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The Olympia Theatre closed on March 4, 1981, after a short-lived attempt to survive as an adult movie theater. [108] Efforts to redevelop the building began in 1983, [109] but it was not until 1987 that the new owners received property tax credits which enabled the renovation to move forward. [110]
St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Cleveland, Ohio) St. Joseph's Church and Friary; St. Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) St. Michael the Archangel Church (Cleveland, Ohio) St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Cleveland, Ohio) St. Stephen's Catholic Church (Cleveland, Ohio) St. Theodosius Russian Orthodox Cathedral; Severance Hall; Shiloh ...
Interior of the Cleveland Arcade. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cleveland, Ohio. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register ...
Transfiguration Church (Cleveland, Ohio) W. Wesley Chapel (Cincinnati) West Side Spiritualist Church
Transfiguration Church (Polish: Parafia Przemienienia PaĆskiego w Cleveland), was a Catholic parish church in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States.Part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, it was located at the southwest corner of the intersection of Broadway Avenue and Fullerton Avenue in a part of the South Broadway neighborhood previously known in Polish as Warszawa, also referred ...
Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Cuyahoga County, Ohio" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Mimi Ohio Theatre is a theater on Euclid Avenue in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, part of Playhouse Square. The theater was built by Marcus Loew's Loew's Ohio Theatres company. It was designed by Thomas W. Lamb in the Italian Renaissance style, and was intended to present legitimate plays. The theater opened on February 14, 1921, with 1,338 seats.
During the early 70s, after extensive remodeling and refurbishing, the Performing Arts Theater became the Scrumpy-Dump Cinema, Cleveland's first and only black-owned movie theater, hosting popular exhibitions of Blaxploitation features such as Shaft, Foxy Brown, Across 110th Street, Blacula, Cleopatra Jones, Cotton Comes to Harlem, and The Mack.