The Fiesta was in the Central Business District of Pittsburgh and closed on September 1, 1986 with “The Fly.” It closed on the same day as the Chatham Cinema and three days after the Bank Cinema I & II as options in downtown were scaled back almost instantly.
The Bank Cinema I & II closed permanently on August 28, 1986 with “Manhunter” and “Aliens” at end of lease. Four days later, the Pittsburgh Central Business District then lost both the Fiesta and the Chatham Cinema.
Cinemette placed the Chatham in part-year functionality in its final years of operations when business went to nearly zero for the venue that lost money in its 1980s operation. It cited end of lease, lack of business, parking woes, and an amusement tax as the reasons for closure following Labor Day weekend of 1985. It closed on the same day as its downtown cohort, the Fiesta and two days after the Bank Cinema I & II closed.
The opening sentence of this entry reads, “not much is known about this theatre.” But I’m not sure what ISN’T known about the Davis Theatre. There are shots of it being built in 1914 and numerous accounts from both the trade press and the local newspapers. We know that its initial cost was pegged at $225,000 for the Harry Davis Stock Company and Harry Davis’s Theatre Circuit but approached $920,000 at completion if reports are correct. The building’s final cost, however, also included an arcade of shops and three entries into the theater for reasons of safety and convenience. The original structure was a more simple five-story venue with roof-top garden, open-air theater in addition to the main indoor auditorium. The finished three-story building was a more ambitious, multi-use property which the Pittsburgh Press called, “(T)he handsomest and costliest theater of the varieties in America.” The land it sat upon was comprised of three lots acquired from Colonel Oliver S. Hershman adjoining Smithfield Street, Oliver Avenue, Sixth Avenue, and Cherry Street turned William Penn Place facing the new $5 million William Penn Hotel.
The Davis Theater’s interior was bathed in ivory and gold. Its framework was steel hidden underneath a facing of Bedford stone, terra cotta and light grey brick. Its entrances were from Oliver Avenue and Sixth Avenue (see photos). The architectural style was said to be Adam with the lounge and balcony owing its look to the period of Louis XVI. It sported a copper marquee. Its lobby was 35 feet high resplendent in marble. Fred Zweifel was its opening manager.Its opening scenery was created at the nearby Alvin Theatre. Its capacity was 2,500 at opening. Its main drop curtain was created by Arthur Lowell (see photos). The asbestos curtain was created by George A. Little. Portraits included Marie Antionette, Madame de Pompadour, Madame du Barry, and Julie Adélaïde Récamier. The four seasons were reflected on the auditorium’s ceiling. A series of dancers were found in a frieze above the proscenium (see photos).
Harry Davis opened the venue on February 15, 1915 with his Davis Players in “Baby Mine” (see opening ad in photos). Gill Friar was in charge of the orchestra. Dedication speeches were by Eleanor Fitzgibbon of the Drama League of America, Mayor Joseph G. Armstrong, and Samuel Black McCormick, Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh. Big attendance was reported for the opening which launched with great floral displays throughout its lobby and auditorium. And because Davis and his partner and brother-in-law, John P. Harris, had famously opened the first movie theaters some ten years earlier in Pittsburgh, the Davis Theatre was also equipped with movie projection at launch.
It was fortuitous that the Davis had installed film projection because plays did not appear to be the road to profitability for Harry Davis’s new house. The trade press reported the first films in the Davis Theatre started in May of 1915 under a new policy and the Davis’s first major film screening in June of 1915 with an exclusive of “The Eternal City.” And it’s possible that the Davis' future might have been that of a movie house until just two months later when the Keith Vaudeville jettisoned its long-standing agreement with the Grand Opera House in favor of the Davis. The venue was soon under the Davis and Rowland operational banner.
The Davis stayed with vaudeville, primarily, and spotted in motion pictures as plays were completely gone in the 1920’s era Davis Theatre. It became the town’s leading vaudeville house in the 1920s. A child labor charge in 1921 was brought when youngsters Jane and Katherine Lee graced the Davis' stage. The victorious defense by the Davis turned out to be a significant precedent for child actors seeking work in theatrical or other art forms. In 1925, the Davis added a modern air conditioning plant (see photos) to improve comfortability. When Harry Davis suffered a stroke in 1927, his Davis Theatre began to slide after its final profitable year of 1927. At that time, the theater was said to have made some $262,000 in profit. But with the new Penn Theatre launching in September of 1927 followed by the Stanley Theatre which opened five months later in 1928 - both of which made the Davis seem out of step. Further, vaudeville revenues began to slide as talking pictures and variety shows on radio chiseled away audiences.
