Roosevelt Theatre

770 Arthur Godfrey Road,
Miami Beach, FL 33140

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Showing 26 - 46 of 46 comments

aarfeld
aarfeld on April 15, 2008 at 9:09 pm

Al, I don’t think that there’s much of a market today for Cinerama Roadshows. So, for what purpose will these lovely old theaters be preserved—if any? Look at how many are listed as closed and demolished. Single-screen theaters simply can’t survive in today’s multiplex film business, unless their auditoriums are broken up into smaller screening rooms (which doesn’t preserve these gorgeous interiors) or they are converted to live-performance theaters for music or plays. It’s the only way to save a theater’s architectural integrity.

Al Alvarez
Al Alvarez on April 15, 2008 at 8:29 pm

I think the posts above greatly underestimate the value of this early Miami Beach Cinerama Roadshow house.

aarfeld
aarfeld on April 15, 2008 at 8:23 pm

In 1974 I traveled up from Perrine to this theater to see “Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones,” as Al Alvarez mentioned above. I think that it was the only theater in the Miami area showing the film. I, being a very big Stones fan, returned several times to see the film during it’s run at the Roosevelt. I’d love to see the theater reborn as an intimate venue for live music performances with a cafe in the lobby, but I think it might better attract such a business if it were located down on Lincoln Road or among the many Art Deco hotels by the beach, where people stroll looking for entertainment.

aarfeld
aarfeld on April 15, 2008 at 8:03 pm

Sorry to disappoint you, ghamilton, but there are no more distributors for classic pictures—video stores and cable stations have that niche all locked up. And art house operators have lost much of their business to the multiplexes, who now dedicate at least one screen to that market, and at cheaper prices than the foreign movie theaters can afford to offer. Live performance: that’s the only hope for these lovely old movie houses.

Harvey
Harvey on March 23, 2008 at 11:47 pm

Okay, right theatre.

XXX TURNS TO ZZZZZZ: BEACH ADULT CINEMA SHUT
Miami Herald, The (FL) – June 26, 1989
Author: DAVID ZEMAN Herald Staff Writer

For more than a decade, the Roosevelt Theater has leered lasciviously at passing motorists as they slide across the Julia Tuttle Causeway into Miami Beach’s business district.

But the adult movie theater closed with scarcely a whimper this month, canceling — perhaps forever — the South Florida showing of Seven Minutes in Heaven.

Merchants along 41st Street wonder what took so long.

“In two years here, I don’t think I saw a half-dozen people go into that theater,” said Paul Steinberg, a lawyer who works across the street.

His figures do not include the lawyers in his office who used to jokingly don raincoats when they crossed the road for popcorn. Only for popcorn.

It’s hard to conceive that the same theater that bowed out with sex romps was originally called the Lemonade Theater when it opened in 1949 because free lemonade was served during intermission. The Roosevelt showed first-run movies then and even put on plays before converting to “adult” flicks about 15 years ago.

Yet even its detractors concede that the sex palace has become a part of the local fabric.

Thomas Coltrane, who runs a realty office next door, said the theater has guided many customers to his otherwise nondescript office.

“A 75-year-old lady once called me and said, ‘I just can’t imagine how to get to your place,’ ” said Coltrane. “I told her we were right next to the dirty movie theater. She said, ‘Oh, I know exactly where you are.’ ”

The marquee has been empty since building owner Ted Konover bought out the lease from the theater’s operator, Irwin Knohl, the first week in June. Konover, who purchased the building in 1985, and Knohl both refused to be interviewed.

However, Steinberg said Konover has shown him plans to build a restaurant, stores and offices where the Roosevelt stands abandoned at 770 41st St.

Peeking inside the fingerprint-smudged glass doors, visitors can still ogle the posters promoting coming attractions.

There’s the sentimental Legend of Lady Blue, a movie “for those who still remember the first time”; Satin Suite, a “film” that won the praise of Hustler’s discerning art critic; and a medical docudrama, The Naughty Nurse.

Rabbi Gary Glickstein of nearby Temple Beth Sholom recalled when the Roosevelt began promoting Debbie Does Dallas two days before the temple was to host an Israeli Independence Day festival in 1975.

Panicky elders from the temple prevailed on the Roosevelt to delay the ad campaign for a week.

“It’s probably the best thing that’s happened to Arthur Godfrey Road in the last 10 years,” said Steinberg of the closing. “This is the gateway to Miami Beach and the business district. To have a large marquee advertising triple X-rated movies is not the first impression you want people to have.”

The Roosevelt might have fallen victim to a take-out mentality, said Joe Bueno, manager of Video Variety in Miami Beach. Bueno said adult movies make up 50 percent of his store’s weekend rentals.

ghamilton
ghamilton on September 28, 2006 at 3:16 pm

Went by it several times last week.Big metal gate in front now.For sale sign up.

