Paramount Theatre (Middletown, New York)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paramount Theatre
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Theater marquee in 2007
Theater marquee in 2007
Location: Middletown, NY
Coordinates: 41°26′44″N 74°25′16″W / 41.44556, -74.42111Coordinates: 41°26′44″N 74°25′16″W / 41.44556, -74.42111
Built/Founded: 1930[1]
Architect: Rapp and Rapp
Architectural style(s): Art Deco
Added to NRHP: March 6, 2002
NRHP Reference#: 02000136
Governing body: Arts Council of Orange County

The Paramount Theatre is a Registered Historic Place on South Street in Middletown, New York, USA. It was built in 1930 in an Art Deco style, a twin to the Paramount Theater in Peekskill, across the Hudson River.[1]

Paramount-Publix Corporation, the builder and original owner, opened the building on June 12 of that year with a celebration that included a parade at noon, a musical performance by the Paramount Symphony Orchestra, and the first movie, The Big Pond, starring Maurice Chevalier and Claudette Colbert at 6 p.m. It was preceded by a newsreel, a short film about Middletown and its citizens, and a welcome film starring Buddy Rogers.[1]

Paramount-Publix had to sell the theater after the U.S. Supreme Court's 1948 United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. decision, which required the movie studios to divest themselves of their theater chains. ABC, a successor corporation, owned the Paramount until 1973 when it sold it to Hallmark Releasing. After several other owners, it closed five years later. In 1979, the city took title when back taxes went unpaid.[1]

Two years later, the Arts Council of Orange County bought it and renovated it into a performing arts center. An apron was added to the stage, and a pavilion on the back of the building provided dressing room space. It was reopened in 1985. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.[1]

The New York Theater Organ Society installed the Wurlitzer organ from the Clairidge Theater in Montclair, New Jersey. The Paramount's organ's original keyboard is now part of the organ at the Orpheum Theater in Phoenix, Arizona.[1]

[edit] References

[edit] External links