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Princess Theatre (Edmonton)

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performances, including touring acts such as Sneezy Water's "Hank Williams - The Show He Never Gave". After firmly establishing the Princess as a significant alternative arts establishment in Edmonton, Frank Grisdale resigned and Susan Morrow became the manager in 1981. Morrow expanded the theatre's program to a glossy monthly magazine. The theatre was offering Saturday morning cartoons, student pricing, and yearly memberships which all contributed to its steadily increasing attendance.
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make major upgrades and repairs to the interior of the building. A fundraising drive in 1987 allowed 422 modern sized plush seats to be installed, lowering the theatre's original seating capacity by almost 240. In 1989, a soundproofed cry room was installed with an independent sound system, allowing patrons with small children to come to films without worry.
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Whyte Avenue. For his part, J.W. McKernan is considered an important trailblazer in Edmonton entertainment. He was already a recognized theatre operator having previously run a succession of other south side theatres before the Princess: the Gem, the Alhambra, and the South Side Bijou / Bijou Strathcona.
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Edmonton's native Magic Lantern Theatres unexpectedly tried to buy the Princess for $ 500,000 on Christmas Eve 1996. A condition in the Brar's contract stated that the sale could be voided if another party bid at least ten percent more for the building. However, the Brars exercised an option to match
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Paisley quickly offered to buy the Princess, and reached an agreement with the Old Strathcona Foundation in October 1994 for an unspecified amount. The banks, however, refused to finance Paisley's plan and the deal fell through in December. The Old Strathcona Foundation quickly pivoted, and attempted
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The theatre was profitable by its second year, and earned the Old Strathcona Foundation $ 1 million between 1979 and 1989. This was in no small part due to Grisdale's vision of a repertory film house dedicated to championing the independent film genre. During his tenure, Grisdale also introduced live
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Towne Cinema Limited bought the Princess outright sometime in 1970. The chain owned several theatres in Alberta, including the Towne Cinema on 118 Avenue. The theatre reopened on Christmas Day 1971 as the Klondike Theatre after almost a year of renovations. Towne Cinema restored the original function
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was devoted to the reopening, including a congratulating ad from a local record store, an ad for the electrical contractors who installed the wiring, and a message congratulating the Princess placed by the managers of three other establishments already wired for sound: the Rialto, Empress and Capitol
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The theatre was operated by Magic Lantern Theatres as a first run cinema until January, 2016. At that point Plaza Entertainment, headed by Mike Brar, took it over again, ending Magic Lantern's tenancy. In 2006, after a lengthy dispute with a local developer, the City of Edmonton demolished the Gem
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Unsurprisingly, Ostapchuk was against Alliance Atlantis's plans for Whyte Avenue, believing that it would put both the Garneau and the Princess out of business. The Old Strathcona Foundation sided with Magic Lantern, and fought the plans. The argument went all the way to Edmonton City Council, which
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1992 was the theatre's high-water mark, with a record number of tickets and memberships sold. A state of the art video projection system was installed in June 1993, but in that year revenue declined by $ 65,000, at least partly because of the growth of home video. The Old Strathcona Foundation began
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neighbourhood. The building was designed by prominent Edmonton architects Wilson and Herrald, a firm responsible for the design of many other Edmonton heritage sites. It became Edmonton's oldest surviving theatre after the demolition of the Gem Theatre in 2006. The building currently houses the main
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declined to renew a $ 100,000 annual grant which the Foundation had received since 1985. The Foundation needed cash, and quickly sold the theatre for $ 450,000 to Calgary's Brar family, owners of the Plaza Theatre in that city. The decision was not popular, and even Old Strathcona Foundation member
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The Princess Theatre Society, while promising, failed to convince the Old Strathcona Foundation that it was capable of profitably managing the theatre, and negotiations broke down in April 1996. Paisley immediately resigned as director and ended his relationship with the theatre two months short of
