Usherettes at the Columbia Theater in Portland, 1916

At the advent of the 20th century, the city of Portland, Oregon, was among the first on the United States West Coast to embrace the advent of the silent and feature film. The city's first movie palace, the Majestic Theatre (later known as the United Artists Theatre), opened in 1911. By 1916, Portland had "the finest array" of movie houses on the West Coast relative to its population, pioneering venues dedicated exclusively to screening films.[1] The popularization of the sound film in the early 1920s resulted in another boom of new cinemas being constructed, including the Laurelhurst, the Hollywood Theatre, and the Bagdad Theatre, the latter of which was financed by Universal Pictures in 1926.

By the mid-20th century, several of the cinemas and movie palaces in Portland were demolished, including the Majestic, the Playhouse Theatre, and the Oriental Theatre. The Portland Publix Theater (later known as the Paramount), is the only cinema in downtown Portland that has survived into the 21st century, having served as the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall since 1984.

Since the 1990s, construction of several multiplexes has taken place in the city, mainly by Regal Entertainment Group, who opened multiplex cinemas in the Fox Tower and Pioneer Place in 2000 and 2006, respectively. Several cinemas have also seen extensive renovation since the 1990s, including the Bagdad Theatre by the Portland-based restaurant and hotel company McMenamins, who have opened additional cinemas at their Kennedy School and National Cash Register Building properties. Many of Portland's historic cinemas have continued operations into the 21st century screening both revival and art house films, including the nonprofit Hollywood Theatre, Cinema 21, and the Fifth Avenue Cinema, the latter of which is owned by Portland State University and operated by the university film department. In 2013, the real estate company Movoto ranked Portland the no. 1 city in the United States for movie lovers.[2]

History

1910–1919: Beginnings and silent era

The Majestic Theatre, the first movie palace built in Portland, in 1921, showing Dream Street

In the early 20th century following the advent of film, Portland, Oregon was one of few western U.S. cities to embrace the exhibition of films.[1] Historians Gary Lacher and Steve Stone partially attribute this to the region's predominant rainy weather, which resulted in residents seeking indoor forms of entertainment.[3]

Though the Star Theater was showing Synchroscope films as early as 1908,[4] the first exclusive movie palace in Portland was the Majestic Theatre located at the northeast corner of Southwest Park Avenue and Washington Street, which opened on June 10, 1911.[5] The venue contained 1,100 seats, and was constructed for $62,500 by Edwin F. James, a businessman from Seattle.[1] It was the first movie palace in Portland to show a silent feature film the two-reel Italian feature The Fall of Troy in 1911.[1] The same year, the Majestic introduced a pipe organ to accompany film screenings; the Star Theater also introduced an organ.[1] The Baker Theatre, which had hosted live theater by the Baker Players, began showing films shortly after (the cinema would become known as the Playhouse Theatre in later decades).[5]

The following year, in 1912, the Sunnyside Theatre (contemporarily known as the Avalon Theatre) was opened, followed by the Alhambra and Columbia Theater in 1913.[6] At the time of its opening, the Columbia, built for $125,000, was marketed as being "without peer" as the city's "strictly photo playhouse."[7] Around 1914, construction on the Clinton Street Theater began, and the cinema began showing features in 1915.[8] By 1916, it was reported in The Moving Picture World that Portland had "the finest array of photoplay theaters of any of the cities on the Pacific Coast given its population. This statement is based on the fact that the homes of photodrama in Portland were built for that purpose within recent years and are not rehabilitated broken down theaters that once housed "legit" and burlesque shows."[1]

1920–1949: Sound films

Opening of the Oriental Theatre, December 31, 1927

After commercial production of the sound film began in 1923, numerous cinemas were constructed in Portland throughout the remainder of the decade. The Art Deco-inspired Laurelhurst Theater was constructed that year in east Portland,[9] followed by the Roseway Theater in 1924, and the Moreland and Oregon Theatres in 1925 (all in east Portland).[10] In 1926, the Hollywood Theatre was built in the city's the Hollywood District, designed by John V. Bennes, with an exterior resembling Spanish Colonial architecture, and the interior being based on the Baths of Caracalla and Bernini.[11] The Broadway Theatre was also constructed in 1926 in downtown Portland, at 1008 SW Broadway.[12] The exotic Mission Revival-inspired Bagdad Theatre was constructed in 1927 in the city's Hawthorne District,[13] a project funded by Universal Pictures.[14] Other cinemas built in the city in 1927 include the Oriental Theatre and the Aladdin Theater, the latter of which opened on Christmas Day that year.[15]

