Ridgewood Theatre
55-27 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood,
NY
11385
55-27 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood,
NY
11385
31 people favorited this theater
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Thanks, Lost Memory.
Acknowledged, BklynJim and Bway.
What # theater is the Whitney on this site ?
I don’t get the update emails from any theater anymore since the site changed over…..so unless I check every theater I want to keep current with every so often, I won’t know if comments are made…I obviously won’t (couldn’t possibly) be doing that regularly…so if you guys need me, please feel free to email me directly….
I wish I could turn it back on, but I have no idea how. The box is checked, so it should be coming, but I don’t get any emails whatsoever from the site anymore unfortunately….I wish it could be fixed, but I know they have a lot on their plate with the site….
Peter, I left you a message/question 6/12 over on the Whitney page. Didn’t want to add to any unnecessary clutter here. (Necessary clutter, of course, remains paramount.) Looks as if I’ll be in Ridgewood in August, but may be without CT/computer hookup initially. So planning a “Ridgewood Regulars Reunion” at the Ridgewood 5-plex might be a bit tough unless we start e-mailing. You should have mine, or you can get it from EdSolero or tapeshare Rick if you’ve misplaced it.
They began to reappear on my list just minutes ago…
I’m still getting them, Bway. The site was down for awhile yesterday, Monday, June 11, 2007.
Has anyone else stopped getting the update emails from cinematreasures? They stopped about a week ago.
As a child and teenager growing up in Glendale, next to the Oasis, I have been to Ridgewood Theatre so many times. I was fortunate enough to attend a venue which is becoming very extinct in today’s society, the single screen theater. My recollections are vast, my earliest recollection is seeing “The Sound of Music” with my mother and brother in the 70’s.The one thing that stands out though is the aesthetics of this theater.I will never forget that huge chandelier placed just past the balcony,with the ornate plaster surrounding it. It was the size of a small truck, and remember being scared to sit under it. Ridgewood also had many classic features, stained glass exit lights,a stage with huge curtains,fancy marquee, a basic concession stand,and the feel and atmosphere of an old movie house.
Makes sense. Thanks Bway
Tonino, the Ridgewood has 5 screens in 5 auditoriums….but depending on the movies, they sometimes show a different movie during the day than at night (kids movies, less poplar movies split, etc), so the marquee may have 6 movies listed, even if they only have 5 theaters, sometimes one auditorium may have a split movie, showing two different movies during the day in the same auditorium at different times…..
Michael Perlman – Can you give us an update on the status of the RFE?
Michael Perlman – Can you give us an update on the status of the RFE?
The marquee shown on Monica’s site indicates that the Ridgewood has six (6) screens. What’s right, 5 or 6 screens?
Ridgewood theater has a historical interest, how many movie venues are 91 years old and still operate? I’m wondering why there is such a slow process to preserve motion picture history, this movie house is a treasure and definitely should be preserved, after reading the Commodore page, I’m concerned that time is running short.
What about the Ridgewood’s history make it a potential landmark candidate?
The Landmarks Law requires that, to be designated, a potential landmark must be at least 30 years old and must possess “a special character or special historical or aesthetic interest or value as part of the development, heritage, or cultural characteristics of the city, state, or nation.”
There are four types of landmarks:
Individual Landmarks (individual structures that can range from bridges to rowhouses to skyscrapers; examples include the Woolworth Building, the Langston Hughes House in Harlem, and the Wonder wheel at Coney Island);
Interior Landmarks (building interiors that are “customarily open or accessible to the public,†such as the Marine Air Terminal at LaGuardia Airport, the RCA Building Lobby, and the Ed Sullivan Theater);
Scenic Landmarks (city-owned parks or other landscape features, such as Prospect Park, Central Park, and Ocean Parkway); and
Historic Districts (areas of the city that possess architectural and historical significance and a distinct “sense of place,” such as Ladies Mile in Manhattan, Cobble Hill in Brooklyn, and St. George-New Brighton in Staten Island).
I searched for The Ridgewood and saw two happy sentences, the first, theres four other theaters in the US with this name, and they all say closed, until you come to the one for New York, open. The second, is that according to a neighborhood newspaper and the first posting, The Ridgwood is the oldest operating theater in New York. Does any one know if this great facility is landmarked? If not, it really should be, despite the fact that its interior has been altered, its history and relatively unchanged exterior, make it a prime reason to be landmarked.
Thanks, Lost Memory. I had thought it was in Brooklyn, near the BQE, as you said, also the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Wallabout Bay, etc.
Good work, guys. Thanks.
71 Park Avenue : Are we talking midtown Manhattan, or downtown Brooklyn ?
1926 F.D.Y.: Willoughby Theatre, 260-262 Knickerbocker Avenue, Brooklyn 600 seats. In that same edition of F.D.Y. also listed there is a Park Palace Theatre, 71 Park Avenue, Brooklyn 430 seats.
The Throop Theatre is listed in the 1914-1915 edition of American Motion Picture directory as being located at 963 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn.
The Park Palace Theatre is listed in that same edition of A.M.P.D. as being located at 268 Knickerbocker Avenue
Or perhaps the Throop Theater was located on a cross street in Bed-Stuy near Throop Avenue. I don’t know.
Scott Struck, pretty sure he lived at 1711.
I think I used to work with your sister in Royal Farms in the 1970’s.
I tried to get in contact with your sister through classmates but no use.
I was curious about scotts kids. I am godfather to one and I think Patty was godmother to one of the others. Also curious how Patty’s doing.
If you want you can email me back or have patty email me at
I am in the area on a daily basis, Drive the car down from Glendale and run in to see my mother who still lives on Seneca between palmetto and woodbine.
Thanks for an help
Thanks
RFS, I still check in here when I can. I did grow up around the corner from you on Woodbine between Cypress & Seneca during the 60’s & 70’s. What’s your friend’s name?
Now, here’s a historic theater:
View link
Shalom, ciao, and excelsior
New York Times May 28, 1929
Frederick Brown buys a block front on fifth avenue from 106th to 107th street…from the Dualin Holding Corporation William A. Daly Vice President… a plot of about 30,000 square feet fronting 201.10 feet on the avenue. 100 feet on 106th street and 196 feet on 107th street, at present time imporved(?) with a movie theatre and three five-story tenements.
The plot is two blocks from the new Museum of New York City..now under construction.