The Colonia Theater

This picture is where I worked as an usher as soon as I could get my working papers. 1953ish. It was built in the 1900's and was an opera house.

It was a beautiful theater with a gorgeous painting on the ceiling, a balcony and a small area in the front where the piano played before the talkies. Some of my duties were escorting folks to their seats and keeping young people quiet. I had several free passes each week, so needless to say, I was a very popular young man.

Sometimes I would help in the projection room helping to load the films and keeping things running smoothly.
I saw my first 3D movie here and remember passing out the paper glasses to patrons. I loved to watch the reactions of the folks as they would jump and cover their faces in some scenes.

Somewhere, I have pictures of the beautiful interior. I will post them if I ever find them. Oh, and one job I didn't care for was changing the marquee for the next showing. Summer wasn't bad but froze my butt in the winter.
 

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I believe I posted a link to this site previously, but in case you didn't run across it there's a wonderful site that documents old theaters - After The Final Curtain. The site is always bittersweet for me, because although I love the look and what must have been the feel of the classic theaters I'm saddened by the state of disrepair and disintegration so many of them experience.

Beautiful palace you have there!
 
The 'magic' has gone from the cinemas today, or is that just me? Seems the swanker they get the less I like them. I loved the creaky old seats, the bare boards, the hokey plastered walls and statues doing their damnedest to look like marble in a palace in the little suburban ones. It was the kitsch of them that appealed I think.

I went through a stage of wandering the city alone before or after a shift just to look at it as 'a tourist'. I'd ride the ferries, (had a free pass ) or go to the zoo, or explore around the Quay and the Botanic Gardens, but I found I was drawn to the area where many of the theatres were. I'd do 'study' tours of the foyers and take note of things we never look at when going to see a movie. Some of the cinemas in Sydney were gobsmacking when really looked at, but so few really saw the details in them.

Warrigal would remember the Prince Edward, it was gorgeous, and they demolished it!! I'm not a 'heritage' person as a rule, just because some buildings are old doesn't mean they're worth keeping, but that one was! I was devastated to lose that one in particular, but most have been dusted now. We still have the State Theatre which is real marble and an absolute gem, and I think the Capitol has survived, but I missed my other old plaster and fake gold paint 'friends'.

[story alert]
An elderly distant relative lived in a nearby town and I'd met him often but only visited his home once. He had been the manager of the cinema in Muswellbrook back in the 50 to late 70s. It was the fulfillment of his life's ambition as he was mad for movies since he was a little kid.
He was one of nature's most boring men to converse with, and had only two subjects to discuss. One was his health the other was the cinema industry and old movie stars. He was a walking encyclopeadia of things Hollywood. He said he'd collected 'a bit of stuff' through his stint at the cinema but as he was boring at everything else I wrote that off as probably a few posters and mouldy film reels.

When the front door of his house opened I was greeted with a scene from 'Hoarders'. It was clean, but it was just stuffed tight with his 'collection.' There was a track barely wide enough to squeeze through the hall between all the cabinets and tables piled with books and god knows what. The whole house was like that. How he kept it as clean as it was is beyond me. He even had 'movie stuff' in the kitchen.

He lived with around a square foot of table space and one chair that wasn't piled with his cataloging projects. It was the El Dorado of film buffs! It would have exploded the heads of those fellas from American Pickers.

He had hundreds, thousands? of books, biographies, albums, cigarette card collections, clippings, copies of contracts, scripts, autographed photos, you name it.
He showed me his 'gem in the crown'... the script from the original Frankenstein, fingerprints, coffee stains and all!

I kept hearing kerchinggggg noises and all I could think of was that this collection was at huge risk of catching fire!
He didn't even have it insured! He lived on the old aged pension and hadn't a penny in the bank and he was sitting on a bloody fortune!
He didn't see it's value beyond what it meant to him.

I gave him a good talking to, and told him to let his daughters, who were scattered far and wide and didn't give much of a damn about him, what the stuff was and that it was valuable! I had visions of them throwing it all on a fire as rubbish! It's not that I wanted them to get rich, I just couldn't bear the thought that this irreplaceable memorabilia would be lost.

He died not long after I moved away so I have no idea what happened to the collection, I don't really want to think about it.
I often wish I could have gotten my hands on it but short of mugging him that wasn't on. He wouldn't have sold any of it anyway.
I just hope it was appreciated for how valuable it was and not destroyed.

