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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as UA 70 & 150

UA 150

Seattle, WA
2131 Sixth Avenue
, Seattle, WA, United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Twin
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 1345
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
This theater, which opened in 1969, was originally outfitted with the Dimension 150 process. It was well known locally as the main theater that showed "Star Wars" for a year in 1977/78. The interior of the main auditorium was a large wooden framed roof with an equally massive screen.

In the mid 90's it was a second run house that had revival screenings on weekend midnights. UA let the theater get very run down and ultimately closed the doors in 1998.

The theater was demolished in 2002 and the only thing remaning is the marquee. "It's a shame Paul Allen couldn't have also saved this theater and restored it to it's glory. Ironically it was just a few blocks from the restored Cinerama."
Contributed by Shannon Laine


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Sad to see dust and rubble at this site on a recent visit to the city. Used to come down from Vancouver regularly to see Star Wars in 70MM Dolby stereo and those memories are some of my favorite movie-going experiences. Here's to progress, yecccch.
posted by Seattle Cinerama on Sep 17, 2004 at 4:55pm
This was a very special and unique theatre in the Seattle area. Everyone loved it! It should never have been allowed to become run down by United Artists, closed and finally torn down in 2002. It's sad, these large screen theatres are being demolished all over the country. Hmm, wonder how long the remodeled Cinerama will eventually last?

Some of my fondest memories are going to movies at the UA. Yes, the theatre and screen were enormous and had a great Dolby Stereo sound system (for the time), but additionaly it simply felt "majestic" and intimate at the same time. Just staring at the huge red and beige curtian, waiting for it to rise gave you a rush of anticipation no matter what movie you were about to see. A feeling and ambiance you just don't get from today's multi-plex theaters!

Before the theatre was torn down, the seats were for sale @ $5 each. So I bought several for my home theatre. What a great souvenir!
posted by Colin Marcoe on Nov 19, 2004 at 11:50am
I've been in dozens of Cinerama, CineMiracle and D-150 houses, but this is the ONLY one where there was a rising contour curtain on a curved track in front of the screen. Must've taken motors the size of a Volkswagen to lift that thing. Anybody have any info the UA70 right next door?
posted by veyoung on Nov 27, 2004 at 9:02pm
Yes, I had always been curious about the Seattle UA 150 curtain. The rigging and motors must've been very complicated because of the curve. I regrete not taking a closer look at it the day I was there buying my seats. I remember it was frozen in the raised position.

I don't know much about the UA70 as the 150 received all the attention. One could assume it was intended to show 70mm, however the equipment was always 35. I remember that E.T. originally opened on the UA70 screen but was quickly moved to the 150 in 70mm.
posted by Colin Marcoe on Nov 29, 2004 at 10:25am
Paul Allen's got money invested in the new Cinerama. It's not going anywhere anytime soon. Wish I'd known about the seat sale at the UA 150. Would've bought a roomful. As for the UA 70, I think it was always a 35mm moviehouse. As for ET, yes, it opened June 11, 1982 on the UA 70 side and then moved to the UA 150 when the 70mm print was released sometime in August of that year. I've also been lamenting the loss of the great Southcenter theatre (demolished for a restaurant).
posted by Movie Mike on Dec 5, 2004 at 1:19am
Yes, who could forget "Raiders of the Lost Ark" in 70mm at the Southcenter Theatre in 1980! I once heard the Southcenter boasted the LARGEST screen in the Pacific NW. Not sure if it was true or not compared to the Cinerama or UA 150.
posted by Colin Marcoe on Dec 6, 2004 at 1:35pm
God I absolutely loved this theatre. It was my favorite!!! It had the coolest sunken bathrooms and real velvet curtains. It was just huge. The aisles were great, tons of legroom. It was a true cinematic esperience. The saddest part is (to me) is that I never even went to it in it's heydey, just when it was a second run theatre in the nineties. And it was still the coolest ever. Even now that the cinerama is working and wonderful (thank you Paul Allen!), I still wish it was the UA-150 that could have been saved.<p>
Probably the best film I ever saw there was 'From Here to Eternity', which was wonderful. however, I still had loads of fun with 'Saturday Night Fever', 'Rumble in the Bronx', and 'Wildthings'. I will never forget this magical place.
posted by Dominique on Apr 24, 2005 at 8:30pm
Dominique, I thought I kept track of movies shown at the UA 150 second run during the nineties as I continued to attend it frequently, and I don't recall any of the films you mentioned. 'Saturday Night Fever'?? Where these specialty/midnight screenings of some sort?