Agent86
Agent86 on April 26, 2006 at 6:26 am

Some info the Roosevelt. It’s available for rent for $15,000 a month (!). There is still seata and a screen, but no sound system or projector. No idea how it actually looks in there. The phone number for the gentleman who is renting it out is (305) 538-2186.

ghamilton
ghamilton on April 23, 2006 at 12:50 pm

Three big questions here.#1 What is the condition of the interior?#2 What is the true seating?I know what a 400 seat house looks like-bulk-wise.The Olde Towne in VA is a much smaller place size-wise.How can it be as magneficient as some say in the old days and only be 400?#3 What owns it and how much $ are they asking(and for what purposes?).Would a purchase be possible?

woody
woody on April 23, 2006 at 11:32 am

heres another similar shot i took last week, the building looks rather sad and lonely

http://www.flickr.com/photos/woody1969/131002428/

Agent86
Agent86 on April 11, 2006 at 5:08 am

I see there is a for rent sign on it. Does anyone know how much it’s going for and what it’s like inside?

ajcp78
ajcp78 on November 4, 2005 at 8:33 am

The picture I posted in the previous message is from August of 2005. It’s been closed since 1989 I believe. The entrance has been gated only recently to prevent grafitti and the marquee sealed off only recently as well. I think it’s one of the most beautiful and unique theaters I’ve ever seen, so “Miami”.

ajcp78
ajcp78 on November 4, 2005 at 8:30 am

The picture I posted in the previous message is from August of 2005. It’s been closed since 1989 I believe. The entrance has been gated only recently to prevent grafitti and the marquee sealed off only recently as well. I think it’s one of the most beautiful and unique theaters I’ve ever seen, so “Miami”.

ajcp78
ajcp78 on November 4, 2005 at 8:29 am

The picture I posted in the previous message is from August of 2005. It’s been closed since 1989 I believe. The entrance has been gated only recently to prevent grafitti and the marquee sealed off only recently as well. I think it’s one of the most beautiful and unique theaters I’ve ever seen, so “Miami”.

ajcp78
ajcp78 on November 3, 2005 at 10:21 am

Here is a great photo of this ghostly theater!
View link

Al Alvarez
Al Alvarez on August 28, 2005 at 2:20 am

The Roosevelt was once home to the “Quintaphonic Sound” release of LADIES & GENTLEMEN THE ROLLING STONES. The managers at the time invented the gimmick and it seemed to work. I also saw the film version of OH! CALCUTTA here.

During the late 60s and 70s it was a first sub-run double feature house and had some great shows. The Miami Herald ad always announced the following week’s shows so you could plan ahead. WAIT UNTIL DARK and COOL HAND LUKE was one memorable double.

moviesmovies
moviesmovies on July 18, 2005 at 1:33 pm

I don’t recall this theater being small. It had a big orch. with balcony and mezzanine.
Wide winding staircase and truly an excellent adult film house.
Visited several times.
Jackie Gleason may have filmed his show there at one time.

ghamilton
ghamilton on March 10, 2005 at 6:07 pm

I passed this theater last week on a Fla.trip.Still sitting empty.The area is doing well.If I won a big lotery,I’d buy it and run classics.With all the old theaters that still exist in Miami Beach,why can’t ONE show a movie?

ajcp78
ajcp78 on February 17, 2005 at 7:28 am

I grew up on the same block as this theater. I was born in Miami in 1978 and remember from my earliest years this theater was a pornographic theater from 1980 to about 1989, when it closed down, due to the pressure of the Catholic Church that was just around the corner. It’s a very charming theater with the word ROOSEVELT printed on the waterfront section of it. The theater is built over a very dirty canal which is traversed by 41st street in Miami Beach. I left the area in the late 90s for New York, but I was back visiting recently and it’s still closed. Back in the 80s Miami Beach, unbeknownst to many people, was not a safe area. Lincoln Road used to be full of homeless people mainly Cubans from the Mariel boatlift of 1980 and was quite dangerous at night. There were little more than a couple of thrift clothing shops and a Woolworth open in those days on Lincoln Road. Only around 1992 did Miami Beach really come to life when celebrities and rich out of towners started investing in recreating very run-down buildings on Miami Beach and incorrectly naming the area South Beach.

bbin3d
bbin3d on January 8, 2004 at 10:19 am

My comments about the Roosevelt (sometimes called the Roosevelt Playhouse when it had live theater) should have mentioned I attended the theatre again in the 1960s where I saw the Russian WAR AND PEACE, which played exclusively at this theatre in two parts. Also, back in the 60s they played first run UA films. I believe it was part of a package called UA Premiere Showcase which included FITZWILLY.

SethLewis
SethLewis on January 8, 2004 at 8:15 am

This theater was around the corner from where our Miami friends lived and I was lucky to catch a couple of interesting pictures there in the 60’s including Fitzwilly with Dick van Dyke, Never on Sunday on a reissue and Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner…It was a pretty bog standard 400 seat single screen but certainly appealing enough for the times