Southampton 4 Theatres

43 Hill Street,
Southampton, NY 11968

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Regal Entertainment Group, United Artists Theater Circuit Inc.

Styles: Colonial Revival

Nearby Theaters

Southampton Theater Marquee, Jaws

Around 2005, the auditorium block of original 1,062-seat Southampton Theatre was demolished. United Artists constructed four new auditoriums behind the original façade. It was last operated by the Regal Entertainment Group.

On May 21, 1996 the Southampton 4 Theatres opened as a first-run theatre, popular with the areas numerous celebrities including director Barry Sonnenfeld. It was closed on March 17, 2020 due to the Covie-19 pandemic. It was announced in April 2021 that the closure would be permanent as the owner was trying to sell the building. It was sold in November 2022 and renovations began in August 2023.

Contributed by Ken Roe

Recent comments (view all 8 comments)

Guodone
Guodone on October 5, 2020 at 9:57 am

I saw Patton here in the summer of 1970 and Chinatown in the summer of 1974. I posted a picture of the marquee when they were showing Jaws in 1975.

ridethectrain
ridethectrain on May 18, 2021 at 10:17 am

please update, closed permanently. Landlord sold the building

ridethectrain
ridethectrain on May 18, 2021 at 10:22 am

from the south hampton press and the theatre been remove from Regal website: Kitty Merrill on Feb 23, 2021          Ken Karlin, owner of the Hill Street building once home to the Southampton movie theater, says he hasn’t been paid rent in a year. The COVID-19 pandemic hit cinemas across the country hard, prompting wholesale closures in the ailing industry. In the spring of 2020, the Regal movie chain shut down all 536 of its movie theaters, including the one in Southampton and the one in East Hampton. The theater in Hampton Bays had closed earlier, before the coronavirus crisis, and may be turned into a CVS drug store. The Southampton theater owner, a North Fork resident, said his family has owned the site for 40 years and it’s been for sale “for some time,” with an asking price of $8.9 million. “I’m bleeding money,” he said, adding, “it’s time to move on.”

Though the property has been up for sale for a while, community curiosity was piqued when, during the last several weeks, fresh “for sale” signs appeared on the building’s doors. Mr. Karlin said he’d been in contract to sell the building “many times,” but the contracts fall through in the face of village bureaucracy. He stopped short of elucidating the nature of the governmental impediments to successful sales, but was emphatic that his building’s zoning means “I can put anything in there.” He said officials are adamant about having a movie theater at the site. His response? “Then you buy it and operate it.” Village Board member Mark Parash wandered the rooms of that theater in his youth growing up in the village. “I grew up going in and out of all those rooms,” he recalled. A movie theater is one of the primary assets a vibrant village or hamlet has, the lawmaker pointed out. “I’d love to see someone come in with a vision,” he said, offering his “dream” of a performing arts center similar to Bay Street in Sag Harbor or the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center being established in Southampton. That type of a destination use is “a huge draw,” Mr. Parash observed. At this point, Mr. Karlin said, it doesn’t matter to him whether the buyer chooses to use the building for a theater or not. “I don’t really care who does what with it, not my concern anymore. Pay me my money, I walk away, it’s all yours. Have fun.” He acknowledged some companies are trying to find ways to draw people into theaters, with food and alcohol a potential. “God bless them, do whatever you want. Just not on my dime.” According to the website Cinema Treasures, the Colonial-style movie house was opened by Glynn Theatres in 1932 as the 1,000-seat Southampton Theatre. It was operated by Prudential Circuit in the 1940s. It was split into a fourplex in the 1990s and operated by United Artists, then as a Regal UA cinema more recently. Regal reopened some of the theaters that had been closed due to COVID-19 at the end of the summer, only to close them again in October, citing the lack of business.

robboehm
robboehm on May 19, 2021 at 12:38 pm

Re the original theatre: In the last few years of its operation a fifth auditorium was created in dressing rooms and storage space in the basement. Access was from an outside stairway apart from the main entrance.

Also village bureaucracy was a factor in the creation of the Southampton 4. The operator wanted to close the in town location and do a new build elsewhere. Town said no so they demolished all but the facade of the old theatre and constructed the new auditoriums.

Bureaucracy went beyond commercial real estate. My cousin wanted to build a modest house on Old Town Road. The Village Board even had a say on elements of the interior of the house requiring her to put up a pony wall between the dining and living rooms rather than allowing an open concept. Many years later this house was sold (for an outrageous amount) only to be torn down and replaced by a structure which is really too big for the lot.

ridethectrain
ridethectrain on June 3, 2021 at 6:14 pm

Please update, new Southhampton 4 open on May 21, 1996. Grand Opening ad in photos

ridethectrain
ridethectrain on July 12, 2021 at 7:41 pm

Seating Capacity Theatre 1 168 Theatre 2 152 Theatre 3 320 Theatre 4 232

Total seats 872

robboehm
robboehm on February 15, 2023 at 12:41 pm

Reports that there are plans to repurpose as a cultural arts center. Problem with that is limited parking.

robboehm
robboehm on September 21, 2023 at 1:44 pm

Billionaire Aby Rosen was behind the 8 million dollar purchase of the theatre in November 2022 by Hill Street Cinema LLC. Scaffolding is now up around the theatre. See photo I’ve uploaded. Interior renovations are also planned. Movies will again be shown but, probably, not exclusively.

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