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Towne Cinema Yonge and Bloor 1949 1985 1 Underground Cinema Spadina and Queen 2010 2012 [31] 1 Repertory cinema opened in what was formerly the Golden Classics venue. University Theatre: 100 Bloor Street West 1949 1986 1 For a time the largest cinema in Canada. Demolished except for the facade, which was incorporated into a store. Uptown Theatre
The Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema (formerly the Bloor Cinema and the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema) is a movie theatre in The Annex district of downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located on the 506 Bloor Street West, near its intersection with the Bathurst Street and the Bathurst subway station.
Return of the Jedi showing at the University Theatre, with the marquee stating "The Smash of 83" The University Theatre facade for the Williams-Sonoma & Pottery Barn store. The University Theatre was a single-screen cinema located at 100 Bloor Street West along the Mink Mile, just west of Bay Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
During late 1910s, the building's redesign was initiated by its new owners—Canadian-based Allen Theatres chain that decided to turn it into a silent film theater. With the redesign executed by the Detroit-based Howard Crane's company, [4] the 782-seat Allen's Bloor Theatre became one of Toronto's (a city of some 200,000 inhabitants at the time) [5] most luxurious suburban movie houses. [6]
In addition to the sudden closure of another major downtown historic Famous Players movie theatre, the Imperial Six, in 1986, many other Famous Players theatres in the Yonge and Bloor area closed during the 1980s, including The Plaza 1 and 2 Cinemas in the Hudson's Bay Centre and the University Theatre on Bloor Street West. Following the loss ...
In 1999 Hyatt purchased the hotel for $107 million, [6] calculated to be the highest cost per room ever paid in Canada, [7] and renamed it Park Hyatt Toronto. In 2014, Hyatt sold the hotel to Toronto-based Oxford Properties , for $90 million USD, [ 8 ] with an encumbrance that the hotel remain operated as a Hyatt for at least 40 years.
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