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The Majestic was the grandest of all the theaters along Dallas's Theatre Row which stretched for several blocks along Elm Street. The Melba, Tower, Palace, Rialto, Capitol, Telenews (newsreels and short-subjects exclusively), Fox (live burlesque), and Strand theatres were all demolished by the late 1970s; only the Majestic remains today.
One of them was the Majestic Theatre in Dallas; another was the Majestic Theatre in San Antonio. [2] More theaters were opened in Fort Worth, Waco and Houston as well as Shreveport, Louisiana, Birmingham, Alabama, Little Rock, Arkansas, and Wichita, Kansas. [2] Hoblitzelle sold the company to RKO Pictures in 1930; however, he purchased it again ...
Hoblitzelle offered O'Donnell a job as the manager of the fledgling Majestic Theater in Fort Worth, Texas. Majestic Theater, Dallas Texas, c.1950. In 1925, Hoblitzelle appointed O'Donnell as general operating manager for all of the Majestic Theaters in Dallas, San Antonio, Houston and Fort Worth. [7] By 1933, O'Donnell had set up his permanent ...
Majestic Theatre (Broadway), New York City, a 1927 theatre; Majestic Theatre (Chillicothe), Ohio, the oldest continuously operating theater in the US; Majestic Theatre (Columbus Circle), New York City, a 1903 building, demolished in 1954; Majestic Theatre (Dallas), Texas, a 1920 performing arts theatre in the City Center District; Majestic ...
1921: Majestic Theatre (Dallas), Dallas, Texas 1921: Strand Theatre and Arcade (later Michigan), Lansing, Michigan (auditorium demolished 1984) 1922: Indiana Theatre (Terre Haute, Indiana) , 683 Ohio Street (Eberson's first theatre with the beginning of atmospheric design elements; the Indiana Theatre was constructed eight months before the ...
The Majestic Theatre is San Antonio's oldest and largest atmospheric theatre. The theatre seats 2,264 people and was designed by architect John Eberson , for Karl Hoblitzelle 's Interstate Theatres in 1929.