I do agree with you 100% the UA should have beed saved along with (if not instead of) the Cinerama. The Cinerama is cool of course, but the UA had true charm!
posted by Colin Marcoe on May 4, 2005 at 11:15pm
Does anyone have pictures of this theatre inside and out?
posted by Mark Campbell on May 5, 2005 at 2:47pm
Mark, I do! Several of the interior after some pre-demolition took place (you get the idea what it looked like), and exterior before and during demolition. Glad to send some your way if interested, e-mail me at: colin@thenantucket.com
posted by Colin Marcoe on May 8, 2005 at 9:35pm
Thanks Colin. Great Photos (but also sad) photos!
posted by Mark Campbell on May 10, 2005 at 4:36pm
The UA Cinema 150 was among the theatres included in the original limited-market launch of "Star Wars." The UA Cinema 150's 5/25/77 opening-day gross, as reported in Daily Variety, was a house record $8,300.
posted by Michael Coate on Jun 21, 2005 at 6:17am
I was here only once, on August 21, 1992, to see Brian De Palma's Raising Cain. Here is an "obituary" by Clark Humphrey that appeared in a column in the paper The Stranger in 2002:

"The United Artists Cinemas 70/150 at Sixth and Blanchard was finally demolished on November 15, four years after the United Artists (UA) chain abandoned its only Seattle branch. The twin-cinema (Seattle's first) was built in 1962 to exploit two of the postwar film business' big-screen fads, 70 mm and Dimension 150. The 70/150 had its most famous moment as the local first-run home for the original Star Wars in 1977 (at the height of the film's popularity, the movie ran there 24 hours a day). In the mid-'80s, the UA chain leased the house to local operators, who briefly renamed it the Seattle Cinedome (no relation to the national Iwerks CineDome chain). UA retook operation of the 70/150 in 1992, operating it for six years as a discount house with midnight cult-film screenings. For its final demise, workers put up one final title on its long-empty marquee: DEMOLITION MAN."

posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Aug 27, 2005 at 3:56am
Dimension-150 did not exist in 1962.
posted by Michael Coate on Aug 27, 2005 at 5:42am
The theater was torn down in 2002, and those dated, old signs still stand on the corner. There's nothing there. Just a big empty parking lot. I swear, those signs are there to taunt theater lovers.
posted by Katie Mac on Sep 9, 2005 at 10:07pm
Katie, I have some bad news about those signs. They are gone as of today. I am staying right around the corner from this site, and this morning they took down the marquees, leaving just the "United Artists" sign atop. As I looked into my bag to grab my camera to take a picture of that sign, and the construction worker next to it BANG it was gone, falling 50 feet to the ground. Jesus! Just like that. And I missed it. It stood there for years yet in the 30 seconds I wanted to capture it....
posted by saps on Sep 11, 2005 at 6:54pm
After 3 years, the "entire" theatre is now gone including the marquee signs! There is nothing on the property. I had mixed feelings about the marquee sign not being demolished. A cruel reminder of what used to be there.
posted by Colin Marcoe on Sep 15, 2005 at 3:46pm
Also, long ago I e-mailed Clark Humphrey about that column in The Stranger from 2002. There are several errors in it: First, as mentioned by Michael Coate, Dimension-150 did not exist in 1962. In fact, the theater opened in November of 1969. The first 'Star Wars' never ran 24 hours a day! I attended the film MANY times in '77/'78 and the showtimes were 1:45pm, 4:30, 7:15 and 10:00pm only. He may be thinking of 'Empire Strikes Back' or 'Jedi' perhaps. And finally, UA did not lease the theatre to a local operator until after the summer of 1990. 'Die Hard 2' (in 70mm) was actually the last first-run film to play there. "Demolition Man" was the name of the wrecking company that tore the theatre down. A little advertising for themeselves?
posted by Colin Marcoe on Sep 20, 2005 at 7:00pm
"This theater, which opened in 1969"

"The twin-cinema (Seattle's first) was built in 1962 to exploit two of the postwar film business' big-screen fads, 70 mm and Dimension 150."

"In fact, the theater opened in November of 1969."
__________________________________________________

Okay...I looked this up recently in The Seattle Times. The real deal is: the theater opened on October 3, 1969. The debut attractions were "Easy Rider" (on the "150" screen) and "3 Into 2 Won't Go" on the "70" screen).
posted by Michael Coate on Sep 24, 2005 at 8:50pm
Thanks Michael! Corrected, it opened in October, NOT November of '69. Still a far cry from 1962! And STILL a crime the place is gone.
posted by Colin Marcoe on Sep 28, 2005 at 7:37pm
Listed Below are the films which played at the UA 150 Theater in Seattle from their opening through December 31, 1976. Research is from Variety and microfilms of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The date listed is the Wednesday of the week that the film opened. There may be a few instances where second run bills were played or films moved over from UA 70 which are not listed.

