Search

Theaters News Links

Advanced search
 

Theater Guide

Now listing 28,054 theaters & 1,598 photos… more
Browse by...
 

Add Your Cinema Treasure!

Add Theater
Add Photo (offline)
Add Theater News
 
 

Recent Comments

Mar 22 Loew's Ames… (12)
Mar 22 Loew's Theatre (12)
Mar 22 Vernal Theatre (11)
Mar 22 Art Cinema (77)
Mar 22 Torbay Cinema (9)
Mar 22 Riviera Cinema (8)
Mar 22 Drive-In (10)
Mar 22 Mann Village… (297)
Mar 22 Las Palmas… (42)
Mar 21 Alameda Theatre (132)
 
 
 
  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Roth Maplewood Theatre

Maplewood Theatre

Maplewood, NJ
155 Maplewood Avenue
, Maplewood, NJ 07040 United States
(map)
973.763.3100
Status: Open
Screens: Multiplex (4 Screen)
Style: Unknown
Function: Movies (First Run)
Seats: 1412
Chain: Independent
Architect: William E. Lehman
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
Opened on March 15, 1927 with Rudolph Valentino on "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse", the Maplewood Theatre began showing movies in addition to live performances in the 1940s.

The theatre was enormous and was one of the largest in New Jersey. It was cut into three and later four screens in the late-1980's and early-1990's.

"It is my general recollection however that the extravagent interior is still under modern covering… and a small part of the ceiling (with egg and dart moulding) can be seen peeking out of the dropped ceiling in one of the rooms. It is a candidate for restoration for sure, and it is in a very progressive town that gets behind these sort of things. The theater is still a huge success as a 4-plex and there is little chance of it going out of business."
Contributed by John


YOUR COMMENTS

 
it now has six theaters
posted by fred on Mar 1, 2004 at 10:38am
All on one level -- no balcony.
posted by saps on Jul 5, 2004 at 6:10pm
Was there ever a balcony in this theater? I grew up in Maplewood and remember the main space...seeing Ghostbusters and Color Purple there, on the massive screen with grand ceiling decorations and itchy red wool seats...from the early and mid eighties, and I too think that the original theater may be mostly intact, like the Loews Jersey. But I don't remember a balcony. I agree with John that it's a cash cow for its owners and downtown, which houses more family and young-goingout life than I remember from my childhood, but certainly a fine renovation of the original hall with two small underground screens (some of the current screens in it only seat under 50 people) would work and attract an older crowd, plus introduce younger folk to the joys of enjoying a movie in full screen glory. Plus it would give Maplewood a sorely needed larger concert space. Currently they mostly show first run major studio but mostly fluffy films, and very few indie or hard hitting films ever pass through, unlike the old days, when I remember double features or just weekly changing bills and still full houses. I think it could make just as much money as a boutique house and be a grand centerpiece for Maplewood, as it once was, when it was once voted the most beautiful theater in North Jersey...
posted by Jmiah on Jul 16, 2004 at 11:06am
The Maplewood originally had 1,412 seats. I would hardly call that "enormous," let alone one of the largest theatres in New Jersey. Give us a break!
posted by Warren G. Harris on Jul 16, 2004 at 11:12am
Well, 1400 is about the size of the Astor Plaza, so it must have seemed pretty big in a small town like Maplewood. Plus, 1400 seats all on one level is pretty vast, especially with a narrow lobby flowing into a sea of seats.
posted by saps on Jul 20, 2004 at 5:12pm
Definately one of the largest! Especially when you are 5 years old. No chandalier in this place that I remember... In the pizza place next door they have an old advert for the theater showing the original marquee. It used to have a blade sign. The ad stated "One of the most beautiful theaters in New Jersey". I remember seeing Ghostbusters here. They had a ghost on the marquee for prolly an entire year. They are hiring right now! i'm tempted to get hired to see some of the back rooms, etc. This place was a mess when I was a kid.
posted by John Elwood on Aug 12, 2004 at 4:24pm
I did some research on the Maplewood and came up with the following:
March 15, 1927 Maplewood Theater opened.

107ft on Maplewood ave, 191ft deep. Leased to Maplewood Amusement Co. and branded as "Roth Maplewood" Owner was Isadore Portnoff of Newark. Architect of William Lehman. Cost $300,000+. White terracotta in Spanish renaissance 28ft wide lobby. First picture The Four Horsemen of The Apocalypse with Rudolph Vanentino. Matinee was 30 cents, evening show was 40 cents. 36ft ceiling. 7 trusses. 175 tons of steel. Manager was Walter Hoffman.

