The Centro Ybor 20 was designed by the Baltimore architectural firm Development Design Group, Inc., which has been designing Muvico’s themed theaters since 1997.
Colorado Place splits off from Huntington Drive almost in front of the theater (it’s a double-curved “Y” intersection, with Huntington veering southward while Colorado Place bends north.) The City of Arcadia must have decreed at some time after 1950 that the numbers on the north side of that block be reassigned from Huntington Drive to Colorado Place, because that’s where they are now.
The theater was called Edwards Santa Anita for about two decades. The name Santa Anita was on the marquee until the early 1960s (I don’t recall the exact year,) when it was changed to Cinemaland. However, for as long as I remember, the theater always had a vertical sign that said Edwards, in letters larger than those used for the marquee name. The same was true at Edwards San Gabriel, which was renamed Edwards Century about the same time Edwards Santa Anita became Edwards Cinemaland.
Most of the old Edwards circuit houses had the company name on their signage, though at most of them it was in small, white neon script over the theater names themselves, so it was barely visible by daylight, and not very noticeable even by night. The San Gabriel and Santa Anita were the only houses I recall having the big vertical Edwards signs, but a smaller vertical reading Edwards was featured on the Edwards Village Theatre in Azusa.
A theater of the style the photos reveal would not have been first opened as late as 1935. Possibly 1935 is when Famous Players began operating the house. I’d guess the construction of the house to date from the late 1910s-early 1920s.
Perhaps the Classic was the theater then in the planning stage which was mentioned in the trade union journal The Bridgeman’s Magazine, issue of September, 1920. The house for C. Georgas and P. Leos was to be a two-story concrete, brick, and steel structure costing about $125,000 (presumably in Canadian dollars.) It was being designed by Toronto architects Hall & Duerr.
Boxoffice in 1954 mentioned two theaters that were then operating in Owen Sound; the Roxy and the Centre. The Roxy is the house now called the Owen Sound Little Theatre, built in 1912, but the Centre is unaccounted for, and it might have been the 1920 project by Hall & Duerr, so the Classic cannot yet be definitely attributed to them.
The book Washington County by Michelle M. Martin says that the Rex Theatre was built in 1915 and originally called the Yale.
There’s a small photo of the facade of the Yale Theatre in an ad for a popcorn machine that was published in the May, 1917, issue of Photoplay (result 4 of 5 for Yale– page 155.) There’s a bit of Art Nouveau decoration on the building.
A bit of the Colonial Theatre’s history can be found on this web page, along with a photo and an early theater program (click on them to enlarge.)
Information about the building’s later history is featured on this web page about the business that took over the space after the theater closed. It has a couple more photos.
A small interior photo of the auditorium can be seen in Moving Picture World, July 12, 1913.
PSTOS provides this photo showing the Ritz ca.1942.
Spokane Heritage Tours has this photo (click tiny thumbnail) of Rocky Rococo, the restaurant that currently occupies the former Ritz Theatre. This site classifies the architectural style of the building as Italian Renaissance. While the facade certainly has some Italianate features, I’d say that the tiled pent roof, the narrow windows at each side, and the interesting little spired domes at each front corner (these are almost Art Deco) are all much more characteristic of the Spanish Colonial Revival style that was popular all over the western United States (and in Florida) during the 1920s.
An item in the Spokane Spokesman-Review said that part of the theater’s historic interior can still be seen in the back of the restaurant. Maybe somebody in Spokane can check it out and report on how much of it remains.
The caption of this 1911 photo from Maine Memory contradicts some of the information about this theater from other sources. It says that the Nickle Theatre was located in the Graham Building, which was on Central Street. The article Kirky linked to also says that the Nickle was on Central Street.
As early nickelodeons were sometimes peripatetic, perhaps the house moved from Union Street to Central Street (or vice-versa) at some time in its brief career. Perhaps it moved to the Union Street location after the Graham Building was destroyed by the fire of 1911.
This house might have been called the Olympia Theatre after was called the Nickle. Another page in the book from which ken mc’s linked photo came says that the Olympia burned down in 1963, though by that time the building had long since been converted to retail use.
The Bijou was “The Prettiest Playhouse in Maine” according to the text of their advertisement in the 1914 edition of the Maine Automobile Road Book. There is a photo of the Bijou’s reasonably pretty auditorium.
