Newton Theatre

234 Spring Street,
Newton, NJ 07860

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teecee
teecee on March 2, 2006 at 1:08 am

Listed as a Brandt Theater in the 1976 International Motion Picture Almanac.

teecee
teecee on January 22, 2006 at 6:08 am

Old postcard from ca 1940:
View link

teecee
teecee on September 13, 2005 at 8:09 am

When the Galaxy website was updated, they excluded the old photos.
Here are some (thanks to Chuck’s photobucket!):
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teecee
teecee on June 27, 2005 at 8:57 am

The Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ), May 29, 2002 p013
Those old theater organs have become piping hot; Movie houses revive sounds of the silents. (NEW JERSEY)
Byline: JIM LOCKWOOD

It’s not every keyboardist who gets to see his name in lights, but John Baratta is the marquee attraction in Newton. It is as if an old friend has come home.

After a half-century absence, the full orchestral sounds of an antique pipe organ are reverberating again inside the Newton Theatre.

A relic of the 1920s silent-film era, the theater organ makes its rich sounds by pushing air through pipes – a far cry from today’s digital techno-beats and electronic wizardry that require speakers. But for Nelson Page, who installed the Newton Theatre organ, the old instrument is a “living, breathing” entity, with a future tied to its past.

“What’s old is new again. It’s a step back into yesteryear,” said Page, president of the American Theatre Organ Society, a group with 100 chapters worldwide.

Cathy Martin, president of the Garden State Theatre Organ Society, said the instrument’s popularity is rising, due in part to a resurgence in interest in silent films, as well as in theater organs themselves.

Martin – who with her husband, Robert, installed a theater organ at their Little Falls home a decade ago – said there may be as few as 100 to 150 fully functioning theater organs in existence, 20 of them in New Jersey. Page puts the number in theaters and homes around the country at 500.

A long-forgotten organ at Newark Symphony Hall was recently restored. That instrument had not been played for some 50 years, and few people even knew it still existed, because the keyboard console had been removed years ago. But the pipe chamber remained intact, and the Garden State society helped bring it back into action, Martin said.

In 1994, Page installed two vintage organs at the Galaxy Triplex cinema in Guttenberg, one for the lobby and the other for the theater section. Other recent efforts to restore pipe organs have taken place in Asbury Park and Jersey City.

Reflecting on the restoration efforts, Page said: “I think they are on an upswing because there’s a greater amount of interest being developed in this uniquely American art form. It’s a search for nostalgia. People are looking for a simpler, bygone era.”

Some 10,000 theater organs were made by a dozen companies during the silent-film heyday of 1919 to 1929. Most were scrapped long ago, Page said.

The Newton Theatre, built in 1924, had an orchestra pit that once boasted two organs, including the largest pipe organ in Sussex County. Page guesses they were removed around the World War II era, as theaters switched to recorded music.

Page and employees spent 10 months transplanting an Organunique pipe organ to the theater on Spring Street in Newton from a private residence in Clifton.

Compared with other pipe organs, this one is small: two keyboards, 32 foot pedals and 24 stops, the switches that operate the sets of sounds. (The phrase “pulling out all the stops” stems from organ playing.)

Moving even a small pipe organ was no easy task because of the hundreds of components that had to be taken apart, restored and reassembled, Page said.

A separate room was built backstage for the pipe organ’s unseen guts, including some 200 metal (zinc and tin) and wooden pipes, and various mechanical parts, such as a blower, windchest, and regulator, that work in concert to produce sounds.

Volume is controlled by a foot pedal that opens and closes swell shades, a sort of Venetian blind between the pipe room and theater seating.

The instrument, believed to date to the mid-1920s, made its debut in Newton seven weeks ago. It is played Saturday nights by John Baratta, organist for the First Presbyterian Church in Newton and Roxbury middle school band director, during intermission, around 6:30 to 7 p.m., in one of the theater’s twin cinemas.

Inside the dimly lit theater, Baratta is silhouetted by a small light over the sheet music. All four of his limbs move as he plays, with hands working the keyboards and feet tapping bass pedals.

Baratta glides through a set of tunes, flowing from one into another, seemingly effortlessly.

“The response has been favorable so far,” Baratta said. “At first I was afraid of the response I’d get, because it’s so different from anything else. It’s not canned music.”

No, Page notes, this is live entertainment to an audience that at times spans all ages (depending on what movie is playing).

Baratta laughed as he recalled the time a young girl requested “Over the Rainbow” and a young boy suggested Baratta pipe down, because the music was too loud for his taste.

While some teenagers on a recent Saturday night seemed oblivious to it all, others took notice. “It’s interesting. We’ve never seen it before. We’re used to music from the speakers,” one said.

Newton senior citizen Lucy Mathews said the pipe organ music is “just like the old days.”

To Page, who does not play the instrument himself, such sentiments are music to his ears. Introducing the theater organ to someone who never heard it before, or reintroducing it to someone who has, achieves his goal of promoting the instrument and, he hopes, makes the moviegoing experience more enjoyable.

“They get a little extra for their movie dollar,” Page said.

CAPTION(S):

  1. It’s not every keyboardist who gets to see his name in lights, but John Baratta is the marquee attraction in Newton.

  2. Bob Miloche of Maywood makes sure last Wednesay that the pipe organ in the Newton Theatre is in fine form for John Baratta’s Saturday night performance.

  3. RICH SCHULTZ/FOR THE STAR-LEDGER

  4. STEVE KLAVER/THE STAR-LEDGER

Article CJ86433844

teecee
teecee on June 27, 2005 at 8:52 am

Operator Richard Nathan closed this theater in September 1997. Nelson Page of Ridgefield then took over.

The Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ), August 16, 1998 p035
Washington theater will get face lift. (COUNTY NEWS)

teecee
teecee on June 20, 2005 at 10:06 am

Not sure when the original theater link expired. Here is the current one:
http://www.bigscreenclassics.com/newton.htm

teecee
teecee on June 20, 2005 at 10:02 am

In January 1923, the Newton Amusement Corporation awarded the construction contract for a stadium-type theater, capable of seating 1,000 people, to William Houghton. It was designed in “Colonial Style” by Reilly & Hall of New York. Load-bearing columns, consisting of 50 tons of steel supplied by the Submarine Boat Corporation of Newark, made the building of “the safest type known to modern engineering science.” Tapestry brick, pilasters and niches of ornamental stonework, and a marquise with 180 electric lights decorated the facade. Newton Theatre opened May 15, 1924. At that time, it was considered the most imposing theatre in any town of the size of Newton east of the Mississippi.

kateymac01
kateymac01 on May 6, 2005 at 11:03 am

Does anyone have a Web link that works for this theater? The one above doesn’t take me to the Newton Theatre.

William
William on December 9, 2003 at 10:50 am

During the mid 50’s the Newton theatre seated 870 people.