoeshoe14 on Aug 28, 2007 at 10:22am
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