Moving Picture World of July 24, 1915, mentions the Plaza Theatre and John Himmelein. The house was originally called the Ivanhoe Theatre:
“The Ivanhoe theater, of Sandusky, recently constructed by Charles L. Blatz, has been brought under the control of John A. Himmelein, owner of the Sandusky and other houses, and its name has been changed to the Plaza. The house operated for a short time as a vaudeville theater, but the plan of the new management, it is understood. Is to show feature films only. It is being redecorated throughout, and will be one of the handsomest theaters in that part of Ohio.”
Moving Picture World of November 22, 1913, provides this item about the Crystal Theatre, with a small photo of the front. The nickle house, managed by J.A. Lemke, ran Universal pictures exclusively.
The November 22, 1913, issue of Moving Picture World featured an article about the University Theatre (scroll down just a bit) with a small photo of the original facade. J.O. Canfield and C.J. Wagner were the operators of the house.
The theater’s mirror screen, the first of its kind in Los Angeles, was 12x16 feet. The programs consisted entirely of movies and music, the stage being only six feet deep. The 48x104-foot auditorium originally seated about 600. The University Theatre was open only in the evenings, except for one Saturday a month when free shows were presented for children.
The November 9, 1913, issue of Moving Picture World had a brief item about this house:
“The American Theater at Spokane, Wash., has been reopened with pictures, although it is announced that later it will go into a vaudeville circuit, in which the Advance Amusement Company, of Portland, Ore., is active. The lighting system has been replaced by a semi-indirect plan and the entire theater interior has been re-decorated.”
The Rex Theatre was on the north side of W. Riverside Avenue a few doors east of Washington Street. WorthPoint currently has a postcard on display (second card in the popup slide show- some browsers might not be able to fetch it) which they date 1955. The Rex was open at that time, showing a Bette Davis movie.
If the date is correct, the movie was probably “The Virgin Queen” (the marquee isn’t really readable in the online display.) The newest cars I can pick out on the street appear to be from the early 1950s, so the Rex was certainly open at least that late. It’s definitely the same building as the one in the 1913 photo I linked to in my previous comment, too. The arch is recognizable, though partly obscured by a modern marquee.
Here is a small photo of the Alameda Theatre from the July 12, 1913, issue of The Moving Picture world. The caption says that the Alameda was a Turner & Dahnken house.
Gregg: The Colonial was a different theater, not yet listed at Cinema Treasures (I’ll submit it tonight.) It was located at 55 Broadway, and opened in 1912. About 1929 it was converted into a grocery store, and the building was demolished in 1974.
C.M. Garrett was probably the only operator the Yandell Theatre ever had. He made frequent contributions to Boxoffice Magazine’s “The Exhibitor Has His Say” feature in 1947 and 1948. Boxoffice of May 9, 1960, reported that Clayton Garrett had closed the Yandell Theatre and sold its projection equipment. He had attempted to sell the theater as a going business but there had been no takers.
The Construction report in Boxoffice of August 22, 1936, listed the Weedsport Theatre and gave its opening month as March. The operator was named Earl Zimmer, and the house had cost an estimated $50,000.
In Google Street View or Bing Maps Bird’s-eye view I don’t see any buildings resembling any of those in the photo. A big chunk of downtown Batavia has been demolished and replaced by one of those enclosed shopping malls, so it’s likely that the Dipson Theatre is gone.
Boxoffice of July 11, 1936, said that Dipson Theatres had bought the property of the Dellinger Theatre, which had been destroyed by fire the previous year. However, a later issue of Boxoffice called the theater the Dillinger, so we still don’t have a confirmation of either spelling.
Dipson had no immediate plans for the property, the July 11 item said, but it was reported that they were considering building a new theater on the site. I’ve been unable to find any later Boxoffice items about this project, and it was apparently never built. A 1950 Boxoffice item ken mc cited on the Lafayette Theatre page says that, until three years before, the Lafayette and the Family had been the only theaters operating in Batavia.
It’s possible that the Dipson Batavia Theatre was eventually built on the site of the Dillinger-Dellinger, but then the Dipson has a very narrow front in between two much older buildings. I’d expect a late 19th century opera house to have a wider frontage.