The aging Davis Theatre venue and the other Davis' locations were combined under the short-lived Stanley-Davis-Clark Theatres Circuit under the Stanley-Davis-Clark-and-Rowland banner (a mouthful) which - in less than two years - was operated by Warner Bros. Circuit as Stanley-Warner and then, simply, Warner Theatres. Warner’s entry into Pittsburgh’s film exhibition space allowed which more emphasis on movie exhibition and transitioning to Warner’s Vitaphone for silent houses. With new movie palaces in the city and without founder Harry Davis to champion it, the Davis Theatre’s halcyon period(s) were clearly behind it under Warner.
The venue was experimented with as a talking movie house but was not considered an ideal sound movie auditorium. It was downgraded being leased out for lectures, promotional sales pitches, and other events at the onset of the Depression and closed in 1930 as Warner refreshed it with a new color palette. The Davis was reopened in 1931 as a vaudeville house with sound films. Vaudeville would be excised in favor of the Davis becoming a double-feature, second-run grind house until, apparently, being dropped by Warner at the end of its 20-year leasing cycle in 1934.
Late in 1934, it returned to full-time live plays and, under manager Ed Siegal in 1935, returned in its final stage of operation with films combining radio station tie-ins. It appears to have closed on April 18, 1936 with a double-feature of George Brent in “Snowed Under” and Chester Morris in “Woman Trap.” The Davis property was sold by Hershman Estate to Pittsburgh interests later in that year and left vacant by all reports for two years. That group would finally have the venue razed in 1938. A final attempt to save the Davis and turn it into a nightclub, sadly, were nixed that spring.
A November 1938 ad listed what one could purchase from the Davis and that included its $15,000 organ, French doors, maple flooring, steel, brass railings, chandeliers and more from R.J. Omslaer Wrecking Co. (see photos) The Davis auditorium and lobby space was finally cleared in 1939 and would be replaced at the time with a parking structure with the arcade shops and two Davis entries remaining until 1954. All of the structures would then be razed for the visionary Mellon Square project that placed parking below the surface with a Modernist park above the parking structure. It was a plan that was copied in major cities in the U.S.
So basically, the planning stages of the Davis Theatre’s pre-launch from 1914 and 1915 are very well documented. One could look up every single booking at the theatre. Vaudeville performers included Fanny Brice, Jack Benny, Edgar Bergen, Marie Dressler, and Edward Everett Horton. Every owner of the theatre is known. And even the contractor for its demolition (other than the adjoining arcade) and contents offered for sale are known. The 1955 demolition of the remaining elements of the 1915 structure - likely reaching end of a second 20-year leasing arrangement, are pretty well documented, as well. And Mellon Square now occupies its spot. So, yes, other than all of that, “nothing is known about this theater.”
The Super 422 opened on July 10, 1953 with “Siren of Bagdad,” two cartons and a Three Stooges short. On Sunday, July 19, 1953, the theatre was padlocked by police for illegally operating on Saturday. That got straightened out and the theatre was open the next night. Manos Circuit announced that the Super 422 would not be reopened for the full 1981 season and was discontinued after a movie marathon on July 7, 1981 with “Escape from Alcatraz,” “Dirt,” “Coach,” “Convoy,” and “The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave.”
The Ritz opened April 3, 1924 with Norma Shearer in “Lucretia Lombard.” Just four months later, it had competition from the Indiana Theatre which was opened July 16, 1924. It closed September 16, 1980 with “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”
M.J. Peris of Buffalo was at the Marr & Colton organ for the opening of the Indiana Theatre which launched with Louise Fazenda in “Listen Lester” on July 16, 1924.
EVO Entertainment Hampton in Hampton, Virginia was re-opened May 27, 2022 by EVO Entertainment Group just in time for the release of 2022’s major summer films including “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Jurassic World Dominion.” Originally, Cobb Theatres had opened the locations as the CineBistro at Peninsula Town Center 12 years prior. It closed the venue in July of 2017.
