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Movie Theaters of my Childhood

When I was a kid, movie theaters were my home away from home.  In the heat of the summer, they offered air conditioned splendor and big screen excitement.  Drive-ins allowed my family to bundle us up on a Friday or Saturday night and see a movie from the comfort of our car.  Here are some of my homes away from home:

The Cinerama Theater -there weren't very many of them but we had one.  Located on Viking Road just off Paradise, this was a  terrific theater.  I dragged my friends there to see many a film, including "Fantasia", "The Hindenburg" and "The Three Musketeers".

 

The Fox theater located in the Charleston Plaza Mall.  This was a large and elegant theater located in the first mall in Las Vegas.  On East Charleston, just south of downtown, this theater had a sign that could be seen for miles.  We saw "The Sound of Music", "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", "The Hot Rock" and on New Year's Eve, "The Poseidon Adventure".

 

The Stardust Drive-In located behind the hotel.  We saw "Viva Las Vegas" there.  My parents were big Elvis fans and my dad was working at the Golden Gate when they were filming the movie and stepped outside of the casino to watch the filming of the race.

The SkyWay Drive-In.  After the Stardust Drive-In closed, we used to drive out Boulder Highway to this great Drive-In.  My dad bundled us all up and took us to see "Night of the Living Dead" after my mother brought home a Reader's Digest that had an article, "The film you don't want your kids to see".  My dad had a wicked sense of humor. 

 

The Huntridge Theater at East Charleston and Maryland Parkway was the closest theater we had to an old fashioned movie palace.  Complete with soundproof "cry room" for unruly babies, the theater was home to Disney films and Saturday afternoons the theater was filled with kids.  In addition to the Disney films, my friend Alan and I saw "Kelly's Heroes" and "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean" there.

Other theaters I loved were the long-gone MGM Grand Theater in the original MGM Grand Hotel (now Bally's).  This theater had plush love-sets and a cocktail waitress that brought your drink order to you.  You ordered just by pressing a button on the cocktail table in front of you.  They only ran classic MGM films but I was already a big film buff by the time the hotel opened and they changed the bill every week.  You got a handout with a synopsis of the film and the cast listing.  They showed a cartoon, newsreel and then the film.  It was old-fashioned and it was beyond great.

The Red Rock Theaters on West Charleston.  We lived in Charleston Heights and this was the theater closest to us.  Started as a a dual screened theater, it ultimately expanded to 11 theaters.  The theaters in the back were placed around an old-time Main Street like square.  We lived at this place, it seemed, when I was in high school.  Between this and the MGM Grand theater, my weekends were spent at the movies.  We saw "The Sting", "Billy Jack", "The Godfather" and every  major (and minor) film that came out in the 1970s.

The Guild Theater, the El Portal and the Fremont Theaters were all located downtown.  The Guild was more an art house back then.  I saw "Next Stop, Greenwich Village", "The Passenger" and other art films of the 1970s there.

The Parkway Theaters across the street from the Boulevard Mall.  The Parkway was a dual screen theater.  We saw "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "Star Wars" there.

How about you, which theater was your favorite?

 

 

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Reader Comments (4)

My husband and I often wonder what happened to all the decorations such as lamps posts, the old fashioned popcrn machine etc. that were inside the Redrock Theater..I saw many movies at that theater, mostly late 70's early 80's. I remember my dad taking us to see The Song of the South at a theater on Charleston. It was located inside a mall. It must have been the Fox theater!
January 15, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterCarrie
I was an usher, at 16, at the Cinerama in 1969, for about 6 months. Several years before that,

I saw "Khartoum" at the El Portal in 7th grade. A Harold Kirschner and I rode the bus from the Flamingo (we lived in the "Churchill East Apts. on Koval & Reno) to Fremont St. We spent too much on soda and candy, so we ended up walking all the way back to the apartments. It was only about 105 degrees, so we hit every motel with a water fountain and a pool along the way. Crazy kids!

The Cinerama was by far my favorite because it had the largest screen & best audio system, bar none! It was also a lot closer.

Remember the little market next to the Fog Cutter? The "Shopping Bag" or "Farm Basket", something like that?

Ever Saturday morning, Harold and I would go there real early and they would give us a bundle of flyers to hang on the doorknobs in the complexes. We'd race each other to see who could finish first, race back and get our money, and off to the Cinerama we went to spend the rest of the day the in cool air of the theatre. Man, to be in 7th grade again!
May 7, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterDavid Reed
I grew up in las Vegas as well, and I remember always going to the Skyway Drive in, probably the best part of my life was growing up in 60's Las Vegas. My grandpa worked at many casinos in those days, pit boss at the fremont, He worked at the Hacienda, and a few others. My mom also worked as a keno girl at the stardust for years. I have very fond memories of Vegas...going to eat at the Showboat was also a highlight for me also. I dearly miss my Vegas childhood, as well as my grandparents and parents. Any ever know a Mike Stimac? his wife was lois, those are my grandparents. Anyway, im getting misty now, thanks for having this great site to reminisce on.
March 16, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterJimmy Davis
I've desperately wanted to find a picture of The Guild theater that used to be where the Plaza's parking lot is. It should have been declared as a historical building.
March 22, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterLeigh McCormick

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