My longtime friend Jon, who managed the Roxy cinema on the Danforth in the 70's & 80's, forwarded the link below to me.
I was a 'Roxy regular' from around '77 until the mid 80's. Rocky Horror was on both mine and my friends agenda most weekends but it was also Sunday night double bills & scattered programming throughout the week where I discovered the bizarre and the macabre inside these magical walls. From Pink Flamingos, Mad Max, Harold & Maude to Susperia, I first saw them all on the Roxy's giant screen.
In the early 80's Jon discovered that there was an inventory of
Sensurround speaker cabinets piled in a theatre supply warehouse in Don Mills, he purchased two of these monsters for next to nothing, added more power amps. and began to regularly run classic run rock and roll films (Pink Floyd The Wall, The Song Remains the Same, Let There Be Rock etc.) as the Rocky Horror phenomena was beginning to fade. The volume for these films was played at concert level and when combined with the additional Sensurround speaker cabinets the sound pressure levels in the cinema was truly astounding (though nowhere near the true Sensurround effect for films that were released in that format in the during the 1970's). The group who operated the Bloor, Fox & Kingsway cinemas picked up the Roxy in the late 80's, spruced it up a bit, tried to run it as a "respectable" rep. house but pulled out within a year as there was no audience for those types of bookings anymore. VHS had now securely killed off most of the repertory cinemas plus the neighbourhood was in transition.
Some of my greatest movie memories were in the Roxy, I was heartbroken to hear it was coming down as I always hoped that as the neighbourhood eventually gentrifies the cinema could also get a second lease on life, but it wasn't meant to be. It was converted into a nightclub which ended shortly after someone was shot and killed in there, chopped up into 3 mini cinemas but nothing worked, it eventually sat empty for most of the new millennia rotting away. The auditorium was demolished this summer but the front 1/4 of the building remains and the restoration looks really good. At least there's a respectful marker now for what was once a great cinema for many decades and where so many people did the time warp, hundreds of times over.
http://torontoist.com/2010/10/from_double_bill_to_double-double.php#more
A few Roxy memories of a program around 1983/84 + lineups, the lobby and the auditorium in the late 70's
After an evening of Rocky Horror screenings...