Vine Theatre
38025 Vine Street,
Willoughby,
OH
44094
38025 Vine Street,
Willoughby,
OH
44094
2 people favorited this theater
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The Granada Also played 2 runs with the Vine. In the 50’s when the movies left downtown they went to the Lake in Euclid before going anywhere else. The Lake was like going downtown after it opened. The Vine did show first runs for a shorttime. It went back to subruns after Great Lake mall cinema open.
this so interesting. There is a wall that is being renovated and on it is painting of a carausel and a tiger and a deer and an old bugs bunny at the top it has Basil Turi’s I was just so interested in the history because of this painting. It looks like a place the kids used
It had 1600 seats according to the 1950 Newspaper ad for “ADAM’S RIB”.
Like its sister theater in Berea, the Vine was designed by the Cleveland architectural firm of Matzinger & Grosel. Boxoffice of November 17, 1945, announced that construction had begun on the project.
Three small photos accompanied this article about the Vine Theatre in Boxoffice of December 7, 1946.
The Vine occupied an odd niche. It did not routinely get first run films, but it often got blockbusters after they had run in downtown Cleveland such as Dr Zhivago, The Great Escape, etc. They did not get films before the Lake, etc., nor did they routinely do double features. The Shore was the one theatre in this general area that did double bills and except for cheap horror films, they abandoned that by the late 60s.
It was a very plain theatre. It closed and was converted to a Kingdom Hall in the late 70s.
Here is a May 1963 ad from the Willoughby News-Herald:
http://tinyurl.com/o7bjam
A picture of the Vine Theater from 1955:
View link
Two other theaters in far out suburbs also showed the same features just after their downtown runs. They were the Stillwell in Bedford and the Willow in Independence. That way all four corners of the Cleveland metro area had theaters showing films just after downtown but a few weeks before they hit the next single feature runs in neighborhood “A” theaters like the Colony, Vogue, Shaker, Fairview, Fairmont, Richmond, Lake, Mayland and Yorktown. Then the “B” neighborhood theaters got the films and played double bills.
Trouble in 1967:
‘Ulysses,'The Movie, Is Banned
WILLOUGHBY, Ohio (UPI)-It was Paris, 1922, when James Joyce first unleashed the “Ulysses" controversy and now it’s cropped up here. Police impounded the film version of the controversial novel Friday night, closed the Vine Theater and charged the manager and projectionist with showing a lewd and obscene film.
The film, with a liberal dose of four letter words, was playing at three other Cleveland area theaters, but there were no complaints. “If a guy said some of those things on a street corner and anyone heard him, he’d be arrested,” said Willoughby Law Director Lewis Turl Jr.
The vine closed in the early 70’s. I use to go to it then