Regent Theater

109 E. Water Street,
Elmira, NY 14901

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rivest266
rivest266 on April 15, 2017 at 3:14 pm

October 4th, 1915 grand opening ad in the photo section.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on November 11, 2014 at 12:45 pm

I’m not a subscriber, either, but I see the photos. It might be an issue with your browser. Try this individual photo.

Lindamay
Lindamay on November 11, 2014 at 10:37 am

I am not a subscriber to Star Gazette so I can’t see anything

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on November 11, 2014 at 12:39 am

Lindamay: This photo gallery of Elmira theaters from stargazette.com includes a shot of the entrance of the Regent in 1958 (thumbnail #6.) That’s the only photo from the 1950s I’ve been able to find.

Lindamay
Lindamay on November 10, 2014 at 6:03 pm

I was a child when I went to this theater, I lived across the street in a second floor apartment era 1954 which was over a diner that my grandmother Bernice Mattison worked in. I was hoping that someone might have a more recent photo like one in the 50’s. I believe this theater was torn down after Agnes Tropical Storm

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on October 11, 2012 at 9:21 pm

An item in the “Theatres to be Built” column of the April 1, 1915, issue of The New York Clipper could be about about the Regent, given the fall, 1915 opening of the house. It says that a $50,000 theater was to be built for the Pittsburgh-based Harton Theatre Company at Elmira, New York. Pittsburgh architect Harry S. Bair was drawing the plans.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on October 11, 2012 at 9:02 pm

Here is an early postcard photo of Elmira with the Regent Theatre’s vertical sign and entrance in the foreground. The caption says that the Regent opened on October 4, 1915. As the picture is from Cezar Del Valle’s Flickr photostream I’d say that’s probably the right date.

lvBP4evr
lvBP4evr on June 22, 2012 at 4:35 am

I saw a photo dated June 23, 1972 & the theater was there at that time. Elmira was flooded that day due to Tropical Storm Agnes, & took several feet of water. I’m not sure when it was torn down, but the studios of WETM TV are at that spot now.

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on September 19, 2007 at 10:31 pm

I read a diary a few years ago written by a woman who lived in South Jersey in the thirties. It was amazing to see how many movies this lady and her husband went to in a week. Probably a dozen if not more. They pretty much went to the movies every night.

DenisMaloney
DenisMaloney on January 31, 2007 at 11:27 am

These entries are from the 1918 diary of Edmond Burke Maloney ( 1879 – 1946).

Jan 8, 1918 “In the evening I took Annie’s mother to the moving pictures at the Regent. The feature was “Nan of Music Mountain” a melodrama with much gun play and narrow escapes. “

Jan 28, 1918 “Went to see the moving pictures~ “Barbary Sheep” being the offering. Good scenery~but a poor plot.

Feb 4, 1918 “ I took Bob downtown to do a bit of banking and then we went to the Regent. Geraldine Farrar played in “The Devil’s Stone” ~ not very good. Bob talked a good deal during the play and annoyed a fat lady near us.

Feb 8,1918 “In the evening Annie and I went to the Regent to see Mary Pickford in a picture play called “Stella Maria”~ unusually good we agreed.

May 1,1918 “In the evening I took mother to see the picture at the Regent”

May 3,1918 “Annie and I went to the Regent to see a picture.”

May 6,1918 “Annie and I went to the Regent to see “The Shuttle”. I was much more interested in some pictures of wild duck and other water foul feeding.”

May 10,1918 “Mother can up to tea with us and I took her to the Regent to see Mary Pickford in “Amarillo of Cloths line Alley” ( a comedy about an Irish working class girl.)

May 14,1918 “Annie and I went to the Regent (theater) and enjoyed an unusually good set of pictures.”

May 16,1918 “Annie and I went to the Regent”

May 29,1918 “After leaving his office I went to the Regent to see (Alla) Nazimova in a picture plat called “Revelation” which was well produced.”(A film about a Paris cabaret singer and her lover)

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on August 9, 2006 at 3:43 pm

Oklahoma Kid was a 1939 film, but the theater could have been showing it in 1943. The cars look like mid to late 30s.