On July 27, 2017, Phoenix Theatres Entertainment renamed it as Peninsula Movie Bistro. The revolving door of owners continued with Studio Movie Grill taking on the venue as Studio Movie Grill Hampton in February of 2019. The Hampton closed along with the rest of the circuit’s locations on March 16, 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, Studio Movie Grill downsized in bankruptcy reorganization and shuttered the Hampton location and many others. As the location’s fourth operator in 12 years, EVO kept the eight screens with in-theater dining while retaining the bowling alley and video arcade. The Hampton was EVO Entertainment’s tenth location, first in Virginia and first outside of Texas.
The Idle Hour’s grand opening film on January 11, 1909 was Lubin Manufacturing Company’s controversial, “The Unwritten Law” based on the real life murder of Stanford White in New York City and the trail of Harry Thaw. Such programming fit in with the way of Hardwick which had a more free-wheeling, working person’s lifestyle in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom.
The bawdy and veteran Idle Hour switched from lightly-trafficked Hollywood fare on weekdays to X-rated movies scoring with “Deep Throat” and “The Devil Miss Jones” at the height of the promo chic exhibition period of the early to mid-1970s for motion pictures. The X-rated fare would then also end up on selected weekends as it found a new audience. The Idle Hour closed just shy of the 80-year mark, likely at the end of a leasing period.
The Moonlight Drive-In closed on September 4, 1988 with a double-feature of “Midnight Run” and “Casual Sex?” citing end of lease and the impact of home video for their closure.
The town of Morrisville got to celebrate two openings in the course of just days in September of 1937. One was the new Tegu Theatre launching on September 10th and the other was the reopening of the Bijou Theatre - now streamlined with a new interior and exterior - on September 6, 1937. The address had housed the venue since its relaunch here on July 11, 1910 with just 250 seats. The Bijou had been on Main Street in its original location in the 1900s.
In 1924, the Bijou building was expanded to Bridge street to accommodate a stage and more seating. The Bijou was sold in 1996 with the new operators devising a major change to the venue. On September 12, 1997, it became the Bijou Cineplex, a quadraplex.
Vermont’s “Little Radio City”, the Tegu Theatre, launched September 10, 1937 with “Vogues of 1938” supported by highlights of the Joe Louis and Tommy Farr fight and a Mickey Mouse cartoon. At launch, the Tegu boasted of its Simplex projection and the same RCA sound system that they have at the Radio City Music Hall… only smaller. The Tegu closed at the end of its 20-year lease with “Top Secret Affair” on June 12, 1957.
The Morrisville Drive-In launched with Peggy Cummins in “Green Grass of Wyoming” supported by short subjects. It operated with a loudspeaker in its first season. The Morrisville D-I was located where the Fairground track once was. News reports said that the loudspeaker system of season one was replaced by 340 individual speakers improving presentation. In 1982, the speakers were replaced with stereo radio sound. The ozoner closed at the end of the 1985 season due attributing home video as the reason for closure. The Brooklyn Street / Route 100 venue became a mobile home dealer in 1987.
Joy Houck’s Joy Theatre Circuit built this New Joy Theatre as a post-War venue announced in 1948. The New Joy opened on November 23, 1949 with Anne Baxter in “You’re My Everything” supported by the MGM cartoon short, “Señor Droopy.” Grand opening ad is in photos. The previous Joy Theatre exited the night before on November 22, 1949 with “Triple Threat,” “Talking Turkey” and “Lost City of the Jungle.”
The second Joy Theatre ceased operations on May 18, 1980 as an independent with a double feature of “Foxy Brown” and “Lips and McCain.” It was offered for sale at $14,000. The city bought it in 1981 but decided against a renovation at that time. In 1982, it became the Rayville Gun & Pawn Shop. When they left, the building fell into disrepair. Two renovation projects were launched - the first in 1999 and the second in 2003 - but neither were completed as the building’s roofline deteriorated more than anticipated during its dormant period making restoration nearly impossible.
Currently open in 2022
The Fiesta was in the Central Business District of Pittsburgh and closed on September 1, 1986 with “The Fly.” It closed on the same day as the Chatham Cinema and three days after the Bank Cinema I & II as options in downtown were scaled back almost instantly.
The Bank Cinema I & II closed permanently on August 28, 1986 with “Manhunter” and “Aliens” at end of lease. Four days later, the Pittsburgh Central Business District then lost both the Fiesta and the Chatham Cinema.