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became the manager in early 1994. Paisley had a history with the Princess; he operated the small, independent Chinook Theatre out of the basement from 1980 to 1983. This organization was the seed of Paisley's Fringe Theatre Event, which he founded while still working out of this space in 1982. This
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By 1982, the Old Strathcona Foundation was confident enough in the theatre's prospects to purchase the building outright from Towne Cinema. By this time, the asking price for the building had dropped to $ 425,000, which was estimated to be $ 8000 below its real market value. The Foundation began to
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The Old Strathcona Foundation, at that time a publicly funded community development initiative, leased the struggling Klondike in 1977 and began searching for ways to use the space. A member of the general public, Frank Grisdale, answered the solicitation, writing a paper outlining how the building
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The Klondike's choice of programming earned it a negative reputation, and Towne Cinema was unable to run the Klondike profitably. The company sought buyers for the theatre as early as 1976, asking $ 600,000. But, despite all of the theatre's problems under Towne Cinema, it is unlikely that it would
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The theatre reputedly fell into disrepair under the Brars. In 1998, the Princess was called "an absolutely lousy advertisement for late 20th century privatization" by Magic Lantern Theatre's Rick Ostapchuk, who said that the current owners had allowed the theatre to sink "with the velocity, if not
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The entire theatre staff was laid off in December 1996 once it became clear that the Brars were seriously considering purchasing the theatre, and the theatre's projectionists began what would be a six-month strike when it became clear the Brars would not respect a recently signed two-year contract
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having been torpedoed by a German submarine, it will be necessary to skip two Weeklies (short films), these having come forward to ourselves from our London representative via this boat. Regretting this occurrence, and trusting you will appreciate our position on this...". McKernan's supply of new
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The building was originally known as the McKernan Block, after John W. McKernan, the Princess's owner and manager until his death in 1919. The McKernans were a family of property developers in boomtown Strathcona; John's father developed and ran the historically important Dominion Hotel, also on
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The building and the theatre within has changed ownership several times, and its fortunes have largely depended on the state of the Canadian theatre industry at the time. It spent a dozen years as a retail space from 1958 to 1970, and six years from 1970 to 1976 mainly exhibiting
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The Princess Theatre opened as a single-screen cinema on March 8, 1915 to rave reviews. It had cost McKernan CDN$ 75,000 and had taken 10 months to build, longer than expected. The theatre opened with 660 seats and the largest live performance stage in a cinema west of
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The Brars handed over management of the theatre to Magic Lantern Theatres in June 1998, merely 18 months after purchasing it. Rick Ostapchuk immediately took over double duty as the manager of the recently renovated Garneau Theatre, as well as the Princess.
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In the 1990s, it "embraced experimental films showcasing emergent New Queer Cinema, ultimately making the Princess Theatre a hub for queer culture." The lesbian community magazine Womonspace News frequently advertised film screenings held at the Princess.
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By 1916, the Princess had stopped booking live acts and was focusing exclusively on the more profitable cinema side of the business. Revenues from the rental spaces in the basement and upper floors had also begun to flow in. Notably, Hugh Morrow, a
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Ostapchuk vowed to return the Princess to the stature it held under Susan Morrow. To that end, he hired a new film programmer, Leonard Schein of Vancouver's Fifth Avenue Cinemas. The first film exhibited under new management was Michael Moore's
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could be successfully operated as a repertory theatre under its original name. The foundation was apparently impressed by his proposal, and Grisdale was installed as the Princess Theatre's director upon completion of renovations in 1978.