Newpaper had multi week run up to opening where there was a front page survey of the format--- Photoplay with Organ, Photoplay with Organ and Orchestra, Photoplay and presentations with Organ and Orchestra, , Photoplay and Vaudeville with Organ and Orchestra.


Maplewood News, Special Theater Edition from March 11th, 1927:

Roth Maplewood A Theatre of beauty in which the acme of real comfort is reached

The Roth Maplewood theatre was especially designed and built for the community it is to serve. Everything that taste, experience and culture can conceive to ate it attractive and comfortable had been provided by the owners.

The Roth Corporation specializes in building theatres for communities of the highest type. They are all of the same style and arrangement and no expense is spared on them. The programs are prepared for a selected clientele.

The materials that entire into the theater construction will not deteriorate but will grow more beautiful with age. The facade of the building is of a specially selected terra cotta which will look just as nice twenty years from now as it does today.

The decorations of the theater are restful and beautiful. In the center is a large oval dome in the preparation of which twelve thousand leaves of gold were used by skilled decorators from New York. The chandelier with its beautiful clusters of cut glass prisms is a duplicate of the one so much admired in the large new theater in Irvington.

Pompeian colors are used throughout the auditorium, which is oval shaped and without a gallery. A real novelty has been introduced by the use of old Spanish stone pilasters to bring out the gold, greens, blues and reds that are the dominating tints in the auditorium.

The proscenium arch is a remarkably effective example of oriental work done by the New Jersey Plastering Company, under the supervision of Harry Pearce, supervising foreman. It is decorated in green carrying red tint.

Red and blue prevail on the side walls, green and gold in the dome and ceiling. The lobby is decorated with a beamed ceiling in colors imitating wood on an inlaid design The doors are finished in Roman gold. The lobby is practically a repetition of the Sanford theatre.

The total cost of the theatre is said to exceed $300,000. Its seating capacity is 1,600. Mr. Mumford, the manager, is an experience an of a most attractive personality who will be a great help in arranging functions and benefits which are so necessary to the success of the work of the many civic, charitable, and social organizations in Maplewood; his judgement and care will also help to assure the right kind of programs for Maplewood.

A Wurlitzer organ costing $30,000 with all the latest novelty effect and specially built to please the most exacting of musical critics, is one fo the featers of the new amusement palace. An orchestera of high quality will supplement.

Attend the opening of this beautiful new Roth Theater in Maplewood on Tuesday night and satisfy yourself that our community had a theatre equal in beauty and value to any in the land. The building is fireproof, throughout.

“The exterior gives but faint idea of the beautiful interior”

posted by John Elwood on Aug 13, 2004 at 1:21pm
Wow! Any links to photos?
posted by saps on Aug 13, 2004 at 3:48pm
Elwood! It's Jeremiah...Dude, give me an email--go to my website...www(dot)jeremiahbirnbaum(dot)com, and contact me thru the 'contact' page... Obviously the 'dots' are there as I am getting spammed up the yinyang...

Sorry for posting this moreso personal message on this board, y'all. Just haven't seen this dude in ten years!

best
Jeremiah
posted by Jmiah on Aug 14, 2004 at 8:18pm
The address for the Maplewood Theatre is 155 Maplewood Avenue, Maplewood, NJ.
posted by Chuck1231 on Nov 17, 2004 at 12:24am
In the 1/17/91 edition of the Star Ledger, it had 3 screens.
posted by TC on Mar 11, 2005 at 6:59pm
The movie "Garden State" was released on Wednesday, 28 July 2004, to eight theaters: three in Los Angeles, four in New York City, and at the Maplewood Theatre in Maplewood, New Jersey. This was the home theater of Zach Braff (who is from the adjacent town of South Orange). He attended the Maplewood premiere, and his father, who still lives in the area, was at the theatre for the film's first Friday and Saturday.
posted by TC on Apr 1, 2005 at 12:44pm
The Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ), Oct 1, 1998 p001
Choir does a rerun of 'Silent Night' at special screening of new movie In Maplewood, Christmas again comes early as Streep film opens. (IN THE TOWNS)
Byline: Ada Brunner

Christmas came early to Maplewood this year for the second year in a row.

Last year, it arrived in November, when 20 members of the Morrow Memorial Church Choir gathered on the pavement near the local movie theater to sing "Silent Night."

