Polk Theatre

121 S. Florida Avenue,
Lakeland, FL 33801

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Showing 26 - 43 of 43 comments

Patsy
Patsy on January 22, 2009 at 4:04 am

Unfortunately, the website doesn’t seem to be working left by CT member, “Chuck 1231”. If memory serves me right, I think he was the retired pilot who lived part of the year in Hawaii.

Patsy
Patsy on January 22, 2009 at 3:42 am

Any interior photos of this atmospheric?

Patsy
Patsy on January 22, 2009 at 3:42 am

And amazing to read that Elvis performed at this theatre in the 50’s and that the theatre has an organ!

Patsy
Patsy on January 22, 2009 at 3:39 am

Lost: Very nice theatre photos and one that I hope to visit in late March along with the Garden in Winter Garden and the Marion in Ocala.

UrbanDozer
UrbanDozer on September 23, 2008 at 4:21 am

Thank you Lost Memory for the compliment on the July 2008 photo of the Polk Theater. I’ve noticed that this site has referenced a few of my theater pictures (Flickr allows you to see where referrals come from). Because of you, I have been taking theater pictures in hopes that you will find them on my flickr!!

Unfortunately, I’m done with most of my traveling this year, as I am back in school, but hopefully I will be doing much more next year!

-Bob

jrhine
jrhine on May 26, 2008 at 2:16 am

Visited the Polk today. They show art or classic films on Friday & Saturday nights and Sunday afternoon. The theater is beautiful. They did a great job restoring it and the cloud projectors actually work! The organ program was disappointing. The organist hit a lot of bad notes and the choice of registration was not very sophisticated the tuned percussion was overused. I felt bad for the people in the audience who had never heard a theater organ before. As an example of theater organ style, it was lacking. The organists are apparently volunteers and at least it is in the theater and playing.

Keiko
Keiko on June 26, 2007 at 4:11 pm

In 1999 InterAmerica Stage, Inc. was contracted to provide a comprehensive inspection of the existing stage equipment, stage tower roof structure and analysis of the theatre’s production program. The study revealed a need for structural enhancements and replacement of the existing spot line/sandbag “hemp house” style rigging. Additional head steel and roof framing steel was installed to accommodate a full counterweight fly system. Our president, Mark Black says “The theatre is like a museum. There are artifacts of stage and film equipment throughout the building. The theatre board of directors are dedicated to preserving these items."

http://iastage.com/historical_renovations

JimFles
JimFles on November 10, 2005 at 10:57 am

The Polk now has a Robert Morton 3/12 organ up and playing.Each time I visit it’s more refined. Hats off to you guys!!!

Henb43
Henb43 on May 13, 2005 at 3:25 pm

Elvis was at the Polk Theater around 1955-1957..I remember my parents wouldn’t let me go with my friends. I was really disappointed but I did see him at the Lakeland Center in the 70’s, not long before he died. Some pictures of the 50’s show are on display at the downtown Crisper’s. I love the Polk Theater and went there as a kid and then on dates in high school. I wish they would show some 50’s and 60’s era movies maybe once a month. That would be fun and and I bet they would draw a large audience.

teecee
teecee on March 2, 2005 at 8:26 pm

Modern photo (enlarging will show pixels):

View link

chriselrod
chriselrod on January 18, 2005 at 1:42 pm

A fun Polk Theater fact – in an upstaris dressing room there is an autograph by Elvis Presley. Appartently he and his band played there in the 50s, right after he became popular on KWKH’s “Louisiana Hay Ride” and right before he broke big internationally. It is my understanding it was Elvis' first nation-wide tour. The Polk Theater folks have placed plexi-glass over the signature and rarely let people go into the dressing. Those that are lucky enough to get a tour of the facility catch a quick glimpse of the autograph.

VincentParisi
VincentParisi on July 28, 2004 at 2:22 pm

Gerald, thank you for correcting the spelling of Riefenstahl.
However the film is being sold and labeled in papers and magazines as a documentary. And as many people have pointed out Moore’s harangue is the flip side of Mel’s catholic fundamentalist gay(Caravaggio anyone?) S and M fantasy. Moore just as much as Mel wants this to be a black and white world and my concerns relate to the chords which they are striking in millions of people in this ever more frightened world.
Hussein and his family were monters and our Democratic Kerry voted for the war. He his also being funded by his wife’s Republican millions.
I am no Bush advocate by any stretch of the imagination. I just wish our filmmakers had more imagination and were able to create popular films which would reach a wide audience that could encompass all these staggering contradictions in a dramatic and entertaining way.
Above I said “perceived” as anti-American. And let’s face it many of the quote, unquote filmmaking and Hollywood liberals are just as high handed, elitest, and arrogant(read this as anti-American) as the staunchest Rebulicans. This is what so many Americans understand and this is why Bush will win again. It is called the spite vote and God help us all.
Basta cosi.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on July 27, 2004 at 11:26 pm

Vincent, it IS biased because it is slanted toward a a point of view. So what? It is not a documentary (that’s why I referred to it as op-ed). It presents the truth about Bush and his slimy Machiavellian cohorts from the point of view of antipathy. Viva antipathy! The facts are researched and no-one has successfully refuted them. You call it shrill. I call it Swiftian. It is not anti-American; it is anti-Bush (unless you equate the two as do the orgasmic wacko fundamentlists of the religious right.) The jury at Cannes had only one Frenchman. Four members, I believe, were American. Leni Riefenstahl prize? She EXTOLLED a monster in “Triumph of the Will”; Moore’s film EXCORIATES a dangerous and failed leader. Hardly the same. Moore does the world and America a noble service. Incidentally, while I do not shy away from friendly arguments, this will be my last word here…having gone on already, probably ad nauseam, on another part of “Cinema Treasures” in regard to the Iowa cinema chain. There are plenty of places to see the movie. And it comes out on DVD around the time of the Republican convention. I’d like to be in the rafters of Madison Square Garden then, dropping down DVD’s of F 9/11 like manna from Democratic heaven into the Valley of the Republicans. Of course I jest. (Gotta be careful of the Patriot Act!)
Finito, basta.

VincentParisi
VincentParisi on July 27, 2004 at 8:43 pm

Could it be that the manager of the Polk has a sense of proportion and refuses to exhibit a highly aggressive political rant by a self consumed monster ego. Now I’m not saying that Bush doesn’t deserve every kick in the butt we can give him(and Kerry too!) but to make what you call a documentary so biased, shrill, and distorted(anything perceived as slightly anti American automatically wins the palme d'or at Cannes, it’s a slam dunk) seems to me your gunning for the Leni Reifenstal prize in cinematic misrepresentation.
Bravo for the Polk.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on July 27, 2004 at 8:22 pm

Movie,
“Fahrenheit 9/11” IS playing in your area by now. You may already know this, but here is a link to all the U.S. theatres Moore’s op-ed filmic masterpiece is now showing.
http://www.f911tix.com/
Then click on the image of Florida. Florida, hmmmmmmm! Make sure your vote is counted this time!

debieacjohnson
debieacjohnson on July 27, 2004 at 5:56 pm

I went to the Polk as a child during the 50’s and 60’s. On Saturday mornings you could get free admission if you brought in 6 RC bottlecaps (Royal Crown cola). There would also be drawings for door prizes at intermission.

ibawesome
ibawesome on June 24, 2004 at 3:28 am

I am very unhappy that the Polk Theater in Lakland, FL is not showing Fahrenheit 911. This film won at the Cannes Film Festival. I could not find a theater nearby showing this film.