Century's Floral Theatre
250 Jericho Turnpike,
Floral Park,
NY
11001
250 Jericho Turnpike,
Floral Park,
NY
11001
6 people favorited this theater
Showing 51 - 75 of 80 comments
Ligg,
Parking, or rather the LACK OF PARKING, was the smallest part of the problem. The major killer of all of these small town theaters was television! (Traditional) movie theater revenue started to decline in the early 50s, as more and more families started purchasing TV sets. You are too young to remember life without television, and thus never experienced the transition.
These theaters were designed as neighborhood theaters. In their heyday, most patrons WALKED to them!
BTW, when I worked there, the balcony was NEVER closed, since smoking was permitted only in the balcony and Loge. And the “boxes” you speak of were part of the Loge area – i.e., all of the area to the screen-side of the transverse aisle. While the boxes afforded some additional feeling of privacy, they had a lousy viewing angle, especially after the CinemaScope screen was installed.
While I do agree that parking was a major issue with the Floral, which is by the way my favorite theater of all time, the major problem was that is was a single screen. You can not make it today with a single screen theater. It costs too much money to keep it going. I do agree that quading it would have kept it going (if you had the parking). The problem with quading it is that they would have destroyed the theater. As a service tech for many theater, I have seen the old singles that have been cut up. It’s digusting what they cover up or cut apart to multiplex these places. I went to the Kenmore once in Brooklyn on a call and when they split the downstairs theater into two, they just built new side walls in front of the old walls. There was about a one foot space in between the old and new wall. You could look behind it an still see the old fabric on the walls. Thank god the Floral closed before they butchered it.
Ditto for Calderone’s Mineola Theatre. The destruction of this gem, too, was a crime.
Hands down, in Nassau, the Floral was one of the most beautful theaters in the county. How is was not landmarked it was a mystey to me. Supposedly, it was one of Long Island premiere movies houses, and when I say premiere, I mean, cast members, while promoting the movie in New York would come to the Floral because of the beauty and the way the theater was set up. When it closed I remember an article in Newsday, that I think are the Long Island opening of Mildred Pierce, Joan Crawford, came out on the stage when either before it started or ended. The unfortunate thing now, is that people in this area are stuck either going to the Clearview Theaters like the Herricks and Franklin Square which are pretty good, but nothing like the Floral. The Floral showed all the great movies, I remember, my 11th birthday, my parents took 10 friends of mine and me to see Return of The Jedi, which is the last movie I remember seeing there in 1983. And then it close for quading that never happened. This theater was so beautiful, that even quading it would have been a shame. It did look like it are one time was Nassau Counties, Radio City Music Hall. I do remember the balcony always being closed, except of course for movies like Jedi, when they needed the space. But they even had boxes if I remember correctly on the side like Radio City and other fancy theaters. They were never opened, but that is the kind of theater we are talking about.
The area around the Floral as I said has only three options the Herricks and the Franklin Six which both were single theaters divided so much, that on a busy first weekend Friday and Satuday night you are better going to the raceway because you will never get a ticket. But quading the Floral, really would have been the only way for it to survive, because this theater was huge, and even Jedi, once the balcony opened, was still not sold out. Imagine today, the new Star Wars plays on the six screens, the Floral could hold that capacity in its one theater.
In my opinion what killed the Floral and not quading, was parking, parking, parking. The Floral was built at a time when the movie theater was like the communnity entertainment center in the days before tv, but by the mid 1980’s, Everyone drove there. Well you can imagine a theater with 1654 seats, even quaded, where do you park the car? It still was a busy merchant street, and there was one municipal lot that with a generous estimate, 50 cars! How can you have a theater that big and so few parking spaces. I remember, the streets around it had one hour parking, so side street parking was out of the question. I hope the owners attempted to have a garge built somewhere turn the small parking lot into multi level lot. I am sure, someone with a theater like that would have done anything to keep it open if they were going to quad it. But parking is what killed the beauty, just like when live in Los Angeles, they would knocked down old homes that were almost historic, and buidlings from the old hollywood of the 30’s and 40’s to make parking. That area just had no room for parking except that small lot. And the community was not helping but now allowing sreet parking. So that is how a beauty like the Floral died and Franklin Sq and Herricks are the only game in town beside the mall area. Parking. The Herricks has its own parking lot. And across Hempstead Tpk, the Franklin Sq theaters as two huge public town lots used on Sunday mornings for the hundreds of parishoners of St Catherines around the corner and during the week and rest of the weekend, the movie theater as free parking for any one, in the village park lot with no meters. So even when the FS theater is sold out as it frequently is with small theaters, the lots are never filled to capacity.
