I would be happy to discuss the Continental Theater with anyone interested…. and my experiences as a young boy, who grew up amid the wonder and facination of movies as they progressed through the “silent” and “talkies” eras…….Great memories!
Please list you email address here, and I will contact you
Tom Falciglia
I would like to add some comments re: the Continental Theatre in the above write-up
My name is Thomas V. Falciglia. I am eighty years old and am the son of the man who first built this theatre in the early 1920’s. His name also was Thomas Falciglia (no middle initial). It is true that the theatre had no roof when he first built it because my father did not have enough money to complete that phase of the construction. However, that did not inhibit him from opening the theatre, and operating it as often as the weather permitted. This lasted for a couple of years until he was able to borrow more money to complete the roof job.
I was only a small boy at the time the theatre was built, but my memories of the wonders that were produced there are vivid and spectacular.
Dad was not wealthy, and was the son of an immigrant from Italy.
He had a dream.. He loved the theatre, and was himself an actor, and musician.
His dream was to build a theatre, which would quench his thirst for artistic involvement, and also would become become a source of entertainment, in a local neighborhood in Providence, for everyone with limited entertainment budgets.
I remember “The Perils of Pauline”, The adventures of Tom Mix, Tim McCoy, Ken Maynard. I remember Tugboat Annie with Wallace Beery,
I remember Buster Keaton, Theda Bara, and so many other silent film greats. It was magic time for me, and everyone else in the neighbjorhood
Dad’s niece was the pianist for him during the silent film era.
I believe he was one of the first to introduce “talking pictures” to the people of Providence. They used the ‘Vitaphone System" in those early days. This was a system with large sound-recorded disks which were amplified, played, and syncronized with the talk and sounds on the silent screen.
Those were the days of dinnerware handouts, silverware handouts,and many other promotional devices to keep customers comming back week
after week. The theatre was “Cinema Paradisio” for that neighborhood in Providence.
Eventually the great depression in the late twentys and early thirties caught up with dad and his dream. The income dwindled and soon the theatre was lost to the loan sharks and the banks who imposed their demands.
Thomas, though, was still recognized throughout Providence, as an innovator with great talents as a promoter.. He was hired by several major theatres in the city to manage their operations, and in fact,
in the lobby of the Columbus Theatre on Broadway in Providence, there is a display describing that theatre’s history, and Thomas Falciglia is named as one of their early managers.
As his son I have so many more wonderful memories of my days at the Continental Theatre, and would be happy to describe them for anyone interested.
I would be happy to discuss the Continental Theater with anyone interested…. and my experiences as a young boy, who grew up amid the wonder and facination of movies as they progressed through the “silent” and “talkies” eras…….Great memories!
Please list you email address here, and I will contact you
Tom Falciglia
I would like to add some comments re: the Continental Theatre in the above write-up
My name is Thomas V. Falciglia. I am eighty years old and am the son of the man who first built this theatre in the early 1920’s. His name also was Thomas Falciglia (no middle initial). It is true that the theatre had no roof when he first built it because my father did not have enough money to complete that phase of the construction. However, that did not inhibit him from opening the theatre, and operating it as often as the weather permitted. This lasted for a couple of years until he was able to borrow more money to complete the roof job.
I was only a small boy at the time the theatre was built, but my memories of the wonders that were produced there are vivid and spectacular.
Dad was not wealthy, and was the son of an immigrant from Italy.
He had a dream.. He loved the theatre, and was himself an actor, and musician.
His dream was to build a theatre, which would quench his thirst for artistic involvement, and also would become become a source of entertainment, in a local neighborhood in Providence, for everyone with limited entertainment budgets.
I remember “The Perils of Pauline”, The adventures of Tom Mix, Tim McCoy, Ken Maynard. I remember Tugboat Annie with Wallace Beery,
I remember Buster Keaton, Theda Bara, and so many other silent film greats. It was magic time for me, and everyone else in the neighbjorhood
Dad’s niece was the pianist for him during the silent film era.
I believe he was one of the first to introduce “talking pictures” to the people of Providence. They used the ‘Vitaphone System" in those early days. This was a system with large sound-recorded disks which were amplified, played, and syncronized with the talk and sounds on the silent screen.
Those were the days of dinnerware handouts, silverware handouts,and many other promotional devices to keep customers comming back week
after week. The theatre was “Cinema Paradisio” for that neighborhood in Providence.
Eventually the great depression in the late twentys and early thirties caught up with dad and his dream. The income dwindled and soon the theatre was lost to the loan sharks and the banks who imposed their demands.
Thomas, though, was still recognized throughout Providence, as an innovator with great talents as a promoter.. He was hired by several major theatres in the city to manage their operations, and in fact,
in the lobby of the Columbus Theatre on Broadway in Providence, there is a display describing that theatre’s history, and Thomas Falciglia is named as one of their early managers.
As his son I have so many more wonderful memories of my days at the Continental Theatre, and would be happy to describe them for anyone interested.