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Premiere Cinemas is a privately held motion picture exhibitor headquartered in Big Spring, Texas.It is among the largest independently owned motion picture exhibitors in the U.S. and is ranked by Box Office magazine and the National Association of Theatre Owners Encyclopedia of Exhibition among the top 12 circuits in the U.S.
The Odeon at Kingstanding, Birmingham, was a 1930s cinema in the Odeon chain. ... The cinema was constructed between 1935 and 1936 to a symmetrical, ...
Lakeshore Village Entertainment is an American independent film production, finance, and former international sales and distribution company [1] founded in 1994 by Tom Rosenberg and Ted Tannebaum. [2] Lakeshore Entertainment is headquartered in Beverly Hills, California. [3]
The theater, previously owned by Premiere Cinemas, originally opened as a first-run United Artists movie theater in 1988. At the time of its closing at the mall, the Premiere theater was a second ...
Omniplex – cinema chain in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland; Pathé - cinema chain in Belgium, France, Netherlands, Switzerland, Tunisia and Senegal; UCI Cinemas - cinema chain owned by Odeon Cinemas Group (AMC Theatres) in Germany, Italy and Portugal; UGC - cinema chain in France and Belgium; Village - cinema chain in Greece
According to the master and lease plans of Eastern Shore Centre, [13] plans also call for the eventual development of a big-box retailer of no more than 140,000 square feet (13,000 m 2) to the east of the Publix-anchored strip mall, while an additional 45,000 square feet (4,200 m 2) of commercial space will be developed south of the Premiere ...
CinéBistro logo. Cobb Theatres was an American cinema chain based in Birmingham, Alabama.The company was established in 1924, in Fayette, Alabama, [1] expanding through the South starting in the late 1940s, and buying out General Cinema's West Central Florida theatres and Wometco Theatres in the 1990s before being bought by Regal Cinemas in 1997 and revived in 2001.
The enlarged cinema was provided with a staff of 18, It re-opened on 16 December 1935. In July 1951, the Oak Cinema was voted the second cleanest cinema in the country and the manager, Roy Fielder was presented with a Silver Medal by A.H. Sayer, chairman of the Birmingham Public Entertainments Committee.