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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Community Theatre

Campus Cinema

Wakefield, South Kingstown, RI
17 Columbia Street
, Wakefield, South Kingstown, RI, United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Triplex
Style: Greek Revival
Function: Housing
Seats: 625
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Campus Cinema, so named due to its proximity to URI, in Wakefield is currently closed and empty. Despite a major renovation in 1998 that fixed up the building and added a third screen it closed down in July 2003 because of a 70% decrease in business due to the Entertainment Cinemas South Kingstown 8 opening minutes down the road.

The Campus is currently being converted into condominiums.
Contributed by Roger Katz


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Many decades ago the theatre was known as the Wakefield Opera House and then, for a very long time, the Community Theatre. The venue might very well function as a showcase for foreign and independent American films that do well at the Avon in Providence but are never booked at the Entertainment Cinemas.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Mar 20, 2004 at 8:34am
Wakefield is a village in the town of South Kingstown, Rhode Island.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Jun 26, 2004 at 5:32am
This theatre is no longer for sale and is currently being converted into condos.
posted by mmessier13 on Aug 26, 2004 at 7:22am
Is the 'Rich' named on the building's sign the same guy as the kid that started there as a film jockey in 1981/1982? I knew of a Rich from SKHS that seemed to work there forever...
posted by Andy F on Aug 31, 2004 at 11:42am
I went to URI and attended many films here. I remember catching "Star Wars" at the Campus. All the development in Wakefield/South County makes me want to cry.
posted by hardbop on Apr 1, 2005 at 12:29pm
Here is a photo of the Campus Cinema (post-closing.)
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y60/italiangerry/Cinemas/CampusWakefieldRI-7.jpg
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Apr 1, 2005 at 12:40pm
The theatre was built in 1919 on the site of the old Wakefield Opera House before being rebuilt as the Community. According to an article the Providence Journal, the theatre suffered a fire in February 1968. Water and smoke did damage to draperies and several of the seats. Because of the effects of combatting the blaze, three firemen had to be treated for smoke inhalation. The fire chief said that film and $25,000 worth of projection equipment were saved. The theatre had been renovated and re-opened the previous July. The Campus had a single screen and 300 seats at the time.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Jun 20, 2005 at 10:04am
Newspaper ad for Esquire Theatres in Rhode Island on December 7, 1971.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Aug 30, 2005 at 7:32am
From the South County Independent in July 24, 2003:

Movie house to shut down

By Alicia Korney/Independent Staff Writer
WAKEFIELD - Campus Cinema will close its doors after tonight's movie screenings, but owner Pi Patel said he still hopes shows - whether in the form of dinner theater or art house flicks - eventually return to Columbia Street.

"It breaks my heart to do this," said Patel, who bought the theater in 1998 and added a third screen. "After a while it became a foregone conclusion. I kept hoping the losses would stop but they didn't."

The Wakefield theater already has lost $70,000 through this year, according to Patel, and his three-screen Narragansett Theater in the Pier Marketplace has lost an additional $60,000 to date.

Patel said the trend dates back over the past three years, long before his theaters had to compete with the eight-screen Entertainment Cinemas that opened last summer in South County Commons on Route 1.

"I was losing money before they got here," Patel said. "I've supported the community for three years in a row, investing more than a million dollars. It's not the quality of the product or service - the movies just got overbuilt in South County. There's not enough business to support 14 screens."

Patel said he is formulating a new business plan and may try to bring dinner theater to the building at 17 Columbia St. He closed his Park Cinema in Cranston earlier this year and after receiving a liquor license from the state and Town Council reopened it to dinner theater.

"A similar concept may work here," Patel said. Beyond the installation of a stage and lighting, he said he would need a liquor license from the town of South Kingstown to make the dinner theater realistic financially.

In many ways, Patel's backup plan would be a return to the roots of the location.

First known as Wright's Hall, the barn-style building opened in 1882 and became known as the Wakefield Opera House six years later. The hall was part of the village center that belonged to another time, long before council members and residents grappled with what continued development in South Kingstown would mean to the fate of the small businessman.

In 1978's "A Stroll Through Memory Lane," South County historian Oliver H. Stedman remembered that the theater got its start after the burning of Columbia Hall in the summer of 1882. After a few months of reconstruction, the hall opened to traveling minstrels and stock productions before the birth of "moving pictures.

"Ten, twenty and thirty cents were the prevailing prices, the center of the hall being the thirty cent section where one felt obliged to sit while having an evening out with wife or sweetheart," Stedman recalled.

John W. Miller of Narragansett was the longest owner of the theater, buying the building in 1915 and making plans to rebuild after a serious fire in 1918 as he prepared to head off to France to serve in the Army during World War I. Miller continued to lease out the theater until his death in 1965, when his wife took over, rebuilding after a 1968 fire and continuing to lease the building until her own death in 1979.

John W. Miller Jr. of Narragansett said the family finally sold the sometimes-literal hot spot in 1981. Miller remembered how the hall was used for dancing after the much shorter movies of the early 1930s and said he's not surprised the theater is closing, especially with the competition on Route 1.

"I naturally feel a little nostalgic and sentimental about the whole thing," Miller said. "I just hope something good can come out of this for the public."

Patel said he will continue to operate the Narragansett Theater to see whether the closing of the Wakefield location buoys business. Far from laying blame, Patel said he hopes Entertainment Cinemas sees a stronger business for the community's sake, so people can still enjoy movies in South County.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Jun 29, 2007 at 4:26am
A very attractive framed photograph of this theatre in 1942, when it was known as the Community Theatre, can be seen in the lobby of Pi Patel's nearby Narragansett Theater.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on Jun 29, 2007 at 4:35am
Any updated info on this? Drove by it recently and it didn't look like Condos. In fact it didn't look any different at all!!
posted by mmessier13 on Aug 21, 2008 at 10:40am
There is an organization called "Project Venue" in the South Kingstown Senior High School that is searching for a place to hold local shows, music talent, poetry, and such, and I remember that this building was brought up for a possible place. The building doesn't seem to be changing into condos (I believe there was a zoning problem). The only problem was that this building seems to be an expensive place to buy/rent and run. I would love to see it stick around, and be used. If the town, state, or someone rich bought it, and rented it to be used by locals, that would be awesome. I believe my dad went to shows there when he went to URI
posted by Music kid on Nov 5, 2008 at 3:56pm
If anyone has any information on who to contact regarding this building would be greatly appreciated.
posted by mmessier13 on Nov 6, 2008 at 11:27am
Here is a photo from the LAPL:
http://jpg1.lapl.org/00080/00080196.jpg
posted by Lost Memory on May 4, 2009 at 10:51am
I didn't post the above comment.

posted by Lost Memory on May 4, 2009 at 10:51am
This is a 1986 photo of a Campus Cinema in Wakefield, RI.

posted by Lost Memory on May 4, 2009 at 10:52am
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