This multiplex was designed by the Baltimore architectural firm Development Design Group, Inc.. Rave now bills the house as the Greene 14 + IMAX.
The Centro Ybor 20 was designed by the Baltimore architectural firm Development Design Group, Inc., which has been designing Muvico’s themed theaters since 1997.
Colorado Place splits off from Huntington Drive almost in front of the theater (it’s a double-curved “Y” intersection, with Huntington veering southward while Colorado Place bends north.) The City of Arcadia must have decreed at some time after 1950 that the numbers on the north side of that block be reassigned from Huntington Drive to Colorado Place, because that’s where they are now.
The theater was called Edwards Santa Anita for about two decades. The name Santa Anita was on the marquee until the early 1960s (I don’t recall the exact year,) when it was changed to Cinemaland. However, for as long as I remember, the theater always had a vertical sign that said Edwards, in letters larger than those used for the marquee name. The same was true at Edwards San Gabriel, which was renamed Edwards Century about the same time Edwards Santa Anita became Edwards Cinemaland.
Most of the old Edwards circuit houses had the company name on their signage, though at most of them it was in small, white neon script over the theater names themselves, so it was barely visible by daylight, and not very noticeable even by night. The San Gabriel and Santa Anita were the only houses I recall having the big vertical Edwards signs, but a smaller vertical reading Edwards was featured on the Edwards Village Theatre in Azusa.
A theater of the style the photos reveal would not have been first opened as late as 1935. Possibly 1935 is when Famous Players began operating the house. I’d guess the construction of the house to date from the late 1910s-early 1920s.
Perhaps the Classic was the theater then in the planning stage which was mentioned in the trade union journal The Bridgeman’s Magazine, issue of September, 1920. The house for C. Georgas and P. Leos was to be a two-story concrete, brick, and steel structure costing about $125,000 (presumably in Canadian dollars.) It was being designed by Toronto architects Hall & Duerr.
Boxoffice in 1954 mentioned two theaters that were then operating in Owen Sound; the Roxy and the Centre. The Roxy is the house now called the Owen Sound Little Theatre, built in 1912, but the Centre is unaccounted for, and it might have been the 1920 project by Hall & Duerr, so the Classic cannot yet be definitely attributed to them.
The Novelty Theatre was in operation by 1909, when it was listed as a business subscriber to the trade union journal The Railroad Trainman.
See my comment on the Rex Theatre page. Yale was the opening name of the Rex, so this page is redundant.
The book Washington County by Michelle M. Martin says that the Rex Theatre was built in 1915 and originally called the Yale.
There’s a small photo of the facade of the Yale Theatre in an ad for a popcorn machine that was published in the May, 1917, issue of Photoplay (result 4 of 5 for Yale– page 155.) There’s a bit of Art Nouveau decoration on the building.
A bit of the Colonial Theatre’s history can be found on this web page, along with a photo and an early theater program (click on them to enlarge.)
Information about the building’s later history is featured on this web page about the business that took over the space after the theater closed. It has a couple more photos.
A small interior photo of the auditorium can be seen in Moving Picture World, July 12, 1913.
PSTOS provides this photo showing the Ritz ca.1942.
Spokane Heritage Tours has this photo (click tiny thumbnail) of Rocky Rococo, the restaurant that currently occupies the former Ritz Theatre. This site classifies the architectural style of the building as Italian Renaissance. While the facade certainly has some Italianate features, I’d say that the tiled pent roof, the narrow windows at each side, and the interesting little spired domes at each front corner (these are almost Art Deco) are all much more characteristic of the Spanish Colonial Revival style that was popular all over the western United States (and in Florida) during the 1920s.
An item in the Spokane Spokesman-Review said that part of the theater’s historic interior can still be seen in the back of the restaurant. Maybe somebody in Spokane can check it out and report on how much of it remains.
This page duplicates this listing.
The caption of this 1911 photo from Maine Memory contradicts some of the information about this theater from other sources. It says that the Nickle Theatre was located in the Graham Building, which was on Central Street. The article Kirky linked to also says that the Nickle was on Central Street.
As early nickelodeons were sometimes peripatetic, perhaps the house moved from Union Street to Central Street (or vice-versa) at some time in its brief career. Perhaps it moved to the Union Street location after the Graham Building was destroyed by the fire of 1911.