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were housed in their own fireproof machine room. The Princess was serviced by a freight elevator, which was an unusual feature for a building of its size, and the theatre lighting was indirect and gentle on theatregoers' eyes. The
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was a disruptive force for Edmonton's cinemas. The theatre was forced to close in 1958, and the McKernan family sold the Princess Block soon after. The Princess's last advertisement ran on July 19, 1958 advertising a double bill,
333:. From the beginning, the building was designed to combine commercial and residential space, and featured a full basement, small multi-use second floor apartments, and a full third floor in addition to the theatre space. 345:. Its competitors, the Ross Hall theatre and the Strand Theatre also on Whyte Avenue, soon succumbed to the economic recession that set in during WWI, and the Princess became the only cinema on Edmonton's southside, the 428:
was also impressed by three novel firsts for a movie theatre in Edmonton: an electric ticketing machine, an "electric time-projecting clock", and a refrigerated drinking fountain. Perhaps most importantly, the
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remarked on the quality of the "photoplay house's" finishings, remarking on the solid marble facade, frescoes, brass mirrors and the abundance of gold leaf decoration. On the technical side, two modern
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The Princess Theatre has a history of being a welcoming space to the Edmonton queer community and has supported it through a variety of screenings and events over the years. During the 1985
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have been returned to its original use without the money they poured into its renovation. Their efforts to restore the building are a significant reason why the Princess is a cinema today.
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and Simplex projectors were difficult to come by at the best of times, and the complex machines proved difficult to maintain. McKernan did not live to see business pick up. He contracted
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to see the theatre as a liability, and their confidence in the theatre was shaken when Susan Morrow quit her position as manager after having worked at the Princess for fifteen years.
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the sanitized H2O, of a waterslide". By his count, 170 of the marquee's 330 lights were burnt out, and he did not believe the interior had been regularly washed or maintained.
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was capable of filtering, heating, and cooling air and featured dedicated intake and output fans making the Princess by far the most comfortable theatre in Edmonton.
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While under Magic Lantern management, the Princess Theatre became a notable destination for the local Queer community by featuring New Queer Cinema films, including
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in early 1995 to transfer control of the cinema to the Princess Theatre Society, "a small board made up of film experts and business people" including Paisley.
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Theatres. The physical renovations necessary to accommodate the new wiring were carried out by S. H. Muttart, an important local builder and namesake of the
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At the time, the Princess was considered a showpiece of elegance and modernity. It was the first building west of Winnipeg to be faced with marble. The
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films was decreased as the war dragged on, and McKernan advertised less and less frequently. Further complicating things, parts for the theatre's
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was asked to waive Old Strathcona's four-story height limit for the six-story multiplex. Council sided against Alliance Atlantis when Councillor
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Tasker, Warren (November 19, 1989). "Strathcona's grande dame; The city's last ornate movie palace is finding long-elusive success".
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https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5f61141fa6215237a5ee5a36/t/6419aff3abdc473bf4684fdf/1679405045486/Centennial+Plaza+032123.pdf
812: 800: 242: 2821: 2465: 2442:"Underground cinema for Whyte Ave.; Princess constructs a second screen in basement of its Old Strathcona building; New Theatre". 2122: 644:. The third floor was split into several apartments, while the second floor was entirely occupied by Strathcona TV and Columbia 563:
The talkies were very well received and hugely successful. Other theatres were pressured to modernize their equipment or close.
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The Princess Block, was designed by Edmonton architects Wilson and Herrald, who also designed Whyte Avenue's Douglas Block, the
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It was originally known as the McKernan Block, after John W. McKernan, the building's original financier, owner, and manager.
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Wartime proved hard on the film business. On September 23, 1915, Famous Players informed McKernan that "On account of the
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But at some point in 1972, family friendly programming began being interspersed with (and was eventually replaced by)
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The McKernan family leased the theatre to Alexander Entwisle sometime in 1919. Entwisle managed a chain of Edmonton
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have exposed an error published in several local histories. They claim the first talkie screened in Edmonton was
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Cernetig, Miro (August 6, 1991). "City Streets: A celebration of urban life Revolt paved way for rejuvenation".
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Towne Cinema renovated the Princess in 1971. Their logo is still hidden in the scrollwork below the marquee
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Theatre (constructed 1913) on Jasper Avenue, making the Princess the city's oldest surviving cinema.
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Tasker, Warren (November 19, 1989). "It has taken 70 years for the Princess to reach it's [
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The Old Strathcona Foundation's offices were in the Strathcona Public Library until the mid-1990s
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Kellogg, Alan (June 6, 1998). "Ostapchuk determined to restore Princess to former lustre".
