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  2. Vine Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vine_Theatre

    Vine Theatre, formerly Admiral Theatre and Rector’s Admiral Theatre, also known as Vine Street Theatre, Dolby @ Vine, and Dolby Screening Room Hollywood Vine, is a historic movie theater located at 6321 W. Hollywood Boulevard, near the intersection of Hollywood and Vine, in Hollywood, California.

  3. The Steve Allen Playhouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Steve_Allen_Playhouse

    The building opened in 1906 as the La Mirada Theatre. In 1929, as the Filmarte Theatre, it was a movie house showing only non-American films, catering to the "various foreign colonies in east Los Angeles. Russians from Boyle Heights were among its best customers." [2] It is the theater where Bob Hope performed his first

  4. Ricardo Montalbán Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricardo_Montalbán_Theatre

    Montalbán Theatre; Full name: Ricardo Montalbán Theatre: Former names: Wilkes Vine Street Theatre (1927) Vine Street Theatre (1927–31) Mirror Theatre (1931–33) Studio Theatre (1933–36) CBS Radio Playhouse (1936–54) Huntington Hartford Theatre (1954–64) Doolittle Theatre (1974–2004) Address: 1615 Vine St. Los Angeles, California ...

  5. Hollywood and Vine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_and_Vine

    East of the Equitable Building is the Art Deco Hollywood Pantages Theatre, designed by B. Marcus Priteca and built as a movie palace in 1930, then converted to a live theater in the 1977. [8] [15] North of the Equitable Building is the Welton Becket designed, Googie-styled Capitol Records Building. [16]

  6. Avalon Hollywood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalon_Hollywood

    Originally known as The Hollywood Playhouse, the theater at 1735 N. Vine opened for the first time on January 24, 1927. [2] It was designed in the Spanish Baroque style by the architectural team of Henry L. Gogerty (1894–1990) and Carl Jules Weyl (1890–1948) in 1926–1927. [3]

  7. Laemmle Theatres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laemmle_Theatres

    Laemmle Theatres (/ ˈ l ɛ m l i / LEM-lee) is a Los Angeles-based arthouse movie theater chain owned and operated by Robert Laemmle and his son Greg. The company's first theater, bought in 1938 [1] by Robert's father and uncle, cousins of Universal Pictures founder Carl Laemmle, was located in Highland Park.

  8. Magic Johnson Theatres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Johnson_Theatres

    It was the first multiplex theatre opened, and was closed in 2010. [5] It was completely renovated and reopened as the Rave Cinemas Baldwin Hills 15 by the Rave Cinemas chain in 2011. [6] It is now owned by Cinemark Theatres and is renamed the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza 15 and XD. [7]

  9. ArcLight Cinemas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArcLight_Cinemas

    ArcLight Cinemas was an American movie theater chain that operated from 2002 to 2021. It was owned by The Decurion Corporation , which was also the parent company of Pacific Theatres . The ArcLight chain opened in 2002 as a single theater, the ArcLight Hollywood in Hollywood, Los Angeles , and later expanded to eleven locations in California ...