Clover Cinema

121 East First Street,
Cloverdale, CA 95425

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lostmemory
lostmemory on August 12, 2009 at 10:47 am

This is a 2009 photo of the Clover Cinema.

lostmemory
lostmemory on November 7, 2008 at 5:31 pm

More photos can be seen here.

lostmemory
lostmemory on June 24, 2008 at 2:09 pm

Name on the Cinema West website is Clover Cinema.

lostmemory
lostmemory on July 4, 2007 at 3:11 pm

Here is a recent close-up view of the Clover Theater.

robertgippy
robertgippy on June 13, 2007 at 10:29 am

The Clover, was originally a single screen theatre, that was converted into a 4 screens. The Clover, for a long time, was showing Hispanic Movies. It was a single floor, with no loge or balcony. It was closed for a long time, but used by various tenants before its remodeling and grand reopening. The previous tenants showed no movies there. We went through cloverdale one night in the late evening and saw that the interior was lit. through the cracks in the door, we saw a red Nazi flag on the stage. I was in it once when i was a teenager, and it was a bare auditorium with no murals. The 4 plex is nice, we just saw Shrek there, they took the original auditorium, and made stadium seating with a nice screen and the seating is great. The other 3 screens were made by the building of an additional building to the original structure. It is doing quite well. The Clover, is an exact duplicate to the Raven Theater in Healdsburg. The Raven’s auditorium, which hasn’t been altered, looks exactly the same as the Clover before remodeling. The theater is doing happy and well, and when we were there, it was packed. Good to see for a small town (not small anymore) do well.

Chuck1231
Chuck1231 on September 15, 2005 at 10:58 am

Photo of the Clover Theatre.
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GaryParks
GaryParks on June 16, 2004 at 12:37 pm

My Dad and I got to go inside this theatre in the early 1990s when it was being used as a rehearsal space for local rock bands. The man who was running it as such let us in. The lobby is plain, but had nice redwood wainscoting and door frames, which have been retained to this day. We went into the auditorium, which was very stark then, with plain smooth white walls and a contrasting painted strip down low. A very shabby twinning job had been done, cross-wise, with a new screen made simply of a painted white rectangle on drywall. There was a small stage apron in front of the original screen.
I have not been inside since the Clover’s refurbishing, but I have seen the exterior at night, and the simple neon outlining the facade and marquee make a nice small town statement. This is a classic theatre such as you can find in articles in volumnes of Theatre Catalog from the late 40s and early 50s, when new small town theatres were written about along with the larger theatres.