Max Theatre

116 W. Main Street,
Cherokee, OK 73728

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Additional Info

Previous Names: Crystal Theatre

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The Crystal Theatre was opened in 1909, and operated as a silent movie theatre, closing in the early-1930’s. It went over to use as a church.

On October 29, 1938 it was reopened as the Max Theatre and continued until it was damaged by a fire on December 2, 1969. Repairs were carried out and the building was modernised, reopening as the Max Theatre again, screening second run movies. It opened into the mid-1980’s.

Contributed by Cactus Jack

Recent comments (view all 4 comments)

raybradley
raybradley on March 22, 2011 at 9:52 am

Here is a modern day view of 116 W. Main St., Cherokee, OK. No evidence of a standing theatre.
View link

cherokee
cherokee on September 27, 2012 at 4:03 pm

Fred and Irene Householder ran the theater for 25 years until it finally closed in the mid 1980’s. Adult tickets were $1.25 and child tickets were .75 when the theater closed. The theater had suffered a devastating fire in the mid 1970’s and the theater was completely rebuilt. Best popcorn on earth! It was sad to see the theater close but Fred and Irene sold it and the new owners just didn’t have the love and dedication to keep it going as a successful business. God bless them both for the hundreds of movies they brought to a community that had very few options when it came to local entertainment.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore on October 25, 2021 at 10:19 am

In December 1944, Motion Picture Herald included two movie reviews from Blanche Gibson, owner of the Max in Cherokee. “The Impatient Years” was exceptionally good, “but did not draw as it should. Jean Arthur is never very strong here.” About “The Hitler Gang,” she wrote, “it is not entertainment. Business terrible.”

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on May 20, 2022 at 6:42 pm

Reading the local paper, there is a high likelihood that this began as the Crystal Theatre in 1909. The Crystal Airdome had opened as an outdoor venue in 1909 for the ventilation-challenged theaters of Cherokee, Oklahoma. It did so well that Frank Wilson equipped a movie theater in the existing Millspaugh Building as the Crystal Theatre also in 1909.

The silent movie house competed with the Majestic Theatre in the 1920s before coming under common ownership in 1927 with the Hawk Brothers and then Cherokee Amusement Co. Only one of the two theaters was equipped for sound and it was the Majestic turned Ritz. The Crystal continued as a place of worship in the early to mid 1930s discontinuing films. The Max Theatre was placed in this same Crystal space beginning after a major refresh on October 29, 1938 with the Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire film, “Swing Time.”

The theatre was rehabbed in the 1950s to show widecreen and erased much of its past. The building was then badly damaged in a fire in December 2, 1969. When it was rehabbed, the building was modern and not reflective of any of its past. It continued into the mid-1980s as the Max Theatre showing second-run discount movies.

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