Difference between revisions of "Wayne Theater"
BotAccount (talk | contribs) |
|||
(6 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
|Predecessor= | |Predecessor= | ||
|Successor= | |Successor= | ||
− | |Start date= | + | |Start date= |
|Founders={{Founder | |Founders={{Founder | ||
|Name of person= | |Name of person= | ||
|Note= | |Note= | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | |End date= | + | |End date= |
|Locations={{Location | |Locations={{Location | ||
|Is primary=Yes | |Is primary=Yes | ||
Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | |||
− | The Wayne Theater was built by the Mott-Kinney Corporation, in 1935. It primarily showed action movies with features like westerns and serials. It was sold to the Daily Record in 1958 and used as a storage area. Then Walter and Margaret Brubaker leased the site of the old Wayne Theater from the Daily Record, and after a complete remodeling of the building they opened the movie theater as the [[Lyric | + | |
+ | The Wayne Theater was built by the Mott-Kinney Corporation, in 1935. It primarily showed action movies with features like westerns and serials. It was sold to the Daily Record in 1958 and used as a storage area. Then Walter and Margaret Brubaker leased the site of the old Wayne Theater from the Daily Record, and after a complete remodeling of the building they opened the movie theater as the [[Lyric II]] in 1968. | ||
==Quick Facts== | ==Quick Facts== | ||
− | |||
− | + | ||
+ | |||
The Wayne Theater was built by the Mott-Kinney Corporation, in 1935. It primarily showed action movies with features like westerns and serials. It was sold to the Daily Record in 1958 and used as a storage area. Then Walter and Margaret Brubaker leased the site of the old Wayne Theater from the Daily Record, and after a complete remodeling of the building they opened the movie theater as the Lyric Two in 1968. | The Wayne Theater was built by the Mott-Kinney Corporation, in 1935. It primarily showed action movies with features like westerns and serials. It was sold to the Daily Record in 1958 and used as a storage area. Then Walter and Margaret Brubaker leased the site of the old Wayne Theater from the Daily Record, and after a complete remodeling of the building they opened the movie theater as the Lyric Two in 1968. | ||
Line 71: | Line 71: | ||
==Newspaper articles== | ==Newspaper articles== | ||
− | + | ||
− | |||
<gallery mode=packed heights=300px style="text-align:left"> | <gallery mode=packed heights=300px style="text-align:left"> | ||
File:SchineWayneTheater-1974-DRStory.jpg|Daily Record, 1974-DEC-3 p.27. | File:SchineWayneTheater-1974-DRStory.jpg|Daily Record, 1974-DEC-3 p.27. |
Latest revision as of 11:50, 19 April 2023
. .
. . .
- Name
- Wayne Theater
- Information
- Motion Picture and Sound Recording
- Founded
- Date unknown
- Dissolved
- Date unknown
- Wooster, 44691, Ohio, United States
SchinesWoosterTheaterBldg.jpg
The Wayne Theater was built by the Mott-Kinney Corporation, in 1935. It primarily showed action movies with features like westerns and serials. It was sold to the Daily Record in 1958 and used as a storage area. Then Walter and Margaret Brubaker leased the site of the old Wayne Theater from the Daily Record, and after a complete remodeling of the building they opened the movie theater as the Lyric II in 1968.
Quick Facts
The Wayne Theater was built by the Mott-Kinney Corporation, in 1935. It primarily showed action movies with features like westerns and serials. It was sold to the Daily Record in 1958 and used as a storage area. Then Walter and Margaret Brubaker leased the site of the old Wayne Theater from the Daily Record, and after a complete remodeling of the building they opened the movie theater as the Lyric Two in 1968.
Gallery
Newspaper articles