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theatre. Until 2016, the Princess was operated as a first run theatre by Edmonton's native
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Horton, Marc (October 13, 1994). "Director Brian Paisley buys historic Princess Theatre".
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Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.
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of the interior of the building, rebuilt sections of the exterior, and installed a new
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Kellogg, Alan (May 28, 1994). "Former Lord Mayor Morrow leaving the city she loves".
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Barrett, Tom (January 2, 1997). "Princess Theatre sale confirmed, staff await word".
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Sound installation was completed at the Princess by August 16. An entire page of the
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Thomson, Graham (December 23, 1996). "Princess' sale too quick, says board member".
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Powell, Kerry (March 25, 1995). "Separate group being created to run the Princess".
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O'Donnell, Sarah (May 23, 2001). "Vote switch by Cavanagh sinks Varscona cinema".
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Hanes, Allison (July 29, 1999). "New art-house multiplex pitched for Whyte Ave".
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Hanes, Allison (July 23, 1999). "Six-screen theatre on Whyte stirs opposition".
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The Old Strathcona Foundation was running a major deficit by 1996, and in April
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were confiscated from multiple Towne locations, and the company was sued by the
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In 1929, talkies arrived in Edmonton. Electronically indexed articles from the
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400-seat theatre as well as the 100-seat Princess II, located in the basement.
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Marck, Paul (December 21, 1994). "It's curtains for bid to buy the Princess".
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Morningstar, Lasha (December 26, 1996). "Garneau owners bid for Princess".
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YEG Queer History. Interview by Matt Hays. The Gateway. September 9, 1986
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Thomas, Don (April 24, 1996). "Strathcona Foundation loses city funds".
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Festival, the theatre held a screening of the Oscar winning documentary
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Geddes, Ashley (December 21, 1996). "Princess Theatre deal announced".
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Chattopadhyay, Piya (May 25, 1997). "Projectionists back at Princess".
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Six of the theatre's original ushers dressed up for opening night, 1915
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any higher bids, and the sale went through in early January 1997.
794: 754: 601: 2273:"Princess Theatre Brings New Movieone and Vitaphone South Side". 1847:"Chinook Theatre / Fringe Theatre Adventures Historical Timeline" 1090:
John Orrell, Fallen Empires, The Lost Theatres of Edmonton, p. 87
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not opening until 1940. Opening night was a benefit concert for
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Grisdale, Frank (January 4, 1997). "New life for the old girl".
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The Capitol showed the first talkie in Edmonton, March 27, 1929.
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changed his vote at the last minute, defeating the motion 6-5.
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Horton, Marc (June 2, 1998). "Princess under spell of Magic".
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Womonspace News: Our Voice in the Lesbian Community: June 1985
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his contract expiring. Malcolm Parker became the new manager.
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did not renew the Old Strathcona Foundation's funding in 1996
2409:. Edmonton, Alberta: Pioneer Press Ltd. pp. 263–270. 2328:
Retson, Don (January 21, 2000). "Cinema complex delayed".
1781:. MacEwan University/Pride Centre of Edmonton. 1985-06-01. 1752: 1645: 648:. The basement was still a pool hall, Princess Billiards. 2132:. The Edmonton Historical Board. November 2007. p. 2 1669:"Making weird waves: On a crest | Rainbow Story Hub" 788:, now the largest event of its kind in North America. 300:
The theatre's first full feature starred Mary Pickford
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The Princess's first program benefited the war effort
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in rapid succession, and died on February 18, 1919.
