Knowledge (XXG)

Riverview Theater

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space was intended to reflect a living room and even included a separate TV lounge. Amenities were ample: "Dunbar tables, McCobb stools, Herman Miller divans and chairs, walnut panels imposed on light wood, graceful modern lamps, stunning draperies." Inside the theater space, however, little changed about the
213:, the theater was built by theater owners Bill and Sidney Volk in 1948. After building a subsequent theater in a new ultramodern style, the Volks returned to the Riverview in 1956 and had its lobby area heavily renovated and updated. The Riverview remains one of several surviving single-screen cinemas in the 292:
to be "their masterpiece". Pleased with the results (and the industry-bucking receipts), the Volks turned back to the Riverview and had Liebenberg and Kaplan remodel it to reflect the successful Terrace model. This occurred in 1956, eight years after the theater's initial construction. The new lobby
341:, the theater typically played second-run films for between $ 2–3 per ticket and its concessions were also "much cheaper than at the suburban multiplexes". Upon reopening after the start of the pandemic, the theater shifted its model to playing first-run films. 372:
Best Budget Movie Theater award in 2000, 2004, and 2005, and the Best Movie Theater award every year from 2006 to 2014 except 2011 and 2012. The Riverview's lobby remains largely unchanged from its 1956 renovation.
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The Riverview became one of the few remaining single-screen theaters in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area; by the end of the 1980s, it was one of only six left, and after 1998, it was one of only four left, with the
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The Lithuania-born Volk brothers, Bill and Sidney, came to Minnesota in the early 1920s and got involved in the movie business by purchasing neighborhood theaters during the
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in twelve years in spite of the protests of other theater managers. The Riverview was designed by architectural firm
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This article is about the cinema in Minneapolis. For the performance venue in Shreveport, Louisiana, see
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AIA Guide to the Twin Cities: The Essential Source on the Architecture of Minneapolis and St. Paul
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Three years later, the Volks again called on Liebenberg and Kaplan to construct the
832:"'Lord of the Rings' trilogy at the Riverview Theater: 690 minutes in Middle-Earth" 831: 737: 693: 648: 356: 799:"48 Hour Film Project movie-making competition comes to Minneapolis this weekend" 653: 1049: 746: 431: 248: 202: 288:, "one of the first ultramodern theaters in America", and considered by author 929: 897: 803: 770: 365: 294: 261: 223: 82: 69: 206: 1038: 472: 615: 243:
called a "theater-building orgy" when they received a permit from the
1028: 893:"Trylon Microcinema Offers Two Unusual Halloween Frights This Week" 181: 324: 271: 1053: 611:"Screen of Dreams: Trylon microcinema set to open on Minnehaha" 348:, sporting events, film festivals, an annual screening of the 309:, although since 1998, several new single-screen theaters–the 735:
Sinker, Howard (May 9, 2003). "Game 7; Wild at Canucks".
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style. It opened December 30, 1948, with a showing of
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area and typically showed second-run films until the
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The Riverview's lobby, largely unchanged since 1956