Cinemette placed the Chatham in part-year functionality in its final years of operations when business went to nearly zero for the venue that lost money in its 1980s operation. It cited end of lease, lack of business, parking woes, and an amusement tax as the reasons for closure following Labor Day weekend of 1985. It closed on the same day as its downtown cohort, the Fiesta and two days after the Bank Cinema I & II closed.
The opening sentence of this entry reads, “not much is known about this theatre.” But I’m not sure what ISN’T known about the Davis Theatre. There are shots of it being built in 1914 and numerous accounts from both the trade press and the local newspapers. We know that its initial cost was pegged at $225,000 for the Harry Davis Stock Company and Harry Davis’s Theatre Circuit but approached $920,000 at completion if reports are correct. The building’s final cost, however, also included an arcade of shops and three entries into the theater for reasons of safety and convenience. The original structure was a more simple five-story venue with roof-top garden, open-air theater in addition to the main indoor auditorium. The finished three-story building was a more ambitious, multi-use property which the Pittsburgh Press called, “(T)he handsomest and costliest theater of the varieties in America.” The land it sat upon was comprised of three lots acquired from Colonel Oliver S. Hershman adjoining Smithfield Street, Oliver Avenue, Sixth Avenue, and Cherry Street turned William Penn Place facing the new $5 million William Penn Hotel.
The Davis Theater’s interior was bathed in ivory and gold. Its framework was steel hidden underneath a facing of Bedford stone, terra cotta and light grey brick. Its entrances were from Oliver Avenue and Sixth Avenue (see photos). The architectural style was said to be Adam with the lounge and balcony owing its look to the period of Louis XVI. It sported a copper marquee. Its lobby was 35 feet high resplendent in marble. Fred Zweifel was its opening manager.Its opening scenery was created at the nearby Alvin Theatre. Its capacity was 2,500 at opening. Its main drop curtain was created by Arthur Lowell (see photos). The asbestos curtain was created by George A. Little. Portraits included Marie Antionette, Madame de Pompadour, Madame du Barry, and Julie Adélaïde Récamier. The four seasons were reflected on the auditorium’s ceiling. A series of dancers were found in a frieze above the proscenium (see photos).
Harry Davis opened the venue on February 15, 1915 with his Davis Players in “Baby Mine” (see opening ad in photos). Gill Friar was in charge of the orchestra. Dedication speeches were by Eleanor Fitzgibbon of the Drama League of America, Mayor Joseph G. Armstrong, and Samuel Black McCormick, Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh. Big attendance was reported for the opening which launched with great floral displays throughout its lobby and auditorium. And because Davis and his partner and brother-in-law, John P. Harris, had famously opened the first movie theaters some ten years earlier in Pittsburgh, the Davis Theatre was also equipped with movie projection at launch.
It was fortuitous that the Davis had installed film projection because plays did not appear to be the road to profitability for Harry Davis’s new house. The trade press reported the first films in the Davis Theatre started in May of 1915 under a new policy and the Davis’s first major film screening in June of 1915 with an exclusive of “The Eternal City.” And it’s possible that the Davis' future might have been that of a movie house until just two months later when the Keith Vaudeville jettisoned its long-standing agreement with the Grand Opera House in favor of the Davis. The venue was soon under the Davis and Rowland operational banner.
The Davis stayed with vaudeville, primarily, and spotted in motion pictures as plays were completely gone in the 1920’s era Davis Theatre. It became the town’s leading vaudeville house in the 1920s. A child labor charge in 1921 was brought when youngsters Jane and Katherine Lee graced the Davis' stage. The victorious defense by the Davis turned out to be a significant precedent for child actors seeking work in theatrical or other art forms. In 1925, the Davis added a modern air conditioning plant (see photos) to improve comfortability. When Harry Davis suffered a stroke in 1927, his Davis Theatre began to slide after its final profitable year of 1927. At that time, the theater was said to have made some $262,000 in profit. But with the new Penn Theatre launching in September of 1927 followed by the Stanley Theatre which opened five months later in 1928 - both of which made the Davis seem out of step. Further, vaudeville revenues began to slide as talking pictures and variety shows on radio chiseled away audiences.