361:"featuring actual war scenes". In audience were the 3058: 3015: 2945: 2907: 2867: 2812: 2745: 2648: 2600: 667:The Klondike opened on Christmas Day, 1971 showing 233:films. The Princess was operated successfully as a 181: 173: 165: 160: 150: 142: 103: 87: 351:The Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire 2491:Edmonton Heritage Council and Real Estate Weekly 2052:. Henderson Directories Limited, Winnipeg. 1976. 2050:Henderson's Edmonton Alberta City Directory 1976 2044:. Henderson Directories Limited, Winnipeg. 1966. 2042:Henderson's Edmonton Alberta City Directory 1966 2036:. Henderson Directories Limited, Winnipeg. 1960. 2028:. Henderson Directories Limited, Winnipeg. 1956. 2020:. Henderson Directories Alberta, Edmonton. 1920. 2012:. Henderson Directories Alberta, Edmonton. 1919. 2004:. Henderson Directories Alberta, Edmonton. 1916. 1871:"Council lets foundation buy Princess Theatre". 874:By 1999, Leonard Schein had become president of 237:from 1978 to late 1996, after which it became a 1334:"Princess Theatre Brings New Movietone" (1929). 484:Around 1919 the basement was first leased to a 78:Princess Theatre in 1915, shortly after opening 1520:Princess Theatre gets new video system (1993). 1472:"Court Puts Its Fangs on Dracula Film" (1981). 580:The first talkie screened at the Princess was 3175:Historic buildings and structures in Edmonton 2578: 2264:"Princess Theatre: All Technicolor Program". 1511:"Council Lets Foundation Buy Princess (1982). 1232: 1230: 1228: 1218: 1216: 1166: 1164: 1162: 1114: 1112: 1110: 1108: 972: 970: 968: 8: 2305:Rainbow Cinemas & Magic Lantern Theatres 1330: 1328: 984: 982: 66: 2532:. The Alberta Heritage Digitization Project 2468:. Edmonton Heritage Council. Archived from 2105:. Edmonton Heritage Council. Archived from 2034:Henderson's Greater Edmonton Directory 1960 2026:Henderson's Greater Edmonton Directory 1956 1849:. Fringe Theatre Adventures, Edmonton. 2008 1318: 1316: 1306: 1304: 1302: 938:Princess Theatre, Canada's Historic Places. 862:as part of Pride Celebrations in 1985 and 700:at a cost of $ 270,000. Its first film was 3145:Buildings and structures completed in 1915 2585: 2571: 2563: 2511:"Magic Lantern Theatres: Princess Theatre" 2282:"Princess Theatre gets new video system". 1890:"Demolished theatre subject of 2 lawsuits" 1368: 1366: 1152: 1150: 1148: 1146: 1144: 1142: 1077: 1075: 1065: 1063: 1029: 996: 994: 72: 65: 3160:Registered Historic Resources in Edmonton 2235:"Princess 'in peril,' ex-director says". 2208:"Opening To The Public Monday, March 8". 1489: 1487: 1398: 1396: 1394: 1392: 1390: 1206: 1204: 1202: 1192: 1190: 1188: 1102:"Princess Theatre Royally Opened" (1915). 1098: 1096: 1027: 1025: 1023: 1021: 1019: 1017: 1015: 1013: 1011: 1009: 946: 944: 866:starring Divine in early September 1986. 2980:Northern Alberta Institute of Technology 2293:Edmonton Daily Bulletin, Morning Edition 1880:"Court Puts its Fangs on Dracula Film". 1566: 1564: 1562: 1292: 1290: 1053: 1051: 1049: 1047: 1045: 1043: 1041: 1039: 609: 535: 357:, B Squad. The program proudly included 2356:"Talkies Are Approved At New Capitol". 1605: 1603: 1450: 1448: 1446: 1444: 1384:"Historic Theatres in Edmonton" (2006). 