UA 150
10/01/69 Easy Rider
12/24/69 Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
03/18/70 Marooned
05/27/70 Rider on the Rain
06/10/70 Goodbye, Columbus/True Grit
06/17/70 Too Late the Hero
07/01/70 The Strawberry Statement
07/15/70 Getting Straight
08/12/70 Tell Me You Love Me, Junie Moon
09/16/70 Performance
11/04/70 I Walk the Line
11/18/70 Five Easy Pieces
12/23/70 The Owl and the Pussycat
03/17/71 Husbands
04/07/71 Waterloo
04/28/71 Lawrence of Arabia
05/26/71 A Man Called Sledge
06/09/71 The Racing Scene
06/16/71 Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice/Cactus Flower
06/23/71 Summer of '42
07/21/71 The Anderson Tapes
08/18/71 The Love Machine
09/15/71 Around the World in 80 Days/West Side Story
09/29/71 My Fair Lady
10/20/71 Gone With the Wind
11/03/71 Doctor Zhivago
12/08/71 2001: A Space Odyssey
12/22/71 The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight
01/19/72 The Hellstrom Chronicles/On Any Sunday
01/26/72 Summer of '42
05/24/72 The Possession of Joel Delaney
06/21/72 What's Up, Doc?
11/22/72 Rage
12/06/72 Blacula
12/13/72 Savage Messiah
12/20/72 Travels With My Aunt
01/24/73 Avanti
02/14/73 Cabaret
03/07/73 The Heartbreak Kid
04/18/73 Sleuth
07/04/73 The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing
08/01/73 The Last of Sheila
08/29/73 The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds
09/19/73 Happy Mothers Day, Love George
10/03/73 I Could Never Have Sex With Anyone Who Wasn't My Husband
10/24/73 From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
11/14/73 (Russian Ballet Film Festival)
11/21/73 Walking Tall
12/19/73 The Seven Ups
01/30/74 The Laughing Policeman
02/27/74 The Last Detail
05/22/74 Zardoz
07/03/74 The Parallax View
07/31/74 Christina
08/07/74 Pink Floyd - The Movie
08/28/74 2001: A Space Odyssey
10/30/74 Harry and Tonto
12/18/74 The Godfather, Part II
03/19/75 The Four Musketeers
06/25/75 The Wind and the Lion
08/20/75 The Happy Hooker
09/17/75 Singin' in the Rain
10/08/75 Yessongs
10/22/75 Gone With the Wind
11/05/75 Royal Flash
11/26/75 Mr. Quilp
12/03/75 Enter the Dragon
12/24/75 Lucky Lady
04/14/76 The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox
05/26/76 Mother, Jugs, and Speed
06/23/76 The Omen
10/20/76 Alex and the Gypsy
11/24/76 The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother
12/08/76 The Shootist
12/22/76 All This and World War II

UA 70

posted by Ron3853 on Apr 11, 2007 at 2:47pm
Listed Below are the films which played at the UA 150 Theater in Seattle from their opening through December 31, 1976. Research is from Variety and microfilms of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The date listed is the Wednesday of the week that the film opened. There may be a few instances where second run bills were played or films moved over from UA 70 which are not listed.