[/story]
 

... I'm not a 'heritage' person as a rule, just because some buildings are old doesn't mean they're worth keeping ...

Great story!

I agree that just because it's old it's not necessarily worth keeping. We recently had a Philadelphia scrap guy make a winning bid of $1.25 million on THIS monstrosity, the Huber Breaker -

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Now there's the Huber Breaker Preservation Society crying that another landmark is gone, how will we ever hold onto our heritage, etc., etc ... WHAT heritage? Black lung disease? Company towns? A bar on every street? Black dust covering everything?

The place was a gathering spot for taggers and bums - oops, "homeless people" - for decades, but all of a sudden they want to preserve it?

We also just lost a beautiful old hotel building, but that was more through politics. And I'll never let them forget the Planter's Peanut Factory that was razed to make a dirt parking lot.

But a dirty old coal-breaking complex? Good riddance say I ... nothing beautiful or artful about it. If they want a reminder of our heritage let them go play in the next sink-hole that shows up.
 
I love the charm of this old theater, Pappy, and the link that Phil posted. I miss the old theaters as well, real movie theaters. These days with waiters wandering all over the theater, you can order dinner from an extensive menu, drink any adult beverage of your choosing, and darned near dance during the movie....it's totally disruptive to the film. I hate it! Like everything else, I miss the old days w/their squeaky seats, with popcorn, cola and candy exclusively, and most of all a quiet theater.
 
There's an 'historic' event scheduled sometime this week along similar lines. They're bringing down the last big smoke stack from the Wollongong steel works.
I almost wish I could be there.

It was an industrial town, choking on fumes and pollution but has blossomed now into expensive coastal real estate and the industry is mostly gone and thankfully, the 'heritage' eyesores with it.

They're not all bad though, some are works of art in brick and I don't mind that so much. I do wonder about the thought processes of the 'hysterical' society people sometimes. They overlook an iconic theatre but preserve a rickety old shed or chimney? Spare me.
 
I remember the old movie theaters when I was a kid, it was very special to go there. The lights were always dim, thick cushioned seats, and usually a red and black design on the carpets and seats. Everything was so big in the theater, high ceilings, etc. My aunt used to be a manager at the theater, and she would always give me a free popcorn with extra butter, real butter in those days, not the fake stuff they give now. I didn't go to the movies very often, but it was a treat when I did...good memories. :sentimental: Nowadays, it's small rooms with rows of seats, no charm at all...just a showing.
 
We had a lovely cinema where i grew up called the Civic it too had the balcony and the beautiful curtains that opened to show the screen, we had the girls dressed in classy uniforms showing us to our seats, at interval there was the singalong with the bouncing bal, i loved that because i was led to believe that i had the most beautiful voice, personally i think people would cringe when they heard me, Mum would give me 5 cents and i could get into the cinema and buy a choo choo bar with that, the best part the cinema was only a block away from our home, my 3 brothers always used to scare in the car park outside the cinema telling me a boogey man was going to get me
 
Love all your wonderful memories. When you entered the lobby, it was like another world there. The smell of fresh popcorn and people hurrying to their seats because the main feature was about to start. Loud talkers and trouble makers were removed from the theater and, thank heavens, no cell phones back then.

I use to go behind the big screen where a huge speaker was, and look at the folks in the house. I could see them, but they couldn't see me. Behind the screen, there were several dressing rooms from the old vaudeville acts and live shows. The large posters, the artful signs out front that showed coming attractions, were sometimes sent along with the film to the next theater for their showing. Some, we just threw away. Some of these posters are going for big bucks these days. Yep, had I only known at the time.

The movie house reopened a while back and has gone modern and now is two mini theaters. I found some pictures in the local newspaper. God, it makes me so sad to see what they have done to a beautiful place. There is a picture of the old projection room, but the other pictures are the renovation work.Ain't progress great..........
 

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We called them Flee Pits.
Also because there were Miners and Foundry workers it was not to clean smelling.
It used to be so bad. The ushers used to come around spraying air cleaner around.
Them were the day's OOP T North. :D:D
 
The Fox Theater in Oakland, CA, was refurbished beautifully and made into a terrific venue for some big name acts. Problem is . . . ya gotta to to Oakland . . . !
 


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