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Former cinemas and movie theaters in Boston (18 P) Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Massachusetts" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.
For more than ninety years the Cabot Street Cinema Theatre has been an important part of the Boston's North Shore community. Harris and Glover Ware, two brothers and former vaudeville musicians from Marblehead, Massachusetts, built the Cabot eight years after the construction of their first Beverly theater, the Larcom Theatre.
Coolidge Corner Theatre was built as a Universalist church in 1906 and was redesigned as an Art Deco movie palace in 1933 as the community's first movie theater. [1] [3] [4] The theater opened on December 30, 1933 with its first film being a Disney short film. [4] Originally the theater only had one screen but was later divided into two and ...
The Somerville Theater is part of the Hobbs Building which was built in 1914 by Joseph Hobbs and designed by the firm of Funk & Wilcox of Boston.Designed for stage shows, vaudeville, opera, and motion pictures, the theater was only one of the highlights of the Hobbs Building, which also contained a basement café, basement bowling alley and billiards hall, the theater lobbies and ten ...
It is one of the few remaining movie theaters, if not the only one, to use a rear-projection system; the projector is located behind the screen rather than behind the audience. The Brattle Theatre mainly screens a mixture of foreign, independent, and classic films, and began showing repertory and foreign films in February 1953.
Get the Plymouth, MA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
Plymouth Rock Studios was a proposed film and television production studio in Massachusetts. [1] The studio had held a now-expired option to buy Waverly Oaks Golf Club in Plymouth as the site [ 2 ] for the $650 million, 1,260,000-square-foot (117,000 m 2 ) development originally slated to be complete in 2010.
The Cutler Majestic Theatre at Emerson College, in Boston, Massachusetts, is a 1903 Beaux Arts style theater, designed by the architect John Galen Howard. [2] Originally built for theatre , it was one of three theaters commissioned in Boston by Eben Dyer Jordan, son of the founder of Jordan Marsh , a Boston-based chain of department stores .