Bijou Theatre

157 W. Adams Street,
Stockton, CA 95204

Unfavorite No one has favorited this theater yet

Showing 6 comments

floydflow1
floydflow1 on August 29, 2015 at 8:37 pm

Did I mention, the Bijou Theatre management was not allowed to attend or even be invited to the business owners meeting aforementioned??? Coincidentally the very same thing happened to the Oakland pussycat theater also which was also owned in the end by Paula Miranda

floydflow1
floydflow1 on August 29, 2015 at 8:34 pm

Hi theatre fans !!! I am what you should now refer to as the bijou theatre’s very last employee…I workeddd there from 1990 until its last heaving sigh in 94'… and I can tell you that the aforementioned city leaders did not play fairly! They conducted A local business owners meeting and together voted out the Bijou Theatre from the Miracle Mile even though it wasn’t really on The Miracle Mile and after that we started getting vice squad officers into the theater all the time harassing patrons and driving them away eventually we were making almost no money at all and soon enough they raided us and took away our business license, mind you this place was here for 25 years very sad to see it go

JayAllenSanford
JayAllenSanford on June 30, 2010 at 5:44 am

The owners from 1974 to 1982 were Bob and Susan Carson. Walnut Properties, who ran California’s Pussycat Theatre chain, coveted the locale, but was unable to close a purchase deal on the property until 1982.

As with many Pussycats in the chain’s fading days, Walnut ceased day to day operation in the late-80s. New management leased the theater from Walnut, keeping the Pussycat signage and operating the locale as a Pussycat (also like at many other latterday ‘Cathouses). In this case, a former Walnut employee leased the property and ran it, Walnut’s former district manager of northern California, Mrs. Paula Miranda (no relation to Walnut co-founder Vince Miranda),

The city of Stockton seemed fairly resigned to the long-lived porn oasis just off the so-called Miracle Mile, until civic leaders began applying pressure to close the locale in the early ‘90s. The theater locked its doors in January 1993.

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on June 29, 2010 at 7:14 pm

Interesting reading JayAllen.

JayAllenSanford
JayAllenSanford on June 29, 2010 at 6:58 pm

As chronicled in this week’s new San Diego Reader, with an updated and expanded version of the ongoing Pussycat Theater project – View link