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Feb. 22—Cinemagic movie theater locations in New Hampshire, Maine and Massachusetts are closing permanently after more than 20 years in business, company officials announced Monday. "To the ...
Onyx announced plans to demolish most of the mall to build of a mixed-use retail and residential development with 625 apartments in place of both the mall and the adjacent Regal Cinemas movie theater, the latter of which closed on April 18, 2024. [34] The proposal began city review in September 2023; construction could start as early as 2024. [11]
The site was previously a drive-in movie theatre, and for several years following its opening, the former movie screen was used to display the double pheasant logo of the mall. The resulting mall development transformed South Nashua.
The Colonial Theatre is located at 2050 Main Street and was built by Karl Abbott, scion of Bethlehem hotelier Frank Abbott. In the summer of 1914, as documented in K. Abbott's 1950 memoir Open for the Season, Abbott, with his then-partner "Doc" Clark, converted the family stables to a garage for automobiles, then looked further: "The vacant lot across the street at which I happened to be ...
It Follows earned $163,453 in its opening weekend from four theaters at an average of $40,863 per theater, making it the best limited opening for a film released in the United States and Canada in 2015. [24]
Still We Believe: The Boston Red Sox Movie (2004) Welcome to Mooseport (2004) The Family Stone (2005) Fever Pitch (2005) Ice Princess (2005) – Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts; War of the Worlds (2005) – Ray tries to flee to Boston to meet his ex-wife; Live Free or Die (2006) The Departed (2006) – set in Boston; Islander (2006) – set ...
The Music Hall in 2016. The Music Hall is an 895-seat theater located at 28 Chestnut Street in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in the United States.Built in 1878, The Music Hall claims to be the oldest operating theater in New Hampshire and the 14th oldest in the United States.
Vaudeville began to lose public favor toward the end of the 1920s, as silent pictures and talkies drew crowds to the silver screen. The Palace struggled to stay in business, so it adapted and became primarily a movie house from 1930 until the early-1960s. By the late 1960s, the Palace Theatre was no longer in use for staging productions.