1344: 1342: 1340: 1280: 1278: 1244: 1242: 931: 882:Executive Director Helen Folkmann, and 525:, as advertised in the August 19, 1929 2705:North Saskatchewan River flood of 1915 2546:"Peel's Prairie Provinces, Newspapers" 2407:The Best of the Strathcona Plaindealer 1935: 1924: 1784: 1680: 1678: 1529:"Paisley new boss at Princess" (1994). 816:Judy Berghofer called the sale hasty. 786:Edmonton International Fringe Festival 3150:Cinemas and movie theatres in Alberta 2668:2001 World Championships in Athletics 958: 956: 706:, a family friendly feature starring 614:Last ad placed before closing in 1958 393:The building's quality was impressive 7: 2487:"Edmonton Movie Houses and Theatres" 2097:Herzog, Lawrence (August 24, 2011). 1402:Rialto Theatre movie listing ledger. 820:with the Old Strathcona Foundation. 636:The Princess Block disappeared from 379:, was screened the following night. 177:Wilson and Herrald, Edmonton Alberta 2339:Rialto Theatre movie listing ledger 2291:"Princess Theatre Royally Opened". 2077:Herzog, Lawrence (March 20, 2003). 2018:Henderson's Edmonton Directory 1920 2010:Henderson's Edmonton Directory 1919 2002:Henderson's Edmonton Directory 1916 1156:"Doors of Princess Theatre" (1915). 27:Cinema in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada 2057:Herzog, Lawrence (March 3, 2005). 540:The talkies were a big hit in 1929 481:, Empress and Dreamland Theatres. 369:. The house's first feature film, 329:, and the University of Alberta's 288:Good ventilation was an attraction 25: 2970:List of Universities and colleges 1373:Princess Theatre: All Technicolor 1127:Edmonton Bulletin, Sept. 27, 1917 405:Opening night was a great success 2446:. February 27, 1999. p. C4. 2217:"Paisley new boss at Princess". 1884:. February 26, 1981. p. A1. 1814:. November 13, 1994. p. B1. 1033:A Theatre With A History (1994). 681: 660: 519:The Princess's first talkie was 512: 500: 398: 386: 307: 293: 281: 267: 169:1915–1958, 1971–2022 34: 3170:Tourist attractions in Edmonton 2526:"Alberta Newspapers Collection" 2123:"Historic Theatres in Edmonton" 1069:"Opening To The Public" (1915). 254:Early years under J.W. McKernan 156:Princess: 422; Princess II: 100 3165:Abandoned theatres in Edmonton 2822:Alberta's Industrial Heartland 2437:. October 9, 2001. p. E6. 2424:"To Capitol Theatre Patrons". 1951:. October 22, 1940. p. 4. 1730:Edmonton Queer History Project 1310:"Talkies Are Approved" (1929). 1081:"Special Announcement" (1915). 1: 2428:. January 5, 1929. p. 7. 2360:. March 28, 1929. p. 13. 2323:. August 16, 1929. p. 6. 2286:. June 30, 1993. p. B12. 2277:. August 16, 1929. p. 6. 2239:. April 11, 1996. p. C4. 2221:. March 13, 1994. p. E5. 1921:. August 16, 1929. p. 6. 1896:. CBC News. February 25, 2010 1875:. March 24, 1982. p. G2. 1866:. August 16, 1929. p. 6. 1684:Hanes "New art-house" (1999). 1570:"Princess 'in peril'" (1996). 870:Whyte Avenue multiplex debate 431:forced air ventilation system 2301:"Princess Theatre Showtimes" 2268:. July 19, 1958. p. 22. 2212:. March 8, 1915. p. 12. 1996:. March 25, 1929. p. 5. 1913:. March 6, 1915. p. 15. 1810:"A Theatre With a History". 1454:Tasker "Grande Dame" (1989). 976:"Underground Cinema" (1999). 577:in Edmonton's River Valley. 146:Provincial Historic Resource 3180:Repertory cinemas in Canada 2351:. March 9, 1915. p. 3. 2295:. March 9, 1915. p. 3. 