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Beekman Theatre; Bleecker Street Cinema; City Cinemas Beekman Theatre [5] Fine Arts Theatre; Lincoln Plaza Cinemas; Landmark Sunshine Cinema; Thalia Theatre; Tribeca Cinemas; Ziegfeld Theatre (1969) The Landmark at 57 West; Theater 80 at St Marks Place [Film Geek, 2023, Documentary, Dir. Richard Shepard]
ArcLight Sherman Oaks opened November 16, 2007, at the Sherman Oaks Galleria, replacing the Galleria Pacific Theater. The grand opening took place on December 14, 2007. [7] A location in Pasadena at The Paseo opened on May 10, 2010. [8] In late 2010, Pacific Theaters refurbished an existing Pacific Theaters multiplex as an ArcLight in El ...
After growing cobwebs for nearly a year, movie theaters in New York City reopen Friday, returning film titles to Manhattan marquees that had for the last 12 months instead read messages like ...
The former RKO Keith's Theater on Hillside Avenue in Richmond Hill. RKO Keith's Theater is a historic RKO Pictures movie theater located at 117-09 Hillside Avenue in the Richmond Hill section of the New York City borough of Queens. It was designed by architect R. Thomas Short and built in 1929 in the Neo-Classical Revival style.
On March 17, 2020, Pacific Theatres closed all of its theater locations, including ArcLight Cinemas, to comply with COVID-19 public health mandates. In March 2021, when COVID-19 restrictions were eased in Los Angeles County to allow movie theatres to reopen, all of the Pacific Theatres and ArcLight Cinemas locations notably remained closed.
The theater was built by Isaac Minor for a cost of $20,000. Ground was broken for the building of the theater on April 2, 1914, and the project was finished in November of that year, built in reinforced concrete for structural safety and fire-resistance. The grand opening was December 3, 1914. It closed in 1938 and reopened in the 50s.
The New York Times ' film critic Vincent Canby observed, "There is a heaven for movie buffs and it could be here and now thanks to The Elgin, The Thalia, The Symphony and all those other houses that occasionally recall the past." [11] In May 1977, while continuing to present film, the theater began to mount programs of rock music and allied ...
The Valencia Theatre (formerly the Loew's Valencia Theatre) is a church building at 165-11 Jamaica Avenue in the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens in New York City, New York. Designed by John Eberson as a movie palace , it opened on January 11, 1929, as one of five Loew's Wonder Theatres in the New York City area.