This year, Yuletide was even earlier. Those same 20 carolers, along with the rest of the Morrow choir and other townspeople and out-of-town visitors, celebrated in September.

All of it was in connection with the film "One True Thing," starring Meryl Streep, William Hurt and Renee Zellweger, which was shot in part in Maplewood and features members of the Morrowchoir as well as some 150 extras from the area.

Based on a novel by Anna Quindlen, the movie opened nationwide Sept. 18. But some 450 local and area residents got an advance look at it at a preview in the Maplewood Theatre the night before. The special screening, a benefit for the Maplewood Village Alliance (the corporation that manages the Maplewood Village special improvement district), was the highlight of an evening that started with a procession from the Women's Club, led by the Youth Orchestra of Essex County playing "When the Saints Go Marchin' In." When the walkers arrived at the theater, the choir, directed by David Hutchings of Colonia, gave a brief outdoor concert, singing "Silent Night," "Angels We Have Heard on High" and "Every Time I Feel the Spirit."

After the screening of the film, a reception was held at the Burgdorff Cultural Center, with the choir once again performing. It sang "Amazing Grace," "Music Has Brought Us Together" and a new version of "Silent Night" - one with words by choir member Mary Sims of Maplewood, describing what it's like to be in a movie.

Area residents had learned what it's like about a year earlier, when they learned of the decision to use Maplewood as a stand-in for Langhorne, Pa., the town where Quindlen's story is set. ........
posted by TC on Jun 27, 2005 at 9:54am
1940s live theater program here.
posted by TC on Oct 15, 2005 at 7:57am
I saw "Jaws" at the Maplewood with my brother in 1976. That scene where that guy's half-eaten head popped out of the bottom of the boat--geez, you talk about a collective scream!!
posted by movie guy on Jan 19, 2006 at 1:09am
Listed as part of Independent Theater Service, Inc. in the 1956 Film Daily Yearbook.
posted by TC on Mar 2, 2006 at 4:55am
It seems as if every time I pass by on New Jersey Transit's commuter trains, there are more screens at the Maplewood! This is the local theater of my beloved cousins who live mere blocks away. Will see if Cousin Matt can piggyback on these comments before he leaves for college in PA in the fall.

Question: Has anyone ever eliminated (or pared down the number of) those pesky yellow jackets emanating from nearby Kings Grocery? Most annoying l'il kamikazees I've ever encountered near any movie theater anywhere in the country...Ouch!
posted by BrooklynJim on Jul 11, 2006 at 1:54pm
I've been looking into the Maplewood Theater for several years now, and most of the information I have is in my back pocket until it gels into something worth writing about... and that should be soon. So anyway, the Maplewood, as described the 1927 article above, was designed for both live production and movies... and in 1940-1942 it was a live theatre house. This one article from the New York Times Nov 17 1940 is so funny in how it describes Maplewood, and The Maplewood.

"Maplewood Concludes"
"A Note or Two on a Summer Season That Ran Well Into Fall"
Maplewood, N.J.

Shuffling among the fallen Autumn leaves on Maplewood's main street these days, your shoes turn up countless yellowing theatre-ticket stubs. This is a jolt to any one familiar with the folkways of well-heeled suburban towns. Theatre-ticket stubs on streets, the animated chatter of local cops and butcher boys about the theatre go with the shimmering heat of Summer. But here it is November and the Maplewood theatre, started as a Summer stock venture, only a fortnight ago concluded its season. It had twenty-one successful weeks to its credit and the memory lingers on. The town took producer Cheryl Crawford and her theatre unto itself with wholehearted enthusiasm backed up by substantial attendance.

The Maplewood theatre soaked up the very solid substantiality that stands out all over the town. One expensive-looking suburb runs imperceptibly into the next in this New Jersey commuting belt. Streets are wide and wind languidly between rows of landscaped mansions, huge places in French provincial, with towering copper-patina turrets and carefully sagging roofs, in Southern colonial on the grand scale, in English Tudor with mullioned windows, and all the other romantic styles that architects figure out for the best people.

***

"There are three million people within twenty miles of the theatre," Cheryl Crawford says, "and most of them have dough." Besides good bank references, they had enthusiasm for the theatre. What more could a producer ask?