2099:"Strathcona Firehall No. 1" 2083:Edmonton Real Estate Weekly 2063:Edmonton Real Estate Weekly 1284:"Hear What You See" (1929). 1210:Tasker "Golden Age" (1989). 3196: 3097:Canadian Forces Base (CFB) 1693:Hanes "Six-screen" (1999). 1481:"Today in History" (2001). 962:Demolished theatre (2010). 18:Princess Theatre, Edmonton 1947:"Gateway Sport Section". 1538:"Chinook Theatre" (2008). 1360:"Congratulations" (1929). 747:Old Strathcona Foundation 327:Strathcona Public Library 186: 83: 71: 43:This article needs to be 2780:North Saskatchewan River 2249:Canada's Historic Places 1296:"Princess Today" (1929). 909:The Times of Harvey Milk 860:The Times of Harvey Milk 492:Arrival of the sound era 365:G.H.V. Bulyea and Mayor 2663:1983 Summer Universiade 2658:1978 Commonwealth Games 2548:. University of Alberta 1646:https://eqhpstories.ca/ 784:event was the original 261:Early days of operation 231:mainstream pornographic 2130:Building Heritage News 1791:: CS1 maint: others ( 841: 832:Magic Lantern Theatres 804: 799:Edmonton's City Hall: 760: 615: 607: 606:Theatre exterior, 1966 594:, on August 19, 1929. 553:The Canary Murder Case 541: 473:houses and cinemas on 353:, associated with the 243:Magic Lantern Theatres 3080:International airport 2995:University of Alberta 2797:William Hawrelak Park 2760:Edmonton Metro Region 2405:Tingley, Ken (1999). 2369:] 'Golden Age'". 2059:"90 Years a Princess" 1992:"Hear What You See". 1618:Chattopadhyay (1997). 839: 813:Edmonton City Council 798: 758: 733:Government of Alberta 703:Man in the Wilderness 670:Man in the Wilderness 638:Henderson's Directory 613: 605: 539: 355:19th Alberta Dragoons 3087:Anthony Henday Drive 2630:Notable Edmontonians 2530:Our Future, Our Past 2466:"Herzog on Heritage" 2433:"Today in History". 2203:. pp. A1 Front. 2174:The Edmonton Journal 1236:Tingley (1999), 267. 1222:Tingley (1999), 266. 1170:Tingley (1999), 265. 1118:Tingley (1999), 263. 988:Tingley (1999), 269. 840:The Princess in 2009 575:Muttart Conservatory 323:Strathcona Fire Hall 127:53.5178°N 113.4964°W 3155:History of Edmonton 3060:Transportation and 2678:City Centre Airport 2176:. p. C1 Front. 2109:on December 5, 2011 1862:"Congratulations". 1627:Morningstar (1996). 1136:The Gateway (1940). 363:Lieutenant-Governor 123: /  68: 2975:MacEwan University 2854:West Edmonton Mall 2770:Metropolitan areas 2695:Heritage buildings 2497:on January 1, 2011 2485:Herzog, Lawrence. 2464:Herzog, Lawrence. 2319:"Princess Today". 2245:"Princess Theatre" 2103:Herzog on Heritage 1830:The Globe and Mail 1722:"Centennial Plaza" 1671:. 13 January 2023. 842: 805: 761: 616: 608: 542: 465:Alexander Entwisle 132:53.5178; -113.4964 91:10337 Whyte Avenue 3132: 3131: 2960:List of libraries 2859:Tallest buildings 2426:Edmonton Bulletin 2358:Edmonton Bulletin 2321:Edmonton Bulletin 2275:Edmonton Bulletin 1994:Edmonton Bulletin 1934:Missing or empty 1919:Edmonton Bulletin 1864:Edmonton Bulletin 1711:O'Donnell (2001). 