dt_toronto_geek
Superstar
Great news! Now if the Paradise and Roxy can be saved we'll have a spattering of great neighbourhood cinemas in the east and west ends of the city.
|
|
|
The unfortunate news is that there seems to be declining interest in the "repertory" cinemas.
I've been trying to wrap my head around a store on a slope....(don't spill anything!) LOL
I heard that the Music Hall is undergoing some renovations, including installing air conditioning (!) with plans to be used more as a live venue in the future.
It was restored some time ago, and has been a live venue for awhile. I saw Crowded House there a couple of months ago. More recently, they turfed out the ground-floor retail tenants (the chocolate and niknak stores) and constructed a new box office and cafe.
FYI: There is a very large cinema on the northeast corner of Spadina and Dundas that is buried by streetlevel retail. Though not part of the cinema circuit, the fact that it has survived for so long with so little public recognition is intriguing; a bit like the Eaton Auditorium before it was saved.
Victory/Standard theatre as it was called. I think there were so many nabes back then, people don't think the structures have any historical significance in them. The Standard is different and it was a stage theatre for the Jewish community. The Standard begin to play films and it was ran by Nat Taylor the co-founder of Cineplex Odeon. Taylor was also an inventor of multiplex theatres. The Standard became a strip club and than ran by Golden Harvest as a Chinese theatre later on. A bank was added to theatre during the 80's.