Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Malco Theatres, Inc. is a family owned and operated movie theater chain that has been in business for over one hundred years. [ 1 ] It has been led by four generations of the Lightman family. Malco Theatres features 34 theatre locations with over 345 screens in six states ( Arkansas , Kentucky , Louisiana , Mississippi , Missouri and Tennessee ).
A screening of Shrek the Third at the Vispathè cinema, in Campi Bisenzio, Italy IMAX at Gading XXI, North Jakarta (second largest IMAX in Indonesia) This is a list of movie theater chains across the world. [1] [2] The chains of movie theaters are listed alphabetically by continent and then by country.
Malco Theatres, a fourth generation movie theatre chain; See also. Malko (flourished 1740-1760), earliest king of Garo Kingdom in India; Nicolai Malko (1883–1961), ...
Bluff City Pickleball is housed at the former Malco theater at 2809 Bartlett Blvd. at the Malco Plaza Shopping Center. The 27,000-square-foot theater opened in 1989 and closed in late 2022.
Sep. 1—Malco Owensboro Cinema Grill & MXT will be participating in the inaugural National Cinema Day on Saturday, Sept. 3. The one-day event, presented by The Cinema Foundation, will have over ...
The Malco Theatre, located at 817 Central Avenue in Hot Springs, Arkansas, was built on a site that has housed vaudeville shows, silent movies, modern films, and specialty productions. The Malco, which was frequented by Bill Clinton as a boy, has played host to the prestigious Hot Springs Documentary Film Institute (HSDFI). The Art Deco ...
As vaudeville's popularity waned, Michael A. Lightman's movie theater chain purchased the Orpheum in 1940 and changed its name to the Malco, presenting first-run movies. [6] In 1976, Lightman decided to sell the building, as intimate multiplex theaters were proving more lucrative than large single-screen venues. [2]
The Coliseum Theatre is a historic theater building in Corinth, Mississippi. It is a Mississippi Landmark. The theater was designed by Benjamin F. Liddon and built in 1923 and 1924. It is being restored by the Corinth Area Arts Council with federal funding. [2] It has been used as the Corinth Coliseum Civic Center.