The aging Davis Theatre venue and the other Davis' locations were combined under the short-lived Stanley-Davis-Clark Theatres Circuit under the Stanley-Davis-Clark-and-Rowland banner (a mouthful) which - in less than two years - was operated by Warner Bros. Circuit as Stanley-Warner and then, simply, Warner Theatres. Warner’s entry into Pittsburgh’s film exhibition space allowed which more emphasis on movie exhibition and transitioning to Warner’s Vitaphone for silent houses. With new movie palaces in the city and without founder Harry Davis to champion it, the Davis Theatre’s halcyon period(s) were clearly behind it under Warner.
The venue was experimented with as a talking movie house but was not considered an ideal sound movie auditorium. It was downgraded being leased out for lectures, promotional sales pitches, and other events at the onset of the Depression and closed in 1930 as Warner refreshed it with a new color palette. The Davis was reopened in 1931 as a vaudeville house with sound films. Vaudeville would be excised in favor of the Davis becoming a double-feature, second-run grind house until, apparently, being dropped by Warner at the end of its 20-year leasing cycle in 1934.
Late in 1934, it returned to full-time live plays and, under manager Ed Siegal in 1935, returned in its final stage of operation with films combining radio station tie-ins. It appears to have closed on April 18, 1936 with a double-feature of George Brent in “Snowed Under” and Chester Morris in “Woman Trap.” The Davis property was sold by Hershman Estate to Pittsburgh interests later in that year and left vacant by all reports for two years. That group would finally have the venue razed in 1938. A final attempt to save the Davis and turn it into a nightclub, sadly, were nixed that spring.
A November 1938 ad listed what one could purchase from the Davis and that included its $15,000 organ, French doors, maple flooring, steel, brass railings, chandeliers and more from R.J. Omslaer Wrecking Co. (see photos) The Davis auditorium and lobby space was finally cleared in 1939 and would be replaced at the time with a parking structure with the arcade shops and two Davis entries remaining until 1954. All of the structures would then be razed for the visionary Mellon Square project that placed parking below the surface with a Modernist park above the parking structure. It was a plan that was copied in major cities in the U.S.
So basically, the planning stages of the Davis Theatre’s pre-launch from 1914 and 1915 are very well documented. One could look up every single booking at the theatre. Vaudeville performers included Fanny Brice, Jack Benny, Edgar Bergen, Marie Dressler, and Edward Everett Horton. Every owner of the theatre is known. And even the contractor for its demolition (other than the adjoining arcade) and contents offered for sale are known. The 1955 demolition of the remaining elements of the 1915 structure - likely reaching end of a second 20-year leasing arrangement, are pretty well documented, as well. And Mellon Square now occupies its spot. So, yes, other than all of that, “nothing is known about this theater.”
1954
The Super 422 opened on July 10, 1953 with “Siren of Bagdad,” two cartons and a Three Stooges short. On Sunday, July 19, 1953, the theatre was padlocked by police for illegally operating on Saturday. That got straightened out and the theatre was open the next night. Manos Circuit announced that the Super 422 would not be reopened for the full 1981 season and was discontinued after a movie marathon on July 7, 1981 with “Escape from Alcatraz,” “Dirt,” “Coach,” “Convoy,” and “The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave.”
The Ritz opened April 3, 1924 with Norma Shearer in “Lucretia Lombard.” Just four months later, it had competition from the Indiana Theatre which was opened July 16, 1924. It closed September 16, 1980 with “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”
M.J. Peris of Buffalo was at the Marr & Colton organ for the opening of the Indiana Theatre which launched with Louise Fazenda in “Listen Lester” on July 16, 1924.
EVO Entertainment Hampton in Hampton, Virginia was re-opened May 27, 2022 by EVO Entertainment Group just in time for the release of 2022’s major summer films including “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Jurassic World Dominion.” Originally, Cobb Theatres had opened the locations as the CineBistro at Peninsula Town Center 12 years prior. It closed the venue in July of 2017.
On July 27, 2017, Phoenix Theatres Entertainment renamed it as Peninsula Movie Bistro. The revolving door of owners continued with Studio Movie Grill taking on the venue as Studio Movie Grill Hampton in February of 2019. The Hampton closed along with the rest of the circuit’s locations on March 16, 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, Studio Movie Grill downsized in bankruptcy reorganization and shuttered the Hampton location and many others. As the location’s fourth operator in 12 years, EVO kept the eight screens with in-theater dining while retaining the bowling alley and video arcade. The Hampton was EVO Entertainment’s tenth location, first in Virginia and first outside of Texas.