The lavish Portland Publix Theatre (contemporarily the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall) was constructed in downtown in 1928, and featured an unprecedented seat count of over 3,000.[16] Construction of the theater used over 700,000 common bricks and over 350,000 exterior bricks.[17] The construction of the venue cost around $1.4 million,[16] and it opened on March 28, 1928.[18] In 1930, it was recommissioned as the Paramount Theatre, and eventually ceased functions as a cinema, becoming the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in 1984.[19] Contemporarily, it is the last movie palace in downtown Portland to survive into the 21st century.[20]

With the growing popularity of the sound film, some establishments that had earlier functioned as burlesque or vaudeville houses were retrofitted to screen films, including the Fox Theatre (originally an opera and vaudeville venue), which began showing feature films in 1929.[21] The Union Theatre (later known as the Paris Theatre), a burlesque house built in 1922, also began showing films, and became known as the Third Avenue Theatre in 1930.[22] 1948 saw the opening of the 673-seat Academy Theater in Portland's Montavilla neighborhood, one of the few neighborhood cinemas to be built in the city after the 1920s.[23]

1950–1980: Drive-ins and demolitions

Cinemas such as the Oregon Theatre began showing pornographic films in the 1970s

Beginning around the 1950s, many cinemas in the city underwent renovations, while others were outright destroyed. The Playhouse Theatre (originally the Baker, and formerly known as the Dufwin, Alcazar, Music Box, and El Capitan in the interim[5]) was closed in June 1950.[5] The building was used for church services before being demolished in 1954.[5] The following year, the Majestic Theatre closed, and was eventually demolished in 1957 to make way for the Union Bank Tower.[24] Three months after the demolition of the Majestic, the People's Theater, a movie house built in 1911[25] (subsequently named the Alder Theatre and the Music Box in the 1930s), was razed as well.[26] The Oriental Theatre was also demolished several years later in April 1970.[27] In the weeks prior to its demolition, various pieces of furniture and other fixtures from the cinema's interiors were auctioned to locals.[27] The Academy Theater closed in 1977, and was used as a printing facility for the ensuing two decades.[23]

In the 1960s, some of the city's older venues turned toward screening pornographic films, and became adult movie theaters; among these were the Paris Theatre, which screened adult films from 1963 into the 1980s,[22] and the Star Theatre, which operated primarily as an adult theater from the 1960s until 1983.[28] The Oregon Theatre began showing adult films around the 1970s, following the success of Deep Throat (1972).[9]

Drive-in cinemas began to grow in popularity in the late 1940s and throughout the 1960s, and the first in Portlandthe 82nd Street Drive-inwas constructed in 1948.[29] Construction on the Powell Boulevard Drive-in began in southeast Portland in 1954, despite legal protests from neighborhood residents.[30] A third drive-in on the city's east side, the 104th Street Drive-in, was built in 1959.[31] The Foster Drive-in, located on SE Foster Road, was established in 1969.[32] The first multiplex in Portland, the Eastgate Theater, opened in 1966 on SE 82nd Avenue, and featured two screens and state-of-the-art sound.[33] The Fifth Avenue Cinema, located in southwest Portland along the edge of the Portland State University campus, was opened as a Moyer Theater in 1970.[34] After ten years of operation, the cinema was acquired by Portland State, and has been operated by the university film department since.[34] In 1974, the Bagdad underwent renovation, and was divided to contain two separate screens.[23]

1981–2018: Revitalization and multiplexes

Century Eastport Plaza in 2007

In the late 1980s, a multiplex was opened in northeast Portland across the street from the Lloyd Center mall, known as the Lloyd Center 10 and owned by Regal Entertainment Group.[35] Four years later, a second Regal multiplex opened inside the Lloyd Center mall, named the Lloyd Mall 8.[36] Regal also opened the Broadway Metroplex 4 around this time, which occupied the space where the original Broadway Theatre had been prior to its demolition in 1988.[37] Regal subsequently acquired the Division Street Stadium 13, in east Portland (near Gresham), which had opened as an ACT III cinema in 1997.[38] Also starting in the late 1980s, several local cinemas were established and/or renovated by McMenamins, a restaurant, brewery, and hotel company based in Portland.[39] Among these were the Mission Theater and Pub, established in a former church in 1987,[40] and the Bagdad Theatre, which they acquired in 1991.[23] The company also opened small cinemas in the Kennedy School in 1997, and the National Cash Register Building in 1998.[41]

