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Rio Grande is situated at the junction of U.S. Route 9 and Route 47. U.S. Route 9 runs south to Cape May and north toward the Atlantic City area while Route 47 runs southeast to Wildwood and north to Millville and the Camden area. Rio Grande is accessible from the Garden State Parkway at exit 4 northbound and exit 4B southbound. [25]
The New Jersey Theatre Alliance is a nonprofit nongovernmental service organization that promotes and supports professional theaters throughout New Jersey. It is one of the nation's first and largest such entities. [1] [2] Its mission is to "unite, promote, strengthen, and cultivate" the state's professional theater community. [3]
The Community Theatre was built in 1937 and was once the crown jewel of Walter Reade's chain of movie theatres in New Jersey, opening on December 23, 1937, with the David O. Selznick film, Nothing Sacred. By the 1980s, the Theatre had fallen into disrepair and sat idle for nearly a decade.
The theater was an Art Deco style building built by architect, Henry Baechlin. Owned by Madelaine Kridel during the Newark Riots. The closure of the theatre occurred late 1960s after the Riots. Closed, various English and Spanish churches Regent Theater: 8 Bloomfield Avenue: 1925: 1,840: Stanley-Warner Theatres, Warner Bros. Circuit Management ...
1508 Route 47, Rio Grande, NJ: Website: capemaycountyherald.com: The Cape May County Herald is a weekly newspaper in Rio Grande, New Jersey. [1] [2] History.
Writer and performer Antoinette Scudder, along with actor and director Frank Carrington formed a partnership in the late 1920s to create their own theater. [7] They eventually found the vacant mill, and spent many years working on it, turning it into a theater. [8] Another fire in 1980 changed the course of the theater, and it closed for ...
Since February 2005, the new company has purchased the original franchise unit from Doss, opened a theater in the Katy Area and in Spring, Texas, and built a new-build multi-screen theater in the Rio Grande Valley; though it was announced in 2006 to open, the building has remained unfinished since the original owner was foreclosed upon. [17]
The theater's marquee in 2018. Edward Franklin Albee II opened the Carlton Theater on November 11, 1926 as one of a series of Keith-Albee-Orpheum vaudeville theaters. Opening night in 1926 included vaudeville acts and the feature film The Quarterback, starring Richard Dix. Nearly 4,000 people attended the two shows that evening, with crowds ...