The Tower Drive-In Theatre launched in 1949. Sold in 1953, it would become the Yellow Jacket.
Opened with “Tycoon” on February 17, 1948
It may have discontinued operations following the February 1, 1958 screening of “The Ten Commandments.”
Also known as Theater at Wakefield Memorial Building; Wakefield Community Theatre; and the Wakefield Motor Lodge Theatre.
Closed after October 17, 2020 showing of “The Polar Express.”
The Idle Hour’s grand opening film on January 11, 1909 was Lubin Manufacturing Company’s controversial, “The Unwritten Law” based on the real life murder of Stanford White in New York City and the trail of Harry Thaw. Such programming fit in with the way of Hardwick which had a more free-wheeling, working person’s lifestyle in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom.
The bawdy and veteran Idle Hour switched from lightly-trafficked Hollywood fare on weekdays to X-rated movies scoring with “Deep Throat” and “The Devil Miss Jones” at the height of the promo chic exhibition period of the early to mid-1970s for motion pictures. The X-rated fare would then also end up on selected weekends as it found a new audience. The Idle Hour closed just shy of the 80-year mark, likely at the end of a leasing period.
The New Twin City Drive-In Theatre - mentioned above - launched April 13, 1962. It closed during the 1988 season.
The Moonlight Drive-In closed on September 4, 1988 with a double-feature of “Midnight Run” and “Casual Sex?” citing end of lease and the impact of home video for their closure.
The town of Morrisville got to celebrate two openings in the course of just days in September of 1937. One was the new Tegu Theatre launching on September 10th and the other was the reopening of the Bijou Theatre - now streamlined with a new interior and exterior - on September 6, 1937. The address had housed the venue since its relaunch here on July 11, 1910 with just 250 seats. The Bijou had been on Main Street in its original location in the 1900s.
In 1924, the Bijou building was expanded to Bridge street to accommodate a stage and more seating. The Bijou was sold in 1996 with the new operators devising a major change to the venue. On September 12, 1997, it became the Bijou Cineplex, a quadraplex.
Vermont’s “Little Radio City”, the Tegu Theatre, launched September 10, 1937 with “Vogues of 1938” supported by highlights of the Joe Louis and Tommy Farr fight and a Mickey Mouse cartoon. At launch, the Tegu boasted of its Simplex projection and the same RCA sound system that they have at the Radio City Music Hall… only smaller. The Tegu closed at the end of its 20-year lease with “Top Secret Affair” on June 12, 1957.
The Morrisville Drive-In launched with Peggy Cummins in “Green Grass of Wyoming” supported by short subjects. It operated with a loudspeaker in its first season. The Morrisville D-I was located where the Fairground track once was. News reports said that the loudspeaker system of season one was replaced by 340 individual speakers improving presentation. In 1982, the speakers were replaced with stereo radio sound. The ozoner closed at the end of the 1985 season due attributing home video as the reason for closure. The Brooklyn Street / Route 100 venue became a mobile home dealer in 1987.
Joy Houck’s Joy Theatre Circuit built this New Joy Theatre as a post-War venue announced in 1948. The New Joy opened on November 23, 1949 with Anne Baxter in “You’re My Everything” supported by the MGM cartoon short, “Señor Droopy.” Grand opening ad is in photos. The previous Joy Theatre exited the night before on November 22, 1949 with “Triple Threat,” “Talking Turkey” and “Lost City of the Jungle.”
The second Joy Theatre ceased operations on May 18, 1980 as an independent with a double feature of “Foxy Brown” and “Lips and McCain.” It was offered for sale at $14,000. The city bought it in 1981 but decided against a renovation at that time. In 1982, it became the Rayville Gun & Pawn Shop. When they left, the building fell into disrepair. Two renovation projects were launched - the first in 1999 and the second in 2003 - but neither were completed as the building’s roofline deteriorated more than anticipated during its dormant period making restoration nearly impossible.
In 2022, the Vaska added a second screen called the Aux while the original auditorium is the Main.
Name: Barksdale Field Air Force Base Post Theatre
Address was 113 South Benedette Street. Sorry