Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The impetus for building the cinema came from Max Nepolski of Majestic Cinemas Limited, who proposed a new cinema in Beeston to be built at the junction of Queen’s Road and Station Road, Beeston. It was designed on similar lines to that recently opened in Chaddesden, [3] also known as the Majestic. The main front towered 73 feet (22 m) high.
GQT theaters are primarily located in small towns and mid-sized cities. All locations are multiplex theaters, ranging from 4-to-16 screens and offer multiple formats and experiences across the board. The standard GQT location featured classic designs of the late 1990s, largely due to acquiring locally owned theaters from private exhibitors.
The Aztec Theatre was part of the Theater district that included the Empire (1914), the Texas (1926), the Majestic (1929), and the Alameda (1949). Though the theater remained highly popular for many decades, by the 1970s, it was in decline. It was cut into three auditoriums as the Aztec Triplex, but this only slowed the eventual.
Alliance Cinemas – after selling its BC locations, it now operates only one theater in Toronto; Cinémas Guzzo – 10 locations and 142 screens in the Montreal area; Cineplex Cinemas – Canada's largest and North America's fifth-largest movie theater company, with 162 locations and 1,635 screens
Majestic Cinema, Leeds, Yorkshire, England This page was last edited on 19 January 2020, at 22:56 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Malco Theatres features three signature IMAX screens. Malco Paradiso Cinema Grill, Malco Razorback Cinema Grill and Malco Grandview Cinema. Paradiso and Razorback were the first two IMAX sites for Malco, opening in December 2017; each location boosts a screen size of 65'-9" wide X 36'-2 high.
The Palace Theater and the Majestic Theater are a pair of historic performance and film venues at 1315-1357 Main Street in downtown Bridgeport, Connecticut. Built in 1921-22 by Sylvester Z. Poli in a single building that also housed a hotel, they were in their heyday a posh and opulent sight, designed by noted theater architect Thomas W. Lamb .
The Majestic was a popular vaudeville theater offering approximately 12 to 15 vaudeville acts running from 1:30 pm to 10:30 pm, six days-per-week. By the 1920s the theater had become part of the Orpheum Circuit and presented many famous vaudeville headliners including Al Jolson , Eddie Foy , Jack Benny , W.C. Fields , Harry Houdini , The Marx ...