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In 2000, Colorado Cinemas Theatres acquired the Mann Theatres locations in Denver. Carmike Cinemas took over most of the Mann Theatres locations outside of the Denver area. The company ceased operation on December 27, 2011, with the closing of its last property, the Westlake Village Theaters, which was reopened as a Cinépolis. [8]
Tartaglia was formally recognized by the City of Los Angeles in October 2011. [19] The theater in 1964. The Chinese Theatre was declared a historic and cultural landmark in 1968, and has undergone restoration projects in the years since then. Ted Mann, owner of the Mann Theatres chain and husband of actress Rhonda Fleming, purchased it in 1973 ...
Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, also known as Egyptian Hollywood and the Egyptian, is a historic movie theater located on Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. [1] Opened in 1922, it is an early example of a lavish movie palace and is noted as having been the site of the world's first film premiere .
Rosa Grauman (mother of theatre owner, Sid) and George Raft (March 25, 1940) John Barrymore (September 5, 1940) Jack Benny (January 13, 1941) Carmen Miranda (March 24, 1941) Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Taylor (June 11, 1941) Rudy Vallée (July 21, 1941) Cecil B. DeMille (August 7, 1941) The Family of Judge James K. Hardy (August 15, 1941)
Downtown Los Angeles's Paramount Theatre opened as Grauman's Metropolitan Theatre on January 26, 1923.The building was financed by the Hill Street Fireproof Building Company, designed by George Edwin Bergstrom with the theater and building interior designed by William Lee Woollett, all for impresario Sid Grauman, [2] known at the time for the Million Dollar Theatre and best remembered today ...
The Roxie Theatre is a historic former movie theater in the Broadway Theater District of Los Angeles, California. The venue opened in 1931 as the last theater to be built on Broadway . Architect John M. Cooper 's Art Deco design of the Roxie remained the only theater of that style in the downtown neighborhood.
The theater was shut down by Mann Theatres in 1992, [3] and two years later the Guinness World of Records Museum moved into the building. [5] In 2024, Hollywood Theatre was one of four Hollywood and Highland buildings proposed for demolition to make way for a metro entrance on the K Line Northern Extension.
In 1996, Regency Theatres was founded by Lyndon Golin [18] and Andrew Golin, [19] brothers, with a theater in Camarillo, California. [20] [21] [22]In 2010, Mann Theatres went out of business, and Regency Theatres purchased the Fox Theater, Westwood Village [23] and a multiplex cinema at "The Plant" in Van Nuys, California.