Rodeo Theatre
Main Street,
Hartselle,
AL
35640
Main Street,
Hartselle,
AL
35640
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The July 27, 1929 issue of Motion Picture News had this item that had to have been about this theater:
The FDYs give a clue to what might have happened next in Hartselle. Ray Howell’s 300-seat Scenic Theatre is listed in the 1929 edition, but the only house listed in 1930 is a 300-seat Alma Theatre. In 1931, the 435-seat Pearl Vaughn theatre appears, along with the Alma. It appears that Mr. Howell failed to get his new house open, but Dr. William Booth got control of it and opened it as the Pearl Vaughn Theatre sometime in 1930. Meantime, Howell’s old Scenic remained in operation with the new name Alma Theatre. In 1932, the new theater returned to the control of the Howell family, as the house was renamed Strand Theatre on August 20 that year, and the January 14, 1933 issue of Universal Weekly says that an Adam P. Howell was manager of the Strand in Hartselle. The 1933 FDY lists the Strand, with 472 seats, but the Alma is no longer listed.The second go-round of the name Rodeo for the house began in 1959, according to this item from the May 27 issue of Motion Picture Exhibitor that year: “Hank Farris has changed the name of his house in Hartselle, Ala., from the Strand to the Rodeo.”
Incidentally, the Scenic Theatre was the sole listing at Hartselle in the 1914-1915 American Motion Picture Directory.
Opened as the Pearl Vaughn theatre and renamed Strand on August 20th, 1932. Ad posted.
A telephone directory listing I found online doesn’t give the Rodeo’s exact address, but lists it on West Main Street. I’ve checked Google’s street views of downtown Hartselle, and though a few of the old buildings are the right size to have accommodated a theater, none have any distinguishing characteristics that could identify it as such.
The Rodeo was most likely somewhere in the three block stretch between Railroad Street and Corsbie Street, now a thriving district of restored buildings, many of them housing antiques dealers.
The Strand of 1944 must have been either a rebuild of or replacement for an earlier house of the same name which was in operation by 1932. The Strand’s manager, Adam P. Howell, was quoted in the January 14, 1933, issue of Universal Weekly saying that attendance for the studio’s movie “The Mummy” had broken his house record for 1932.
The Hartselle Enquirer has frequently published a column called “A look back” which often mentions the town’s theaters, but the earliest mentions of the Strand are from 1937, and there are no items about a rebuilding or a new theater in 1944.
In its later years the Strand became the Rodeo Theatre, as noted in this item:
The May 5, 1956, issue of Boxoffice also noted the name change and remodel, saying that the owner, Hubert Mitchell, had adopted a western motif for the Rodeo, which he had also used at his Ranch Drive-In. I’ve found one more mention of the name Strand in the newspaper, incongruously from 1958, but by 1960 the house is called the Rodeo again. The theater was closed by 1967, when a June 28 item said that “[t]he vacant Rodeo Theatre building on Main Street is being offered for lease.”Hubert R. Mitchell bought the Strand in 1955, but had lived in Hartselle for quite some time and was noted in the October 13, 1956, issue of Motion Picture Herald as “…the owner of Hubert Mitchell Industries, one of the largest manufacturers of stage fittings, decorations and props, as well as theatre auditorium drapes, seat cushions and accessories.” His company, which had two factories, also manufactured something called Bowline Screen Frames, which are mentioned now and then in theater industry trade journals of the period.