1349:Edmonton Bulletin 876:Alliance Atlantis 776:Theatre in crisis 719:Swedish Fly Girls 569:Edmonton Bulletin 558:Mother Knows Best 527:Edmonton Bulletin 455:Spanish Influenza 235:repertory theatre 209:located at 10337 199: 198: 64: 63: 16:(Redirected from 3187: 2955:Catholic schools 2842:PCL Construction 2737:Mindbender crash 2710:Princess Theatre 2619:Edmonton Journal 2594:City of Edmonton 2587: 2580: 2573: 2564: 2557: 2555: 2553: 2541: 2539: 2537: 2521: 2519: 2517: 2506: 2504: 2502: 2493:. Archived from 2481: 2479: 2477: 2447: 2444:Edmonton Journal 2438: 2435:Edmonton Journal 2429: 2420: 2401: 2398:Edmonton Journal 2392: 2389:Edmonton Journal 2383: 2380:Edmonton Journal 2374: 2371:Edmonton Journal 2361: 2352: 2349:Edmonton Journal 2343: 2333: 2330:Edmonton Journal 2324: 2315: 2313: 2311: 2296: 2287: 2284:Edmonton Journal 2278: 2269: 2266:Edmonton Journal 2260: 2258: 2256: 2240: 2237:Edmonton Journal 2231: 2228:Edmonton Journal 2222: 2219:Edmonton Journal 2213: 2210:Edmonton Journal 2204: 2201:Edmonton Journal 2195: 2192:Edmonton Journal 2186: 2183:Edmonton Journal 2177: 2168: 2165:Edmonton Journal 2159: 2156:Edmonton Journal 2150: 2147:Edmonton Journal 2141: 2139: 2137: 2127: 2118: 2116: 2114: 2093: 2091: 2089: 2073: 2071: 2069: 2053: 2045: 2037: 2029: 2021: 2013: 2005: 1997: 1988: 1985:Edmonton Journal 1979: 1976:Edmonton Journal 1970: 1967:Edmonton Journal 1961: 1958:Edmonton Journal 1952: 1943: 1937: 1932: 1930: 1922: 1914: 1911:Edmonton Journal 1905: 1903: 1901: 1885: 1882:Edmonton Journal 1876: 1873:Edmonton Journal 1867: 1858: 1856: 1854: 1842: 1839:Edmonton Journal 1833: 1824: 1821:Edmonton Journal 1815: 1812:Edmonton Journal 1797: 1796: 1790: 1782: 1773: 1767: 1766: 1764: 1763: 1749: 1743: 1742: 1740: 1738: 1733:. 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904:Edmonton Pride 899: 896: 892:Terry Cavanagh 871: 868: 833: 830: 777: 774: 748: 745: 737:obscenity laws 708:Richard Harris 687: 680: 679: 675:Richard Harris 666: 659: 658: 657: 656: 655: 653: 650: 626:Away All Boats 599: 598:Theatre closes 596: 518: 511: 510: 506: 499: 498: 497: 496: 495: 493: 490: 477:including the 466: 463: 446:boat Hesperian 404: 397: 396: 392: 385: 384: 383: 382: 381: 313: 306: 305: 304: 299: 292: 291: 287: 280: 279: 278: 273: 266: 265: 264: 260: 259: 258: 257: 255: 252: 250: 247: 219:Old Strathcona 197: 196: 184: 183: 179: 178: 175: 171: 170: 167: 163: 162: 158: 157: 154: 148: 147: 144: 140: 139: 107: 101: 100: 89: 85: 84: 81: 80: 77: 62: 61: 42: 40: 33: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3192: 3181: 3178: 3176: 3173: 3171: 3168: 3166: 3163: 3161: 3158: 3156: 3153: 3151: 3148: 3146: 3143: 3142: 3140: 3123: 3120: 3118: 3115: 3114: 3113: 3110: 3108: 3105: 3103: 3100: 3098: 3095: 3093: 3090: 3088: 3085: 3081: 3078: 3076: 3073: 3072: 3071: 3068: 3067: 3065: 3063: 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Index

Princess Theatre, Edmonton

Edmonton
Canada
Coordinates
53°31′04″N 113°29′47″W / 53.5178°N 113.4964°W / 53.5178; -113.4964
Capacity
www.princesstheatre.ca
art-house cinema
Whyte Avenue
Edmonton
Old Strathcona
mainstream pornographic
repertory theatre
first run
Magic Lantern Theatres
The first ad ever placed by the Princess on March 8, 1915
Good ventilation was a major attraction
The second ad placed by the Princess on March 9, 1915
Six of the theatre's original ushers, circa 1915
Strathcona Fire Hall
Strathcona Public Library
Rutherford House
Winnipeg
Garneau Theatre
The Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire
19th Alberta Dragoons
newsreels
Lieutenant-Governor
W.T. Henry

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