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The single-screen theater utilized 7: 467: 465: 463: 461: 337:and seats 700 patrons. Prior to the 40:The Riverview's lit marquee in 2011 961:Insiders' Guide to the Twin Cities 861:Tundel, Nikki (January 20, 2009). 247:to build the first new theater in 14: 978:Kenney, Dave (November 1, 2007). 959:Berger, Todd R. (July 17, 2008). 891:Loomis, Adam (October 27, 2014). 842:from the original on May 30, 2015 1200:1948 establishments in Minnesota 1037: 687:Karas, Madison (June 18, 2021). 642:Strickler, Jeff (May 25, 2002). 34: 16:Movie theater in Minneapolis, US 1001:Millett, Larry (May 15, 2007). 751: â€“ via ProQuest 569:Regan, Sheila (March 4, 2011). 355:, and political events such as 1: 1146:(closed and demolished 1930s) 1080:Movie theaters in Minneapolis 609:Nelson, Rob (July 10, 2009). 305:and Parkway Theaters and the 209:, United States. Designed by 1130:(closed and demolished 2011) 797:Wolf, Erika (June 7, 2012). 146:December 30, 1948 1216: 1185:Theatres completed in 1948 361:first inauguration in 2009 18: 255:and built in 1948 in the 180: 45: 33: 836:Twin Cities Daily Planet 576:Twin Cities Daily Planet 245:Minneapolis City Council 753:(subscription required) 479:. Cinema Treasures, LLC 1175:Culture of Minneapolis 867:Minnesota Public Radio 766:"Z-Fest Film Festival" 330: 286:Robbinsdale, Minnesota 277: 215:Minneapolis–Saint Paul 83:44.934051°N 93.21316°W 53:3800 42nd Avenue South 905:on September 28, 2020 656:on September 11, 2016 328: 275: 253:Liebenberg and Kaplan 211:Liebenberg and Kaplan 170:Liebenberg and Kaplan 55:Minneapolis, MN 55406 1046:at Wikimedia Commons 182:riverviewtheater.com 88:44.934051; -93.21316 925:"Riverview Theater" 677:, pp. 117–118. 599:, pp. 209–210. 559:, pp. 189–190. 532:, pp. 119–120. 473:"Riverview Theater" 321:Contemporary status 297:stage and seating. 79: /  30: 623:on January 3, 2016 331: 311:Trylon Microcinema 278: 257:Streamline Moderne 241:Greater Amusements 1162: 1161: 1155: 1147: 1139: 1131: 1127:Oak Street Cinema 1123: 1119:Hollywood Theater 1098:Riverview Theater 1044:Riverview Theater 1042:Media related to 1012:978-0-87351-540-5 993:978-0-87351-595-5 970:978-0-7627-4788-7 351:Lord of the Rings 339:COVID-19 pandemic 335:Howe neighborhood 307:Oak Street Cinema 219:COVID-19 pandemic 191:Riverview Theater 187: 186: 29:Riverview Theater 1207: 1153: 1145: 1137: 1129: 1121: 1074: 1067: 1060: 1051: 1041: 1032: 1031: 1029:Official website 1016: 997: 985: 974: 947: 946: 944: 942: 933:. 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Retrieved 430: 421: 414:Millett 2007 385: 364: 357:Barack Obama 350: 343: 332: 299: 279: 260: 240: 234: 222: 190: 188: 130:Construction 110:Seating type 25: 723:Berger 2008 675:Berger 2008 597:Kenney 2007 557:Kenney 2007 545:Kenney 2007 530:Kenney 2007 518:Kenney 2007 453:Kenney 2007 432:Google Maps 249:Minneapolis 203:Minneapolis 86: / 61:Coordinates 1169:Categories 930:City Pages 909:January 2, 898:City Pages 804:City Pages 771:City Pages 397:References 366:City Pages 295:proscenium 262:June Bride 224:City Pages 150:1948-12-30 74:93°12′47″W 71:44°56′03″N 747:427560444 705:March 14, 207:Minnesota 166:Architect 158:Renovated 941:June 27, 876:June 27, 840:Archived 815:June 27, 782:June 27, 743:ProQuest 699:Archived 660:July 17, 616:MinnPost 582:July 17, 483:June 27, 438:June 26, 313:and the 121:Capacity 1112:Defunct 429:(Map). 353:trilogy 231:History 197:in the 176:Website 148: ( 125:>700 114:Stadium 102:Indoor 50:Address 1009:  990:  967:  869:News. 745:  303:Uptown 195:cinema 143:Opened 953:Cited 377:Notes 370:' 193:is a 135:Built 1086:Open 1007:ISBN 988:ISBN 965:ISBN 943:2014 911:2016 878:2014 848:2021 817:2014 784:2014 707:2022 662:2016 629:2015 584:2016 485:2014 440:2014 199:Howe 189:The 161:1956 138:1948 99:Type 359:'s 284:in 1171:: 927:. 895:. 865:. 838:. 834:. 801:. 768:. 741:. 715:^ 697:. 691:. 646:. 613:. 573:. 537:^ 508:^ 493:^ 475:. 460:^ 404:^ 205:, 1073:e 1066:t 1059:v 1015:. 996:. 973:. 945:. 913:. 880:. 850:. 819:. 786:. 749:. 709:. 664:. 631:. 586:. 487:. 442:. 152:) 23:.

Index

RiverView Theater (Shreveport, Louisiana)

Coordinates
44°56′03″N 93°12′47″W / 44.934051°N 93.21316°W / 44.934051; -93.21316
movie theater
Stadium
Capacity
Liebenberg and Kaplan
riverviewtheater.com
cinema
Howe
Minneapolis
Minnesota
Liebenberg and Kaplan
Minneapolis–Saint Paul
COVID-19 pandemic
City Pages
Great Depression
Minneapolis City Council
Minneapolis
Liebenberg and Kaplan
Streamline Moderne
June Bride
stadium seating
In a lit room, dark square panels line the pinkish wall in rows, while green seats fill the space; a gray screen is visible to the front.
Terrace Theater
Robbinsdale, Minnesota
Larry Millett
proscenium
Uptown

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