Garden Cinemas
353-67 Main Street,
Greenfield,
MA
01301
353-67 Main Street,
Greenfield,
MA
01301
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I read about the sale on Facebook , I know it was difficult for Bill and George to keep the place running and they did it by themselves .
The Garden was recently sold by the partners who owned it to a husband & wife team. (He worked in the Garden as a student). They plan some refurbishment, but will continue operation as before.
It was definitely a sad day when I learned the Garden Thester would be changed into a multi screen theater. It was so beautiful in there ! The way the ceiling would light with stars and the whole majestic beauty of the theater. I understand that it was deteriorating but it would have been nice to see it restored instead. Sadly there aren’t any of these places left in the state…
I recall many visits to the Garden back in my teenage years of the 1950s. Greenfield had 3 theaters at the time, The Garden, The Lawler and the Victoria. I shall never forget the night in 1958 I took my girlfriend to the movies at the Garden and when we came out the fire department had left a note on my windshield for me to contact them. Apparently the wiring on my old 48 Pontiac had caught fire while we were in the theater and burned up all the wiring in my car.
Hello jaboschen I enjoyed your Garden Theater article in “Marquee” the Theater Historical Society magazine. My question is about the splendid murals within the Garden Th. What are the 2 large painted windows behind the Romeo and Juelet organ chamber area? They don’t appear to fit any general design of that colonial art work. Realizing the interior murals are long gone I realize that my question maybe unanswerable!
I live in Greenfield for a time after retiring visited this one time beauty, but like GCC and other company the spit it what a same sad place to view a movie, I did move
This may be slightly off topic (my apologize), but I do feel it is important as it does relate to the Greenfield Garden Theater: The Goldstein Brothers built another Colonial Atmospheric theater similar to the Garden Theater in Athol Massachusetts called the Capitol. The theater opened in 1930 (a year after the Garden) and according to the Athol newspapers was much more elaborate then the Greenfield Garden. (They also stated the residents of Greenfield would be jealous of the Capitol.) This theater was a smaller non-identical sister theater to the Garden. The auditorium had the twinkling stars, cloud machines, the recreation of a new England Town on the walls, etc.. However I do not know if the town was a giant mural, similar to the Garden’s, or miniature buildings actually constructed; several articles in the Athol papers, at the time of the opening, state that a Water wheel was constructed in the auditorium. The lobby and Foyer of the Capitol was quite different from the Garden. While the Garden’s lobby & foyer were designed to look like an old new England parlor, the Capitol’s were designed to look like the interior of a covered bridge. The facade to the Capitol was quite different from the Garden. The facade was UNIQUE, very difficult to describe (imagine something similar to the Westwood Crests facade only much smaller and done over in a Colonial style). However the Capitol’s marquee and vertical sign are almost Identical to the Garden’s.
Here is a link to the Capitol theater’s Cinema Treasures page: http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/27414
According to this article in the Greenfield Recorder (http://www.recorder.com/story.cfm?id_no=8307371), the owners are putting the cinema up for dsale, which could delay a possible renovation of the building into a performing arts center. It’s a complicated scenario, but hopefully something gets worked out. A renovation could possibly move five of the cinema screens into neighboring buildings and restore much of the original auditorium.
According to their website, even they do not know what happened to the organ. They estimate conservatively they draw 90,000 patrons per year.
Here is a 1983 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/cl6zdn
Cinemas site acquired in Greenfield
Friday, October 24, 2008
By DAVID A. VALLETTE
GREENFIELD – A key property in the city’s Bank Row urban renewal district has been sold, and its new owners said they will embark on a renovation and redevelopment plan.
The Main Street building that houses Greenfield Garden Cinemas was purchased for $850,000 by George D. Gohl and William J. Gobeille.
Up until the sale, the two men operated the seven-screen cinema under a rental agreement with Western Massachusetts Theaters Inc., a Goldstein family corporation. The closing was on Wednesday.
Gobeille said on Thursday that they expect to pump about $250,000 into improvements on the short term, and move on from there. New seating for four of the seven cinemas that were not improved during a previous upgrade was ordered earlier in the day, and the installation will begin in January after the seats arrive.
The building’s upper floor will be prepared for commercial tenants, starting later next year, he said.
Town Councilor William F. Martin, chairman of the city’s Redevelopment Authority, said on Thursday that Gohl and Gobeille’s acquisition of the building was “thrilling” news.
He said it assured a good fate for the once-threatened cinemas, and relieved the authority of the financial burden of taking on the building itself.
Money that would have had to go to the building’s purchase can now be focused on construction of a parking garage to support all the businesses expected to result from redevelopment in the district, he said.
The authority has acquired three buildings on Bank Row, around the corner from the theater building. And it is in the process of securing the former Hapco Auto Parts building on Olive Street, located just around the other corner of the Bank Row block.
The Hapco building will be razed and used as the main entrance to the parking garage, under the authority’s redevelopment plan.
