Le Parisien
480 rue Ste. Catherine O.,
Montreal,
QC
H3B1A6
480 rue Ste. Catherine O.,
Montreal,
QC
H3B1A6
2 people favorited this theater
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Leased to Secure Cinema Investments in 1971 along with the Imperial, Bijou, Midi-Minuit, Pigalle (olde Strand) etc. The chain tried to open a theatre in Calgary.
Secure Cinema Investments 12 Nov 1971, Fri The Montreal Star (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) Newspapers.com
Esculator installed in 1918
Escalator at the Princess theatre. Sat, Feb 9, 1918 – 7 · The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) · Newspapers.com
Censorship on October 1st, 1964 La Terre a Boire censorship Fri, Oct 2, 1964 – 9 · The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec, Quebec, Canada) · Newspapers.com
I am utterly dismayed to read this place has closed. It had one of the coolest exterior lay-outs ever. There’s a photo in the photos section that shows the way the marquee recessed and all the flags hung around it. I always thought it was breathtaking. I only ever saw one film here (Tom Tykwer’s Heaven — part of the Montreal World Film Festival in 2002) but I really enjoyed it. The place showed French films on the regular, often without subtitles, so I never made it back.
What a shame to read that it is closed and in decay. Maybe someone will rehabilitate someday.
The architect of the Princess Theatre was D.J. Spence. The artist in the photo CSWalczak linked to earlier is most likely F.S. Challenor, who painted the mural on the theater’s sounding board. A brief article about the Princess Theatre appeared in the February, 1918, issue of the Canadian trade journal Construction.
From the description above, it seems unlikely that any trace of the original decoration of the 1917 Princess remains. The 1917 house was itself a replacement for an earlier Princess Theatre. The photo to which mortonbg linked earlier must depict the front of the pre-1917 Princess, as the facade as designed by Spence was as tall as that of Le Parisien.
Downstairs is being converted, Cinemas 4-7 upstairs remains except for seats and projectors.
Princess grand opening ad from October 3rd, 1908 is at View link
A 1917 picture of an artist working on the mural that once occupied the space over the proscenium at the theatre when it was the Princess from he Ontario Archives:
http://ao.minisisinc.com/Webimages/I0010651.jpg
Info on the Houdini connection is here
View link
Also a nice picture of the exterior from the 1920’s is here
View link
It’s always sad to see an old haunt closed, but this one takes the memory of Harry Houdini with it. The Princess was where he performed in 1926 and took those infamous body blows from a McGill student that inflamed his (apparently already) ruptured appendix. He died soon after in Detroit.
This theatre has closed today. It was the 3rd theatre to be closed by the Cinemas Fortune circuit. It was playing second-run movies in the last year.
More info on this cinema on page 4 of
View link .
a picture can be found here at View link
This photo, which I took in 1989 or so, shows Le Parisien when it had five screens. The Montréal World Film Festival was in progress at the time.
View link
I remember going to this cinema for close to fifteen years in a row for the annual Montréal World Film Festival. Saw a lot of great films when I had the desire to watch movies from 9 A.M. until after midnight. I remember many celebrities on hand to introduce films or speak to patrons (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Shelley Winters, Kathryn Grayson.) I remember the superb projection in a variety of formats, meticulous attention to aspect ratios and appropriate screen masking.
This was the first place I saw the uncut version of Bertolucci’s “Novecento” (dubbed in French and not part of the Festival.) It was the North American première of that version. I don’t like the idea of multiplexing historic theatres like the Princess, but this place had character, and each of the auditoriums was well-appointed and attractive. I haven’t been there in years.