Again, though I spent much of teens at the Herrick and the Franklin to see movies, it is just heartbreaking to see a theater like the Floral be destroyed by PARKING! To me, that is a sin, and the community should have done something save the building including landmarking it. But now it is gone, and will never return. Another case where “they took an idol and smashed it!”
I remember the luncheonette quite well. After having seen a typical double-bill once or twice, taking my “breaks” (as an usher) inside the theater became rather boring. Consequently, I was in the luncheonette quite often.
Also, I was dating the sister of a fellow usher at the time (‘53-'55), and often met her in the luncheonette.
The Floral was the most beatuful theatre I’ve ever been in (besides
Radio City). Does anyone remember the luncheonette on the corner that was part of the building?
Growing up in Floral Park in the ‘60s was a blessing…
RCDTJ,
Sorry I didn’t get back to you sooner. I’ve been in NJ for the last 36 hours, for a wake and funeral.
You are correct on both the steps in the Floral passageways, and the loge location.
In the Queens, the passageways were lengthier, and had fewer steps.
Greg,
When you say “go through the passageway from the mezzanine”, as I remember, the passageway was about 6 or 7 steps up. When you got to the top, you had your choice to go up to the balcony seats or down a couple steps to the loge seats. Does that sound about right? Also, the Floral closed when I was 12. I didnt become a projectionist until about 6 years later. But you are right. We do have our own private little potty.
Guys,
The ground (main) floor is called the orchestra. The “upper lobby area” is called the mezzanine. After you go through the passageways from the mezzanine, you went DOWN into the loge, or UP into the balcony.
The loge in the Floral only had about three rows of seats; but they were the best seats in the house, especially with the advent of CinemaScope. You would view the screen looking straight ahead – neither up (from the orchestra) nor down; and – unlike the first few balcony rows – you had no one walking in front of you! So you really felt you were part of the action on the screen.
As I recall, loge seats cost about a quarter more; and could be purchased at the boxoffice, or from an usher(ette) assigned to loge/balcony duty. Needless to say, part of our job as ushers was to make sure that all loge patrons were properly ticketed.
Anyway, if the passageways were chained, then the Loge had to be closed.
As for the restrooms, in the Floral and Queens, they were located only on the mezzanines. RCDTJ, you had your own potty in the projection booth (chuckle).
The restrooms were up there. I think I remember them being downstairs to the right when you walked in also.
I think the restrooms were on that level. I don’t remember if the ground floor had any at all?
Greg,
If you mean the upper lobby area, as I always called it, then no. That was open. When you went up there into the upper lobby, there were chains on the stairs leading up to the balcony.
Zjoe/RobertR,
Having worked in the Floral (‘53-'55) and the Queens ('55-'58), I can assure you that the attitude of the Matrons off-duty was equal to that on-duty! I suspect that the more sour they were, the more likely they would be hired!
RCDTJ,
Your comment about the closed balcony is interesting. Was the Loge also closed?
Growing up in the late 70’s until it closed in the early 80’s, the balcony was closed most of the time. We always used to try to sneak up there.
Did anyone ever encounter a matron that was not a miserable shrew?
I lived in Bellerose from 1945 to 1953. Saturday afternoon at the Floral was the place to be for us kids. There was a children’s section for the Saturday matinee and it was always full. The fun thing to do was try to sneak into the balcony which was off limits to us brats. There was a horrible woman who was in charge of the children’s section and it was the mark of a hero to be caught misbehaving and be thrown out by her.
Thats right. Santa appeared at the floral too. Man, he is everywhere.
The Ridgwood did this also, always sponsored by the Ridgewood Savings Bank. I remeber seeing “Santa Clause Conquers The Martians” and then Santa appeared on stage.
Every Christmas eve morning they had a free show with cartoons and a movie. After the show, they would call ticket numbers and give out prizes on stage.
I have very fond memories of this theatre. It was not overly ornate but was just a real nice theatre.
The only time we went to the Floral was to see a re-release of Mary Poppins. I was put in charge of my brother. I vividly remember a long wait for Mom to pick us up. It was raining, but luckily, it had a very big marquee.
Having worked as a usher at the Floral from 1953 to 1955, I strongly disagree with the “loser” comment. The theater did well and made money! Yes, it shared simultaneous billings with Century’s Queens (Queens Village) and Meadows (Fresh Meadows) theaters, but always had good crowds on Friday through Sunday evenings. And for an especially good film, SRO was the norm. Frankly, I never saw as few as six patrons in the theater, even on a weekday afternoon.
THANKS, I was spelling it wrong.
There used to be a listing for Century’s Bellrose but I cant find it?
They did talk about iy being a quad but nothing ever came of it . As a single box office # were weak