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Carolina Theater was a historic movie theater located at Fayetteville, Cumberland County, North Carolina. It was built in 1927, and was an oversize two-story brick rectangular building in the Moorish Revival style. The front facade featured terra cotta, clay, brickwork, and decorative stone or concrete friezework.
The theater was rebuilt and reopened in 1948 with 916 seats and a new balcony to replace the old one. Steve Morris bought a share of the theater in 1995 and became general manager and later the owner. With competition from newer theaters, the Gem showed movies that had already been shown elsewhere. First-run movies returned in 2000. [2]
The Crown Complex [2] (originally the Cumberland County Crown Coliseum) is a multi-purpose venue in Fayetteville, North Carolina that includes the Crown Coliseum, an indoor stadium. The stadium broke ground in 1995 [ 3 ] and opened in 1997, [ 4 ] and is currently home to the Fayetteville Marksmen ice hockey team.
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Films shot in North Carolina by city (5 C) Pages in category "Films shot in North Carolina" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 299 total.
North Carolina Highway 59 (NC 59) was an 8.288-mile-long (13.338 km) primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina that ran through Cumberland County from Interstate 95 (I-95) near Hope Mills to U.S. Route 401 Business (US 401 Bus.) in Owens, within the city limits of Fayetteville.
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Producer Howard Welsch had assumed Jean Simmons's contract from RKO and transferred it to 20th Century-Fox after making the film. [2] [3] Filming began on December 3, 1953. [4] In April 1954, Welsch signed a deal with Columbia to distribute the film. [5]