Century Theatres opened the Eastport Plaza 16 in 1998, a multiplex on SE 82nd Avenue near the Eastgate Theater,[42] the latter of which subsequently closed in 2001.[33] The 2000s saw Regal opening an additional two multiplexes in Portland: the Fox Tower Stadium 10 in 2000, which specializes in art house films, and the Pioneer Place Stadium 6.[43][44] The Academy Theater, which had been closed since 1977, was renovated and reopened as a three-screen cinema in 2006.[23] The Regal Broadway Metroplex was closed in 2011.[37] The sound system for the Broadway Metroplex was salvaged by the Hollywood Theatre, which underwent renovations in 2013.[45]

Since the 2010s, several cinemas in the city also serve craft beers to patrons, including the Hollywood, Laurelhurst, Cinema 21, the Academy, and the Moreland.[46] The Living Room Theaters, a small independent multiplex that opened in 2006, has a full restaurant and bar that serves prepared food to patrons' seats during screenings.[47]

Cinemas

Note: Status refers only to whether or not the venue still screens films; some noted as inactive still function as other types of arts venues.

indicates building has been demolished or destroyed

Movie houses

Opened Name Location Status Notes NRHP # Ref.
26th Avenue Theatre
    See: Clinton Street Theater
1948Academy Theater7818 SE Stark StreetActiveRenovated in 2006; temporarily closed due to fire in 2017.[48]
Alcazar Theatre
    See: Playhouse Theatre
Alder Theatre
    See: People's Theater
1912Avalon Theatre 3451 Belmont StreetActiveOriginally the Sunnyside Theatre.[49]
1927Aladdin Theater 3107 SE Milwaukee AvenueActiveOriginally the Geller's Theatre, a vaudeville venue; opened Christmas Day 1927.[15]
Alameda Theatre
    See: Alberta Rose Theatre
1927Alberta Rose Theatre 3000 NE Alberta StreetInactiveOriginally the Alameda Theatre. Stopped showing films in 1978, and contemporarily functions as a performing arts venue.[50]
1913Alhambra Theatre 4811 SE Hawthorne BoulevardInactiveLater known as Sabala's, the Mt. Tabor Legacy, and Mt. Tabor Theater. Subsequently, served as a live music venue, and houses an arcade as of 2016.[51]
1926Bagdad Theatre3708–26 SE Hawthorne BoulevardActiveAcquired by McMenamins in 1991.89000099[39]
Baker Theatre
    See: Playhouse Theatre
1991Broadway Metroplex 41000 SW BroadwayInactiveLocated in the block once occupied by the original Broadway Theatre built in 1926; owned by Regal. Closed in September 2011.[37] Sound system was salvaged by the Hollywood Theatre.[45][52]
Broadway Theatre (1916)
    See: Liberty Theatre
1926Broadway Theatre1008 SW BroadwayInactive Located across from the Portland Publix Theater. Demolished in 1988.[12]
1926Cinema 21616 NW 21st AvenueActiveIndependent cinema primarily showing art house films.[53]
1914Clinton Street Theater 2522 SE Clinton StreetActiveKnown as the 26th Avenue Theatre in 1945 and the Encore in 1969 before returning to its original name.[8]
1913Columbia Theater106 SW 6th AvenueInactive [54]
1911Dekum Street Theater814 NE Dekum StInactiveSilent movie house now used as a bar and performance space.
1997Division Street Stadium 1316603 SE Division StreetActivePreviously owned by ACT III; acquired by Regal.[38]
Dufwin Theatre
    See: Playhouse Theatre
1966Eastgate Theater2025 SE 82nd AvenueInactiveFirst multiplex in Portland; originally a two-screen cinema, though a third was subsequently added. Closed in 2001; building is contemporarily used as a Slavic church.[55][33]
1998Eastport Plaza 164040 SE 82nd AvenueActiveOriginally owned by Century Theatres; subsequently acquired by Cinemark, but retains Century brand.[42]
1924Egyptian Theatre2511 NE Martin Luther King Jr. BoulevardInactiveClosed in 1962, used as a warehouse, now used as a church.[56]
El Capitan Theatre
    See: Playhouse Theatre
Empress Theatre (759 SW Broadway)
    See: Orpheum Theatre
Empress Theatre (411 SW Broadway)
    See: Liberty Theatre
Encore Theatre
    See: Clinton Street Theater
1970Fifth Avenue Cinema510 SW Hall StreetActiveOriginally owned by Moyer Theaters. Acquired by Portland State University in 1980 and has since been operated by the university film department.[34]
1910Fox Theatre SW Broadway and Taylor StreetInactive Originally an opera house, leased for films and vaudeville beginning in 1929. Also known as the Heilig, Rialto, and Mayfair Theater. Demolished in 1997.[57]
2000Fox Tower Stadium 10846 SW Park AvenueActiveLocated within the Fox Tower building; owned by Regal.[43]
Geller's Theatre
    See: Aladdin Theater
1912Globe Theatre1032 SW Washington StreetInactive Renovated and renamed the Blue Mouse Theatre in 1921. Showed the first sound picture in Portland in 1926: John Barrymore in Don Juan.[58]
