Rosewood Theatre
1905 S. Lauderdale Street,
Memphis,
TN
38106
1905 S. Lauderdale Street,
Memphis,
TN
38106
2 people favorited this theater
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This opened on September 4th, 1950. Grand opening ad posted.
My family lived on Lauderdale after WW2 and my sister and I joined the neighborhood kids every Saturday at the Rosewood. It was Saturday paradise with cartoons, adventure serials and western movies. Big part of my childhood. Missed it tons when we moved away.
No, it was not predominantly African American. I grew up going to Rosewood. Trent Wood and Tiny the clown were there one Saturday and drew my name from the tickets and I won a pass to the theater for a year !!!
I remember the barber shop and they had a bar at the end of the building. I have a lot of fun memories at the Rosewood.
Was this a predominantly African American Movie House? I know it later became Club Rosewood which I believe was a black club…ANY INFO?
The Rosewood was one of the theaters operated by Augustine Cianciolo, as mentioned in many issue of Boxoffice Magazine during the early 1950s.
The December 29, 1956, issue of Boxoffice said that Nathan Reiss had bought the Rosewood Theatre from its owner, Ben Bass, and would take over operation of the house from lessee Augustine Cianciolo on January 1, 1957.
The January 11, 1960, issue of Boxoffice reported that William Shapiro had taken over operation of the Rosewood on a lease from owner Nathan Reiss. After that the Rosewood is only mentioned retrospectively in one 1963 item, so it must have closed by then.
The Rosewood Theatre was pictured in the July 22, 1950, issue of Boxoffice Magazine. The house, then under construction, was expected to open on October 15, but was ahead of schedule. Boxoffice announced in its issue of September 16, 1950, that the Rosewood had opened. The architect was W.C. Lester.
Nice story about the barbershop! I visited on 7/4/2007 and took a few photos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gspragin/722746655/
Here is an archive photo of the theatre.
As kids, the Rosewood was a fantastic concert venue after it closed as a movie theater. In the same building was a barber shop. The Rosewood Barbershop of course, and that’s where most of the neighborhood kids got their haircuts. Although the barbershop AT the Rosewood theater closed THAT location, it is still known as the Rosewood Barbershop at their new location in the Whitehaven neighborhood.
The theater itself is now occupied by a Church…Rosewood Church.