The Garden Theater was built by brothers Samuel and Nathan Goldstein 1929, and continued through the years in Goldstein family ownership, until its sale by Ronald Goldstein.
The Goldstein family once owned many theaters throughout Western Massachusetts, and have slowly sold most of them off.
In 1999, after Goldstein closed the Garden Theater, which was in disrepair, the historic building’s fate was up in the air. It was put on the top 10 most-endangered site list of Preservation MASS, a non-profit preservation organization.
Subsequently, Greenfield took the building for unpaid taxes, and repaired its roof for possibly resumption of theater operations, only to have Goldstein appeal the taking and regain the property for $136,000 to cover taxes and costs.
The building is known for its original architecture, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Along with its elaborate murals, it employed machinery in the orchestra pit that created moving clouds and twinkling stars on the ceiling.
Since the theater was carved up into seven smaller cinemas in 1986, the murals are covered and cannot be seen.
The subdivision also dropped the seating capacity from an original 1,887 to the current 1,000.
The two local men that have run the Garden Cinemas since 2000 have bought the buildinng that houses the Main street landmark. – a change that was greeted Thursday with enthusiasm by officials involved in rejuvenating downtown.
George Gohl and William Gobeille sealed the deal with the former owner Ronald Goldstein. The building hoses the seven cinemas, a tailor shop, a nail salon, a former framery, a baseball card place and Brad’s Place.
The cinemas have already renovated thetare 2, 6 and 7 amd will renovate 1 & 3 in January and 4 and 5 in March and April.
From Greefield Recorder October 24, 2008
I was passing through last week on a cycling trip. Long and wide main street and many families were going to see movies as it was dinnertime. I found it quite amazing that even though it was carved up, the marquee fills up the night sky and local unvacant storefronts and it doesn’t feel like a multiplex. It is sandwiched nicely where it is.
I attended the Garden in July 1964. At that time the seats were all wooden with no padding but comfortable. It was an evening show and very few people were there. I can’t recall what was playing as I was not interested, but spent most of my time prowling around. I had high speed color film in my 35mm camera and tried taking photos with time exposures. Only a few came out. I may still have them somewhere. The building was sited on a hill side, sloping down from Main Street where the entrance was located. On the left side of the theater next to the stage was a very, very long staircase leading down the hill to a fire exit. About a third of the way back from the stage on each wall were small attraction boards announcing that shows changed on certain days
The organ remained in use until the theater was converted into a seven-plex in the late 1980s. I presume it was sold, but unfortunately have no idea who it was sold to. I would really like to know whether the original walls are preserved behind all the multiplexing. At least the original rear railing behind the seats still exists in the balcony spaces. The stairs to the balcony are still the original creaking wood underneath the new carpeting!
What happened to it?
The Garden Cinema was an unusual atmospheric theater with idyllic scenes of new england countyside painted on the walls and a greek pediment style proscenium arch. When i first checked out area theatres it was quite a sight, even though my the early 1980s the walls had darkened so you could barely see the murals. There was a large aquarium in the back of the orchestra section. I don’t know if they changed the ceiling or not, but when i went in, instead of the traditional twinkling stars and blue ceiling with clouds, there were a myriad of star-shaped recessed light fixtures shining bright light down into the auditorium Interesting effect but not traditional atmospheric.
The ceilings were very darkened like the walls. There were virtually no plaster ornamental features on the walls as almost all of the decorations were the painted scenery although a few portions of buildings were cleverly shaped and meshed to the paintings. When I went in early 1980s they still played the organ before the feature!
When it was multiplexed, the lobbies all got modern wall coverings and decorations (although otherwise unchanged) and the balcony was sealed off and split down the middle. The railing at the top back is original but all walls and seats are modern.
The orchestra section is split into three spaces, all modern furniture and walls, and two more screens in the stagehouse area. I hope all the original walls are preserved behind the new auditorium walls but I don’t know if they are.
The MGM Theatre Photograph and Report form for the Garden Theatre on Main St. in Greenfield has an exterior photo taken in May 1941. The attraction is “Tobacco Road”. The Report states that the Garden has been a MGM customer for over 10 years old; that it’s over 15 years old; that it’s in Good condition; and has 1318 orchestra seats and 559 balcony seats, total: 1877 seats.
The official Web site for the Garden; http://www.gardencinemas.net/
includes a few old photos, interior and exterior, presented as thumbnails on various pages. Better than nothing!
The Garden had a wonderful cloud machine that puffed wisps of cloud smoke around the auditorium ceiling. I remember them even right up to the theatre’s unfortunate multiplexing. It truly was a beautiful place; the only theatre in the area now that replicates the “outdoor” feel is the Latchis in Brattleboro.
A distant relative, Horace York, was one of the organists who played the Marr & Coulton theatre pipe organ there – wish I could have heard it!!
As a single screen theatre the Garden Theatre seated 1877 people.