Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ragtag Cinema is a non-profit independent movie theater located on Hitt Street in Columbia, Missouri. The theater was founded by a group including Paul Sturtz and David Wilson [1] in May 2000. [2] The theater is the home of the Ragtag Film Society, a nonprofit organization which strives to champion film and other media arts to stimulate and ...
In 2006, it won the Riverfront Times best film festival. [2] In 2008, the film fest lost 1,200 seats due to the renovation work taking place at the Missouri Theatre . To adjust for the loss, the fest expanded beyond its usual boundaries in order to take advantage of additional screens at Macklanburg Cinema, Windsor Cinema, and The Den on the ...
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 ...
During its recent fiscal year that concluded in June, the theater brought in more than $413,000 of its nearly $1.28 million in income from ticket sales, with nearly $370,000 of those ticket sales ...
The big screen has gone dark at a longtime Columbia movie theater, but it appears that may only be temporary. The AMC Dutch Square 14 at the Dutch Square Center mall, located at 421 Bush River ...
Per usual, the summer theater slate is stacked around Columbia. Here are just 10 of the performances you can catch in the coming months. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll give standing ovations!
The theater opened on October 5, 1928. [3] It was built at a cost of over 400,000 dollars which is equivalent to over 4.5 million dollars today. Advertisements in the Columbia Daily Tribune proclaimed the "Formal Opening of your new Missouri Theatre—Friday Evening… A $400,000 Showhouse of Unrivaled Beauty and Extravagant Setting in Central ...
As noted by a historical marker at the site, the Carver Theatre opened in the early 1940s and was one of two theaters for African-Americans in Columbia during the segregation era.