1927Guild Theatre 829 SW 9th AvenueInactiveOriginally known as the Taylor Street Theatre. Closed in 2006.[59]
Heilig Theatre
    See: Fox Theatre
Hippodrome Theatre
    See: Orpheum Theatre
1926Hollywood Theatre4122 NE Sandy BoulevardActive83002172[60]
1997Kennedy School5736 NE 33rd AvenueActiveKennedy School was acquired by McMenamins, who converted the property into a hotel and restaurant c. 1997; gymnasium was converted into a cinema.88003472[41]
1923Laurelhurst Theater2735 E Burnside StreetActive[61]
1914Liberty Theatre 411 SW BroadwayInactive 2,200-seat cinema, commissioned as the Broadway Theatre, but opened as the Orpheum. Renamed the Empress in 1915; reprised Broadway name in 1916; then reprised original Liberty name in 1916. Closed in 1959.[62]
2006Living Room Theaters341 SW Tenth AvenueActiveShowcases independent films, and offers a full food menu and bar serving concessions to patrons' seats.[63]
1987Lloyd Center 101510 NE Multnomah StreetActiveOwned by Regal. Due for redevelopment as of 2018.[35]
1991Lloyd Mall 82320 Lloyd Center MallInactiveLocated within Lloyd Center mall; originally owned by Act III before being acquired by Regal in 1998. Converted into office space in 2015.[36]
1911Majestic Theatre 739 SW Washington StreetInactive First movie palace in the city of Portland; renamed the United Artists Theatre in 1929. Demolished in 1957.[64]
Mayfair Theater
    See: Fox Theatre
1987Mission Theater and Pub1624 NW Glisan StreetActiveFormer Swedish church acquired by McMenamins in 1987, partially converted into a cinema.[40]
1925Moreland Theater6712 SE Milwaukie AvenueActive[65]
Mt. Tabor Legacy or Mt. Tabor Theater
    See: Alhambra Theatre
Music Box Theatre (SW Morrison Street and 11th Avenue)
    See: Playhouse Theatre
Music Box Theatre (901 SW Alder Street)
    See: People's Theater
Newsreel Theatre
    See: Rivoli Theatre
Northgate Theater
    See: St. Johns Twin Cinema
1971Northwest Film Center934 SW Salmon StreetActiveFormerly located in the Guild Theatre building from 1998 to 2006.[66]
1925Oregon Theatre3530 SE Division StreetInactiveOriginally used for vaudeville and films; served as an adult movie theater beginning in the 1970s. Closed in March 2020.[67][68]
1927Oriental Theatre828 SE GrandInactive Demolished in 1970.[69]
1913Orpheum Theatre 759 SW BroadwayInactive Renamed the Empress Theatre shortly after opening; the T & D Theatre after 1916; the Hippodrome Theatre after 1917; and the Pantages Theatre from 1927 to 1929. Reprised Orpheum name after 1929. Demolished in 1976.[70]
Orpheum Theatre (411 SW Broadway)
    See: Liberty Theatre
Pantages Theatre
    See: Orpheum Theatre
Paramount Theater
    See: Portland Publix Theatre
1922Paris Theatre 6 SW Third AvenueInactiveOriginally a burlesque house; later known as Third Avenue Theatre. Served as an adult movie theater from 2006 to 2016, after which it was converted to a live music venue.[71][65]
1911People's Theater 901 SW Alder StreetInactive Was extensively renovated in 1929 by John V. Bennes and Herman Herzog and reopened as the Alder Theatre; in 1935 it was renamed the Music Box Theatre.[72]
2003Pioneer Place Stadium 6340 SW Morrison StreetActiveLocated within Pioneer Place mall; owned by Regal.[44]
1910Playhouse Theatre SW Morrison Street and 11th AvenueInactive Opened as the Baker Theatre; subsequently known as the Dufwin, Alcazar, Music Box, and El Capitan.[5] Demolished in 1954.[5]
1928Portland Publix Theater 1037 SW BroadwayInactiveKnown as the Paramount Theater after 1930. Has served as the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall since 1984.76001585[73]
Rialto Theatre
    See: Fox Theatre
1920Rivoli Theatre 809 SW Washington StreetInactive Opened in January 1920, and featured 1,200 seats. Renamed the Newsreel Theatre in 1941, and later the Roxy.[74]
1976Rose Moyer Theater16501 SE Division StreetInactive [75]
1924Roseway Theater7229 NE Sandy BoulevardInactive Destroyed by fire in 2022.[76]
Roxy Theatre
    See: Rivoli Theatre
1998St. Johns Theatre & Pub8203 N Ivanhoe StreetActiveFormerly the National Cash Register Building; acquired by McMenamins and converted into a pub and cinema in 1998.[77]
Sabala's Theatre
    See: Alhambra Theatre
1913St. Johns Twin Cinema 8704 N Lombard StreetActiveFormerly known as the Northgate Theater and St. Johns Theater.[78]
St. Johns Theater
    See: St. Johns Twin Cinema
1908Star Theater13 NW 6th AvenueInactiveOriginally a silent film house; subsequently operated as an adult movie theater. Serves as a performing arts venue as of 2018.[79]
Sunnyside Theatre
    See: Avalon Theatre
T & D Theatre
    See: Orpheum Theatre
Taylor Street Theatre
    See: Guild Theatre
Third Avenue Theatre
    See: Paris Theatre
United Artists Theatre
    See: Majestic Theatre

