Comments from prosa123

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prosa123
prosa123 commented about Clinton Theatre on Feb 15, 2008 at 11:46 am

It has been reported that a “secret” nightclub is now occuping the theater space.

prosa123
prosa123 commented about Lido Theater on Apr 21, 2006 at 7:59 am

The Courtyard Marriott hotel now occupies the site.

prosa123
prosa123 commented about Capitol Theater on Apr 21, 2006 at 7:50 am

Back in the 1960’s/70’s, after the theater closed, the building was an appliance store known as “Ziggy’s Brooklyn Annex.”

prosa123
prosa123 commented about Lake Drive-In on Apr 21, 2006 at 7:47 am

The site’s still vacant, more than 25 years after the theater was demolished.

prosa123
prosa123 commented about Pine Drive-In on Apr 21, 2006 at 7:46 am

There’s now a Wal-Mart, a Stop & Shop supermarket, and some other retailers on the site.

prosa123
prosa123 commented about Park Theatre on May 25, 2005 at 12:32 pm

For a theater of no particular architectural distinction, the Hamilton/Park has had quite an interesting history. While orginally an ordinary, first-run theater, by the mid 1960’s it was showing mostly foreign movies, what today would be known as an art house. Movies of that sort weren’t too popular in working-class Waterbury and the Hamilton soon became a porno house. It became enmeshed in a lengthy legal battle around 1970 when the police raided a showing of “Thar She Blows,” a movie which, its title notwithstanding, had nothing to do with the New England whaling industry :) Theater management took out a large advertisement in the local newspaper to celebrate the fact when the courts finally ruled that the movie wasn’t legally obscene.
In the early 1980’s the Hamilton became what must be one of the few theaters to return to showing “normal” movies after a period as a porno house. It was during that time I made my one and only visit there, seeing “Eye of the Needle” starring Donald Sutherland. While the auditorium wasn’t really decrepit, it certainly was in need of some TLC, as they say in real estate ads. By that time the name may have been changed to the Park, though my memory’s a bit hazy. In any event, its spell as a regular movie theater didn’t last long, and by the mid 1980’s the owners sold it to the Church of God.
One more controversy awaited. The Church of God congregation which bought the Hamilton/Park was mainly Spanish-speaking (“Iglesia de Dios.”) The surrounding neighborhood, at the time, was one of the declining number of white ethnic working-class areas that once accounted for much of Waterbury. Some community residents claimed that selling the theater to a Hispanic church would lead to white flight and the neighborhood’s becoming Hispanic itself. They had little legal standing to block the sale and the church soon took over. By the way, the neighborhood actually did become partly Hispanic over the next few years, though given Waterbury’s demographics this likely would have happened in any event.
One night in 1989 or 1990, the theater – now the Iglesia de Dios – showed that if nothing else, it was a real survivor. An apartment building known as the Honeymoon Apartments, which adjoined the south side of the theater building, literally burned to the ground in a truly ferocious fire. It was amazing that all of the residents were able to get out safely. As for the theater building, it suffered a little cosmetic damage but somehow managed to survive a raging fire just a few feet away.