Comments from hollyfan20002000

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hollyfan20002000
hollyfan20002000 commented about Rialto Theatre on Apr 23, 2018 at 9:50 pm

Believe it or not, all 783-seats fit into that space. The theatre auditorium was huge. You would never know from the street.

hollyfan20002000
hollyfan20002000 commented about Rialto Theatre on Apr 23, 2018 at 9:44 pm

I grew up in Charleston, WV and remember going to this theatre in the 1970s. The Rialto closed sometime in the 1960s and was re-opened as the Midtown Theatre (actually the Owens Midtown, the same owner as the Owens Drive In Theatre) early 70s. The theatre never had a marquee at all – only the verical sign attached to the Morrison Building that read “Rialto” and later “Midtown”. The theatre is actually a part of the Morrison Building, an office building on Quarrier Street in downtown Charleston.

To get to the theatre, you would walk through the lobby of the Morrison Building, past its elevators, to a non-discript theatre entrance. Inside was a small concession area. Beyond the concession area was the one entrance to the theatre’s large auditorium that was arranged 90-degrees to the entry.

That entrance opened into what was actually a wide aisle that bisected the theatre perpendicular to the screen. At the end of the wide aisle was an emergency exit.

The lower half of the theatre and the screen were to your right with two aisles leading to seating in the lower half of the theatre.

The section to the right of the wide entry aisle was elevated about 8 feet above the main aisle. There were two ramped aisles that allowed patrons access to the seating in the upper half of the theatre. The projection booth was at the back of this upper section.

It was stadium seating before stadium seating was a thing. By having the entire rear half of the seating elevated this high, patrons could enter and exit the theatre during the movie without blocking anyone’s view of the screen.