This house might have been called the Olympia Theatre after was called the Nickle. Another page in the book from which ken mc’s linked photo came says that the Olympia burned down in 1963, though by that time the building had long since been converted to retail use.
The Bijou was “The Prettiest Playhouse in Maine” according to the text of their advertisement in the 1914 edition of the Maine Automobile Road Book. There is a photo of the Bijou’s reasonably pretty auditorium.
Moving Picture World of July 24, 1915, mentions the Plaza Theatre and John Himmelein. The house was originally called the Ivanhoe Theatre:
Moving Picture World of November 22, 1913, provides this item about the Crystal Theatre, with a small photo of the front. The nickle house, managed by J.A. Lemke, ran Universal pictures exclusively.
The November 22, 1913, issue of Moving Picture World featured an article about the University Theatre (scroll down just a bit) with a small photo of the original facade. J.O. Canfield and C.J. Wagner were the operators of the house.
The theater’s mirror screen, the first of its kind in Los Angeles, was 12x16 feet. The programs consisted entirely of movies and music, the stage being only six feet deep. The 48x104-foot auditorium originally seated about 600. The University Theatre was open only in the evenings, except for one Saturday a month when free shows were presented for children.
The November 9, 1913, issue of Moving Picture World had a brief item about this house:
Trade journal Moving Picture World ran this item about Turner & Dahnken’s Theatre De Luxe in its issue of November 9, 1913.
The Rex Theatre was on the north side of W. Riverside Avenue a few doors east of Washington Street. WorthPoint currently has a postcard on display (second card in the popup slide show- some browsers might not be able to fetch it) which they date 1955. The Rex was open at that time, showing a Bette Davis movie.
If the date is correct, the movie was probably “The Virgin Queen” (the marquee isn’t really readable in the online display.) The newest cars I can pick out on the street appear to be from the early 1950s, so the Rex was certainly open at least that late. It’s definitely the same building as the one in the 1913 photo I linked to in my previous comment, too. The arch is recognizable, though partly obscured by a modern marquee.
Here is a small photo of the Alameda Theatre from the July 12, 1913, issue of The Moving Picture world. The caption says that the Alameda was a Turner & Dahnken house.
Gregg: The Colonial was a different theater, not yet listed at Cinema Treasures (I’ll submit it tonight.) It was located at 55 Broadway, and opened in 1912. About 1929 it was converted into a grocery store, and the building was demolished in 1974.
C.M. Garrett was probably the only operator the Yandell Theatre ever had. He made frequent contributions to Boxoffice Magazine’s “The Exhibitor Has His Say” feature in 1947 and 1948. Boxoffice of May 9, 1960, reported that Clayton Garrett had closed the Yandell Theatre and sold its projection equipment. He had attempted to sell the theater as a going business but there had been no takers.
The Abbott Theatre opened in 1950, according to that year’s construction reports in Boxoffice. It was a Dipson circuit house.
The Construction report in Boxoffice of August 22, 1936, listed the Weedsport Theatre and gave its opening month as March. The operator was named Earl Zimmer, and the house had cost an estimated $50,000.
In Google Street View or Bing Maps Bird’s-eye view I don’t see any buildings resembling any of those in the photo. A big chunk of downtown Batavia has been demolished and replaced by one of those enclosed shopping malls, so it’s likely that the Dipson Theatre is gone.
Boxoffice of July 11, 1936, said that Dipson Theatres had bought the property of the Dellinger Theatre, which had been destroyed by fire the previous year. However, a later issue of Boxoffice called the theater the Dillinger, so we still don’t have a confirmation of either spelling.
Dipson had no immediate plans for the property, the July 11 item said, but it was reported that they were considering building a new theater on the site. I’ve been unable to find any later Boxoffice items about this project, and it was apparently never built. A 1950 Boxoffice item ken mc cited on the Lafayette Theatre page says that, until three years before, the Lafayette and the Family had been the only theaters operating in Batavia.
It’s possible that the Dipson Batavia Theatre was eventually built on the site of the Dillinger-Dellinger, but then the Dipson has a very narrow front in between two much older buildings. I’d expect a late 19th century opera house to have a wider frontage.