The astonishing thing is that this enthusiasm for the theatre apparently lay more or less dormant until the theatre moved to Maplewood. Miss Crawford had her biggest successes with shows that were hits not so long ago on Broadway. There was plenty of time for everybody in Maplewood to go to New York to see them. Judging from the way the big theatre was filled up night after night--the theatre has 1,411 seats, more than most New York theatres--Miss Crawford concluded that Maplewood doesn't go to New York for shows as often as one might suppose. In a curtain speech Miss Crawford once very tentatively suggested that she might bring "Abe Lincoln in Illinois" to Maplewood. She was sure everyone had seen it, and said so. A well-bred bedlam broke loose. No, the audience said, it hadn't seen the play, and please, Miss Crawford, do let's have it. The plan finally fell through, but the demand was tremendous.

What with countless chummy curtain speeches, talks to Rotarians and Elks and Moose and strawberry festivals, church supper gathering, social clubs, Miss Crawford spread the word personally about her theatre to about 60,000 inhabitants, rich and not so rich. The community knew her as a personality.

Perfect strangers said hello to Miss Crawford on the street and blushed and giggled. She stopped at a cigar store in a near-by town one day to ask the way to the community church, and the clerk said he'd tell her if she'd give him two seats to the show. Letters poured in from people who signed themselves "A Maplewood Theatre Lover" and variations on the theme, and the letters were effusivve with gratitude for having Maplewood pushed onward and upward with arts. In six weeks 10,000 local folk signed little cards saying they wished to have the theatre back next year and asking to be kept in touch with developments.

***

Having identity as a producer, being known around town as the person who satisfies the appetite for theatre, is an ego-boosting experience that hasn't happened to New York producers since the days of Belasco, and Miss Crawford frankly relished the role. She was having fun, and she was also making enough money, she said, "to pay a few debts and live comfortably for a year anyhow." Box-office receipts, of course, did not touch the dizzy figures that gladden the heart of a New York producer with a hit. Neither did they sink to the sickening low that makes a New York producer begin to think about pigeon raising as a career. Maplewood receipts were steady and moderate, cost of production versus box-office take could be figured out pretty closely in advance.

There was a top price of $1.50 for evening performances, and 85 cents for matinees. Besides low prices, local people had the advantae of not having to get dressed up and go to town to see a show. Wives were very grateful for this, and said they could get thier husbands to the theatre much more often that way. Others said that with the theatre so cheap, they could see a real play instead of going to the movies so much. Anybody who can break into the movie habit in the suburbs deserves some kind of an award with palms.
posted by John Elwood on Jul 25, 2006 at 3:04pm
The Maplewood Theater 1968. The Maplewood Theater 1973.

posted by Lost Memory on Oct 10, 2006 at 3:20am
Excellent shots, LM. I informed my Maplewood cousin about them.

It's funny, tho, regarding the foibles of my "lost memory." The '68 shot is far more vivid in my mind than the one from '73 - and my cousin didn't actually move there until 1978 or so! Hope to snap a new pic soon...
posted by BrooklynJim on Oct 26, 2006 at 7:02am
I know what you mean Jim. Sometimes your mind plays tricks on you. My mind is so far gone that there isn't much left to play tricks with. LOL

posted by Lost Memory on Oct 26, 2006 at 7:55am
Whoops how did you all find my pictures? We were hiding those pending the publication of an article about the Maplewood Theatre in a local magazine. Steve Weintraub found the 1968 and 1973 pictures for my article (soon to be printed) about the Maplewood Theatre's interesting past. If you click on here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/sweintraub/sets/72157594274871640/ you can see what the interior looks like behind the false walls and dropped ceilings. I went with the long time management team and they were gracious enough to grab me a ladder from the neighboring pizzaria... lift a few ceiling tiles... and grab these pictures using a huge flash. Its pitch black, and completely invisible, until you pull the camera down and see what you found. I know you old school theater buffs would call it a tragedy, but you have to remember how beat and destroyed this place was BEFORE it was triplexed. Now with 5 screens, this theater keeps the downtown vibrant in a way no single screen could (or did). Luckily its mostly still up there, just out of view.
posted by John Elwood on Oct 30, 2006 at 1:35pm
Glad you all like the shots, that's what they're there for :)
posted by Steve Weintraub on Oct 30, 2006 at 1:53pm
Hi,
Thank you for your pictures. When I was in high school I worked in the Maplewood Theatre behind the concession stand from about 1980-1984. It was probably one of the best jobs I ever had and will ever have. I used to look up at the ceiling and wonder about its past. It was so cold, lonely and empty and I remember thinking that it was not long before someone hacked it up and destroyed it. Like so many other old theatres it is a local tragedy.
The concession stand was the old school kind--located at the end of the aisle where one could view the movies while serving or purchasing. I went to college in the city and was stunned when I came back to visit Maplewood one day and discovered it had been carelessly chopped up into a painful eyesore. I now have family who have returned to Maplewood and the demographics have drastically changed. For the last 5 years i have been feeling that the current movie theatre will eventual fade and the Maplewood Theatre will be restored and turned into a community theatre featuring: revival movie festivals, live theatre and big scale commercial family "event" pictures all rolled into one. I think that this use mirrors what the current community needs. I also think it might be a part of trend that happens in many other communities around the country. I believe this might happen in the next 5 or 10 years possibly sooner. People do not watch movies in theatres as much and wide screen HD TV's will become very inexpensive. People do not want to spend their money to see a movie which will go straight to DVD in less than 3 months. The only thing that will motivate them to go to the theatres again are large high quality event pictures--an animated family picture, an excellent horror picture, a restored classic which baby boomers want to see and share with a house full of other boomers. This is what I predict will happen to the Maplewood Theatre. I'm hoping that it will happen faster than we think.

