Comments from sambass1878

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sambass1878
sambass1878 commented about Prairie Theater on Dec 8, 2015 at 10:57 pm

I started working at the Prairie Theater in the spring of 1979, and in March of 1980 I became the manager. At that time, it was a single screen using carbon arc lamphouses and two projectors doing ‘changeovers’ between reels of film. The theater still had a functioning curtain over the screen that opened as the show would begin, but overall the theater was in poor condition. The Prairie also had a stage, along with footlights at the base of the stage that were used at sometime in the past – perhaps for live performances. I am told that High School commencement ceremonies were held at the Prairie in the past, but I don’t know of any live stage performances.

In the Spring of 1979, Evergreen Theaters was the management company that operated it, and Evergreen Theaters twinned it over the Summer months, converting the balcony space to a projection booth and installing platter automation systems and xenon lamphouses. Evergreen also installed all new seats in the auditoriums.

By the Autumn of 1979, the Prairie was being operated by a Kansas based company called Mid America Theaters with Home Offices in Sharon Springs, Kansas, and later the parent company moved to Hays, Kansas. In the spring of 1983, a company named Mountain West Theaters based out of Wyoming took over the lease and operations.

All the while, the property remained in the Kehr family who originally built it, but the subsequent management companies – Evergreen Theaters – Mid America Theaters – and Mountain West Theaters leased the property and operated the Prairie. I do not know when the Kehr family turned operations over to Evergreen Theaters, but if I remember correctly, Evergreen Theaters were based out of Loveland, Colorado.

The remaining Kehr family who inherited the property put it up for sale sometime in 1983 or ‘84, simply to settle the A.F. Kehr estate, which by that time included children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great – great grandchildren.

Around 1984, the building was purchased by the general managers at the time, and the building left the Kehr family. It was locally owned and operated as the Prairie Theater from around 1984 to about 1988. The Prairie closed sometime in the late ‘80’s for about 4 years.

In the early ‘90’s, local residents Robert (Bob) and Ginger Downing purchased the Prairie, and after extensive remodeling (moving the concession stand, new HVAC systems, carpets, redesigning the lobby, and eventually new theater seats) the Prairie reopened. The Downing family operated the Prairie until the late '90’s, and as far as I know it is currently owned and operated by Andy and Lisa Byers, local residents of Ogallala. All 3 of the previous and current local owners of this property deserve credit for keeping this theater open in this small town in western Nebraska.

A side note to add here. A.F. Kehr also owned the older Princess Theater that was located about a block and a half to the south on the south east corner of Highway 30 and South Spruce street, when the Prairie opened (currently the USave Pharmacy location, previously known as Buenz Drug). In the 50’s, Kehr also built and operated the West 5th Drive In Theater on West 5th Street, which was outside of the city limits when it was operating. The projectors from The Princess were moved to the West 5th Drive in during the Summer months when the drive in was open, and then back to The Princess when the weather turned cold. The West 5th closed around ‘84, never reopened, it was eventually demolished, and the land was sold.

Somewhere, I have some photos from the early ‘80’s of the Prairie Theater when we were showing E.T. – The Extra Terrestrial, along with Rocky III before the Box Office opened that evening. The line outside went half way around the block and we sold out both shows quickly that night! Good Times! If I come across those pictures I will try to scan them and post them to this site.