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Was described by The Courier-Journal as "perhaps the last genuine neighborhood movie house in Louisville" at the time of its closing. [26] Walden Theatre 233 W Broadway Closed. Apartments now stand on the site. Westend Theatre [27] 3312 W. Broadway Razed Westland 4 Theater July 1975 - 1990 9070 Dixie Hwy, Louisville, KY 40258
Actors Theatre of Louisville; The Louisville Palace; CenterStage at the Jewish Community Center, Community Theatre which began in 1914, features Broadway-style musicals, professional children's theatre, and youth musical theatre training. Iroquois Amphitheater; The Kentucky Theater
United States Marine Hospital of Louisville; Vogue Theater, a movie theater in St. Matthews that closed in 1998, known for showing The Rocky Horror Picture Show for 25 years. Its sign is being refurbished as a historical landmark. Waverly Hills Sanatorium
Culkin, who played the lead role in the 1990 film as a 10 year old, will visit the Louisville Palace in downtown Dec. 3 for a "Home Alone" screening followed by a live discussion and audience Q&A.
The commercial area extends from the intersection of Bardstown Road and Taylorsville Road/Trevillian Way in the south, to the intersection of Baxter Avenue and Lexington Road in the north, a length of 3.2 miles (5.1 km). A 1 ⁄ 2-mile (800 m) section of the nearby Barret Avenue also contains many similar businesses.
AMC Theatres – as of July 2012 AMC divested of its Canadian operations, selling four to Cineplex, two to Empire Theatres which were later sold to Landmark Cinemas in 2013, closing two. Empire Theatres – closed on October 29, 2013, by selling most of their locations to Cineplex Entertainment and Landmark Cinemas and closing 3 others that ...
Located nearby is the Kentucky Theater, which was built in 1921 and operated for 60 years as a movie house, but was closed and was almost demolished in 1986. Ultimately it was saved by local arts advocates, and the newly renovated Kentucky Theater opened its doors in 2000 and has become a community arts center and art film house.
In October 1972, the theater relocated to the newly renovated Old Bank of Louisville building on Main Street, where it remains to this day. The building that became Actors Theatre was a merging of two buildings: the 1837 James H. Dakin-designed Old Bank of Louisville (which is a National Historic Landmark) and the Myers-Thompson Display ...