Colony Theater

329 S. Park Avenue,
Winter Park, FL 32789

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Chuck1231
Chuck1231 on December 3, 2011 at 12:53 am

Andy, you should add your photos to the CT photos, your pics are much clearer than the google.

AndyCallahanMajorMajor
AndyCallahanMajorMajor on December 2, 2011 at 4:38 pm

Here are my pictures from November 2011.

Patsy
Patsy on July 9, 2011 at 1:33 pm

This one is an art deco beauty! Would like to see it next winter while visiting friends in Mt Dora.

Chuck1231
Chuck1231 on February 4, 2010 at 3:09 pm

When Floirida State theatres operated the Colony Theatre they listed seating at 799.

floridaboy54
floridaboy54 on July 26, 2009 at 4:32 pm

I have great memories of the Colony during the sixties. Every Tuesday morning during the summer they had kid shows sponcered by RC Cola. All you had to do was to collect six RC bottle caps and you got in free! The show usually started with a cartoon, a race reel and then the feature. The race reel, which ran about 8 minutes, would show a different race every week. I think there were about 10 total; cars, boats, rollerskates, etc. This series must have been produced in the 30’s. At the end of each race the winner in the film had a number on his back and every kid would look inside of his popcorn box for the winning ticket! Sounds kind of hokey now, but if you’re a 10 year old kid it’s exciting.

In the early 70’s, I was a relief projectionist at the Colony. Whenever one of the two projectionists, Art Pope or Ralph Mays were called to work at the Municipal Auditorium, I would be called in to cover. Located up stairs behind the balcony was the projection booth. It looked like a time capsule from 1939. At the time, there were strick fire laws. Since most of the films were nitate, the booth had to be fireproof. The entry door was steel and very heavy. On every porthole there was a fire shutter attached by a cable to a counterweight. If a fire did occur, the lead fuse would melt and the counterweight would fall closing all the fire shutters. But they had so many coats of paint on them, I doubt any of them would have closed! The projection equipment consisted of Super Simplex’s, Photophone 9050’s, and Peerless Magnarc’s. The lamphouses had control knobs made of swirled yellow Catalin and an etched glass sign on top that would illuminate when the carbon was struck! In the next room was an enormous generator to supply DC current for the carbon arcs. Sometime in the mid-fities they installed Motiograph magnetic penthouses for the magnetic-track films. The auditorium was not ornate. It had a Cinemascope screen and no curtain. The first big picture I ran there was Fiddler on the Roof, three shows a day, a roadshow engagement in magnetic stereo sound!

By 1975, the multiplexes and twins were stiff competition for the old downtown houses and the Colony finally closed. The new owners gutted the theatre and put in a restaurant upstairs and boutique mall downstairs. Outside, the blade is still intact with different colors of neon, a reminder of it’s past life.

lostmemory
lostmemory on December 7, 2007 at 9:37 pm

This is a recent close-up view.

irvl
irvl on September 29, 2007 at 1:47 pm

The Colony’s exterior is featured in the 1958 sci-fi film, TERROR FROM THE YEAR 5000.

DonLewis
DonLewis on September 9, 2007 at 11:07 pm

I suppose becoming a Pottery Barn is better that being demolished. Two August 2007 images of the COLONY.

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irishcine
irishcine on October 4, 2006 at 11:21 am

Two more photos of this former cinema here
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lostmemory
lostmemory on September 28, 2006 at 4:52 pm

Here is a photo of the Pottery Barn located in the former Colony Theater.