Thanks again for the pictures.
Shirley
s h u a n g 8500 at yahoo.........com
Feel free to email me as I think I might know a person who might have some interesting memorabilia from the theatre.
posted by FilmNoir1944 on Jul 4, 2007 at 10:33am
This theater had a Wurlitzer Organ. Because of its proximity to Thomas Edison's West Orange laboratories, Edison happened to use it on several occasions to make recordings. If anyone is interested in MP3s of these organ recordings, I can send them. The folks at Edison National Historic site were nice enough to record them for me, including the "never released" recordings.
Let me know exeterxj12c at yahoo dot com
-John
posted by John Elwood on Jul 10, 2007 at 1:37pm
Do they still not allow people to bring in anything larger than a purse? I remember me and my buddies used to try to sneak in food and sodas, and we would always get busted and have to put our bags in the janitor's closet.
posted by jpcollins on Aug 6, 2007 at 5:06pm
Does this theater have an email address? I need to contact them. Someone please reply!
posted by poland626 on Nov 23, 2008 at 3:22pm
FilmNoir1944: I don't reside in, nor have I ever resided anywhere in NJ, including Maplewood, but I think that this:


" The only thing that will motivate them to go to the theatres again are large high quality event pictures--an animated family picture, an excellent horror picture, a restored classic which baby boomers want to see and share with a house full of other boomers. This is what I predict will happen to the Maplewood Theatre. I'm hoping that it will happen faster than we think."

is right on the money, and, if yours (and mine) prediction is correct, it will not only happen to the
Maplewood Theatre in New Jersey, but to various movie palaces throughout the country.
posted by MPol on Nov 23, 2008 at 4:56pm
Here is a photo of Tallulah Bankhead in front of the Maplewood in 1940. The photo is from Life Magazine:
http://tinyurl.com/6oc24n
posted by ken mc on Nov 28, 2008 at 7:33pm
I grew up in Maplewood and have many fond memories of going to the movies at the Maplewood Theatre during the 1970's, when it was one big auditorium. I especially remember going to Saturday matinee or having pizza at the Roman Gourmet before or after a show. I recall as a very young kid, during which must have been the very late 1960's or maybe 1970, of seeing live singers before the movie began -I think it was a Christmas show. Great memories!
posted by JerseyChris on Jan 19, 2009 at 9:04am
Starting tomorrow, Monsters vs Aliens will be shown in 3D.
posted by Justin Fencsak on Mar 26, 2009 at 12:20pm
Here is another life photo, circa 1953:
http://tinyurl.com/czbrps
posted by ken mc on Apr 11, 2009 at 11:16am
Here are 1986 photos:

Photo1

Photo2

posted by Lost Memory on Apr 24, 2009 at 7:04pm
I think I overheard the manager talking about having Clearview start to buy this theater but I'm not sure. This was a few months ago, like October

The only good theater, IMO, is the one that has the 3D projection. The screen isn't the biggest but it has the best sound in the whole theater and every other screen has crappy sound quality but I still go here because it's the closest place with big screens.
posted by poland626 on Jan 11, 2010 at 2:05pm
Comment
*

Notify me when someone replies to my comment?
Note: Please read our comment policy before posting. Comments which are off-topic, obscene, spam, or personal attacks will be removed. Help us keep the discussion productive!