Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Current theaters in Omaha; Name Built Seating Location Notes Aksarben Cinema [5] December 10, 2010 [5] 2110 South 67th Street [5] Alamo Drafthouse Midtown [6] November 5, 2009 [6] 3201 Farnam Street [6] Opened as Marcus Midtown Cinema in 2009. Turned into Alamo Drafthouse Midtown in 2018. [7] AMC Oakview Plaza 24 [8] 1997 [8]
A new neighborhood development in the area is called "Midtown Crossing at Turner Park." Being developed by Mutual of Omaha, [1] this new community will include condominiums, apartments, hotel, movie theater, grocery store, restaurants and a health club. It will also renovate and expand Turner Park, one of Midtown's public parks. [2]
Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Omaha, Nebraska" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Midtown Crossing at Turner Park is a vibrant mixed-use development in midtown Omaha, featuring retail, office, residential spaces, and green areas. Renowned for its bustling local business scene and year-round community events, this 16-acre seven-building development hosts more than 30 retail and office tenants, 297 condominiums, 196 apartment units, and picturesque Turner Park.
It reopened as a movie theater in 1962 with a new name, the Astro Theatre, run by Dubinsky Brothers and with a reduced capacity of 1,465. [5] It continued operations until June 1980. [ 7 ] In 1974 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places and in October 1980 it was listed as an Omaha landmark .
On March 26, 2008, it was announced that Marcus Theatres of Milwaukee, Wisconsin would buy seven Douglas Theatres, along with the name for $40.5 million. Cinema Center and Q-Cinema 9 in Omaha would continue to be owned by Douglas Theatres, and set close before summer, and Cinema Center would be set to close between October 2008 and February 2009.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Described by the Omaha World-Herald as "Omaha's newest photoplay house," the Dundee opened with the silent comedy The Trouble with Wives and the short film The Fighting Dude, written and directed by Fatty Arbuckle. [2] Four years later, in 1929, management at the Dundee installed sound equipment and the cinema entered a new era of film ...