Majestic Theater

136 W. North Commerce Street,
Wills Point, TX 75169

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Showing 11 comments

dukeisduke
dukeisduke on February 20, 2012 at 3:15 pm

That’s US Highway 80, not Texas Highway 80. And yes, the article in the Dallas Morning News was a very good one.

Mike Rogers
Mike Rogers on November 24, 2010 at 7:43 pm

Played “AMITYVILLE HORROR” for its Christmas Movie in 1979.Must have been different Management.

CSWalczak
CSWalczak on October 4, 2010 at 12:43 am

After eighty-four years, the theater closed on October 3, 2010:
View link

CSWalczak
CSWalczak on June 27, 2010 at 9:16 am

An article about the theater, its history, and its struggle to keep going: View link

dbphotos
dbphotos on July 14, 2008 at 8:19 pm

You can see a photo of the Majestic Theater in Wills Point, Texas taken on July 13, 2008 by clicking HERE.

www.DavidBailey.com

Don Lewis
Don Lewis on March 6, 2008 at 7:23 pm

A 1984 photo of the Majestic Theater in Wills Point showing “Unfaithfully Yours” starring Dudley Moore.

Michael Furlinger
Michael Furlinger on July 19, 2006 at 4:52 pm

would love to buy this theater ……….

teecee
teecee on August 3, 2005 at 4:41 am

Named after Dallas' Elm Street movie palace, the Wills Point Majestic opened in 1926, two years before the first “talkie.” In that time, it has had three owners, all named Karl Lybrand _ I, II and III.

The eldest began showing movies in the back of his tailor shop in 1907, in a makeshift theater called The Home. The Lybrands contend that theirs is the oldest continuously operating, family-owned theater in the United States.

Lybrand III, 61, has two daughters, who have shown little interest in running the faded theater, whose exterior bricks are the same rusty color as those on its bumpy surrounding streets.

“I plan on being here as long as I am physically able,” says Karl III, who knows his customers by name and who refuses to leave until the last underage patron finds a ride. Rather than leave a kid stranded, he occasionally drives them home.

His theater is like a comfortable old shoe, which got a minor makeover a few years back. Its 315 seats were reupholstered in 2003, and during the 1980s, Karl III went to “the platter system,” eliminating the need for the theater’s carbon-arc projectors, which pre-dated World War II. He also installed a new screen. The sound, however, still rattles through a Radio Shack amplifier.

“I don’t have reclining seats, or stadium seating or surround sound or any of the stuff you get at the AMC 30 in Mesquite _ where all of our teenagers go, which is why I don’t have a teenage crowd any more. What people tell me they love here is the nostalgia, and we’ve got plenty of that.”

Like everybody who grew up in Wills Point, 48 miles east of Dallas on Highway 80, assistant manager John Allen, 28, has seen movies here since he could talk. “It’s my entire childhood wrapped up in one building,” he says.

Source: Dallas Morning News, The (TX), Jul 07, 2005

Don Lewis
Don Lewis on July 17, 2005 at 5:53 am

Oops….the theater picture link posted by TC is not the Wills Point Majestic.

It looks like the Majestic in Eastland, Texas.

The link posted by lostmemory has the Wills Point Majestic.