Strand Theatre
205 E. Front Street,
Plainfield,
NJ
07060
205 E. Front Street,
Plainfield,
NJ
07060
3 people
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Back in the early 60s the Strand-Plainfield was a Walter Reade theatre and was one of two first-run theatres in the town. The other was the Liberty Theatre owned by an independent operator.
The Strand lasted as a first-run for some time after that but I’m not sure how long. It was fairly unique in those days because it had a women manager. Her name was Ann DeRagon. Reade also had another theatre in Plainfield called the Paramount Art Cinema. It showed art (foreign) film and, because it wasn’t air-conditioned, closed during the summer months. The Paramount also had its own little art gallery/coffee room where patrons could wait for the show to start. It was a very old theatre, looked like a vaudeville house built near the turn of the century. The walls in the lobby were painted with red dragons from floor to ceiling which was about two stories high. The auditorium floor was wood. It never was very successful as an art theatre. Reade kept it open as an outlet for his own art distribution company. The name of the distribution company escapes me right now.
The Strand wasn’t nearly so dramatic but it was a nice theatre. The auditorium was a stadium type. The lobby was wood paneled.
The Plainfield theatres were supervised by a man named Joe Somers and his district also included the Community-Morristown, the Majestic-Perth Amboy and the Woodbridge drive-in-Woodbridge.
MikeH
From a web search – perhaps a phone call will help you with upcoming programming:
The Strand Cinema is the largest single screen theater showing the latest and best in Indian Entertainment. The 1400 seat fully renovated theater is home to concerts, plays, events, blockbuster movies. More than 150,000 people will view events and films in the state of the art auditorium featuring Dolby Digital Sound and a wide screen experience.
(908)-222-8999
205 East Front St., Plainfield, NJ.
Its in good shape with a big stage- I did the sound for a concert there about three years ago. But it is very plain inside. Probably seats 1000. No balcony
What kind of shape is the theatre in — is it worth going out of one’s way to visit? I wouldn’t mind seeing an Indian picture if the theatre’s worth the trip.
The house is still open—showing Bollywood fare.