Drive-ins

Opened Name Location Status Notes NRHP # Ref.
194882nd Street Drive-in9600 SE 82nd AvenueInactive City's first drive-in cinema; second screen installed in 1976 before the venue was closed in 1985.[29]
1959104th Street Drive-inSE Powell Boulevard & SE 108th AvenueInactive Original drive-in sign remains as of 2017.[80][31]
Un­knownDivision Street Drive-In16501 SE Division StreetInactive Demolished for construction of Rose Moyer Theater in 1976[75]
1969Foster Drive-in11501 SE Foster RoadInactive 1,800-car capacity drive-in, originally owned by Tom Moyer Group; expanded to three screens[81] in 1974. Subsequently, owned by Regal. Closed in 1998 and demolished in 1999.[32]
1954Powell Boulevard Drive-in11040 SE Bush StreetInactive [30]

See also

References

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  2. Grigson, Natalie (2013). "The 10 Best Cities for Movie Lovers". Motovo. Motovo Real Estate. Archived from the original on December 6, 2018. Retrieved December 6, 2018.
  3. Lacher & Stone 2009, n.p.; back cover.
  4. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 27.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 26.
  6. Lacher & Stone 2009, pp. 41–42, 84, 99.
  7. "Columbia Theatre, Portland, Ore". The Moving Picture World. New York City. 18: 1402. 1913. OCLC 1717051 via Google Books. Free access icon
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  20. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 65.
  21. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 19–20.
  22. 1 2 Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 86.
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  24. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 28.
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  28. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 80.
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  73. Lacher & Stone 2009, pp. 43–44.
  74. 1 2 Cowan, Ron (December 4, 1976). "State's movie theaters expand". Statesman Journal. Salem, Oregon. p. 4A via Newspapers.com.
  75. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 105.
  76. "St. Johns Pub History" (PDF). McMenamins. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 14, 2016.
  77. Lacher & Stone 2009, p. 106.
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Sources

  • Lacher, Gary; Stone, Steve (2009). Theatres of Portland. Mount Pleasant, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-439-63831-6.
  • Palahniuk, Chuck (2007). Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon. New York: Crown Publishing. ISBN 978-0-307-42075-6.
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