UA 150
10/01/69 Easy Rider
12/24/69 Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
03/18/70 Marooned
05/27/70 Rider on the Rain
06/10/70 Goodbye, Columbus/True Grit
06/17/70 Too Late the Hero
07/01/70 The Strawberry Statement
07/15/70 Getting Straight
08/12/70 Tell Me You Love Me, Junie Moon
09/16/70 Performance
11/04/70 I Walk the Line
11/18/70 Five Easy Pieces
12/23/70 The Owl and the Pussycat
03/17/71 Husbands
04/07/71 Waterloo
04/28/71 Lawrence of Arabia
05/26/71 A Man Called Sledge
06/09/71 The Racing Scene
06/16/71 Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice/Cactus Flower
06/23/71 Summer of '42
07/21/71 The Anderson Tapes
08/18/71 The Love Machine
09/15/71 Around the World in 80 Days/West Side Story
09/29/71 My Fair Lady
10/20/71 Gone With the Wind
11/03/71 Doctor Zhivago
12/08/71 2001: A Space Odyssey
12/22/71 The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight
01/19/72 The Hellstrom Chronicles/On Any Sunday
01/26/72 Summer of '42
05/24/72 The Possession of Joel Delaney
06/21/72 What's Up, Doc?
11/22/72 Rage
12/06/72 Blacula
12/13/72 Savage Messiah
12/20/72 Travels With My Aunt
01/24/73 Avanti
02/14/73 Cabaret
03/07/73 The Heartbreak Kid
04/18/73 Sleuth
07/04/73 The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing
08/01/73 The Last of Sheila
08/29/73 The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds
09/19/73 Happy Mothers Day, Love George
10/03/73 I Could Never Have Sex With Anyone Who Wasn't My Husband
10/24/73 From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
11/14/73 (Russian Ballet Film Festival)
11/21/73 Walking Tall
12/19/73 The Seven Ups
01/30/74 The Laughing Policeman
02/27/74 The Last Detail
05/22/74 Zardoz
07/03/74 The Parallax View
07/31/74 Christina
08/07/74 Pink Floyd - The Movie
08/28/74 2001: A Space Odyssey
10/30/74 Harry and Tonto
12/18/74 The Godfather, Part II
03/19/75 The Four Musketeers
06/25/75 The Wind and the Lion
08/20/75 The Happy Hooker
09/17/75 Singin' in the Rain
10/08/75 Yessongs
10/22/75 Gone With the Wind
11/05/75 Royal Flash
11/26/75 Mr. Quilp
12/03/75 Enter the Dragon
12/24/75 Lucky Lady
04/14/76 The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox
05/26/76 Mother, Jugs, and Speed
06/23/76 The Omen
10/20/76 Alex and the Gypsy
11/24/76 The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother
12/08/76 The Shootist
12/22/76 All This and World War II

UA 70

posted by Ron3853 on Apr 11, 2007 at 2:47pm
Sorry, I didn't mean to hit "Submit" twice - it was taking a long time.
posted by Ron3853 on Apr 11, 2007 at 2:49pm
UA 70
10/01/69 3 into 2 Won't Go
10/08/69 The Libertine
10/29/69 The Sterile Cuckoo
12/17/69 Viva, Max!
02/25/70 They Shoot Horses, Don't They?
05/13/70 Fellini's Satyricon
08/19/70 The Passion of Anna/Persona
09/09/70 Barefoot in the Park/The Odd Couple
09/16/70 Hotel
10/07/70 Joe
07/21/71 Summer of '42
01/26/72 The Last Picture Show
06/21/72 Cisco Pike
07/05/72 Red Sun
07/19/72 Little Big Man/A Man Called Horse
07/26/72 The Other
09/20/72 Marjoe
10/25/72 Bad Company
11/01/72 A Separate Peace
12/20/72 The King of Marvin Gardens
01/10/73 They Only Kill Their Masters
01/31/73 Sounder
05/23/73 Slither
06/27/73 Scarecrow
09/19/73 Visions of Eight
10/03/73 Walking Tall
10/24/73 Jimi Hendrix
12/05/73 The Betty Boop Scandals of 1974
12/19/73 Ash Wednesday
01/30/74 The Seven Ups
02/20/74 Sounder
02/27/74 A Touch of Class
03/27/74 The Three Musketeers
10/02/74 Conrack
11/06/74 The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob
11/20/74 King of Hearts
12/18/74 The Godfather, Part II
02/12/75 Murder on the Orient Express
06/25/75 The French Connection 2
08/20/75 At Long Last Love
09/17/75 The Happy Hooker
10/01/75 Fantastic Planet/Dark Star
10/08/75 (Ali-Frazier Fight)
10/15/75 Coonskin
10/22/75 Camelot
11/12/75 The Human Factor
11/26/75 Capone
12/17/75 The Sunshine Boys
03/24/76 I Will, I Will...For Now
04/28/76 The Killing of a Chinese Bookie
05/26/76 The Blue Bird
06/30/76 Silent Movie
11/24/76 Murder by Death/Murder on the Orient Express
12/22/76 Silver Streak

posted by Ron3853 on Apr 11, 2007 at 3:22pm
also UA 150
03/03/71 Doctors' Wives (inadvertantly omitted)
posted by Ron3853 on Apr 11, 2007 at 3:24pm
Ron, Wow! That's an impressive list! It would also be interesting to see a list of all the films which played AFTER 1976 as well. (Several, of course we already know).
posted by Colin Marcoe on Jul 16, 2007 at 10:31pm
yes please. Format as well (dolby, 70mm etc)
posted by Mark Campbell on Jul 16, 2007 at 11:19pm
the website fromscripttodvd.com does a great job of detailing 70mm engagements and where they played.

I wish they'd devote some attention to Seattle. There's no shortage of venues and events.
posted by neeb on Jul 16, 2007 at 11:44pm
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