Welcome to CinemaTour!  Sign In

CinemaTour
 
Cinema History Around the World  
 HOME ·· CINEMAS ·· LINKS ·· BOOKS
 Contact Cinematour ·· Help & Hints ·· About Cinematour
 

Royal Theater


Photo from the Kansas City Public Library collection.
1022 Main St
Kansas City MO

Demolished
Record #10557  
 Opened: June 10, 1914
 Closed: 1936
 Demolished: Yes (date unknown)
Capacity:
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
National Register:
Current Organ: none
 Also Known As:

Information for this tour was contributed by Kansas City Public Library.

The Theater Royal at 1022 Main opened here June 10, 1914. It was the forerunner of modern downtown motion picture palaces.

Frank L. Newman was born in Newark, N.J., to Jewish parents who died when he was quite young. A kindly Irish family reared him, and he helped them in their restaurant until he struck out for himself, earning $1.75 for an all-night job in an iron foundry.

Married at 17, Newman saw his first movie in Montreal. He and his wife moved to St. Louis, where he borrowed $100 and with $25 he had saved, started a movie house with a partner. It was called the Royal. In 1909 he went to Joplin and opened another Royal and a few years later one in St. Joseph, also called the Royal.

An outcry arose when the Theater Royal was being built in Kansas City in 1913. It was considered an undesirable intrusion in a strictly retail district. Merchants felt the two hours patrons spent inside the theater would mean less time for them to gaze into store windows and shop.

After the theater was in operation they felt differently, and in 1915 Robinson's even opened a shoe store next door north (still there today).

The legend on the back of the post card reads: "Most beautiful house west of the Mississippi. Open 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Ten piece orchestra. Mamoth Pipe Organ. Lounging room for gentlemen and Rest Room for Ladies with Maid attendant. Check room for Babies. Children's Play Room. Strictly fireproof."

Newman later opened two more movie theaters, here, the Regent and the Newman. The Royal Theater, as it was called in later years was replaced in 1936 by retail stores.

Kansas City Star
March 18, 1972


 Postcards
 Images remain the property of the Member and may not be reproduced without the written consent of the Member.

Postcards from the Kansas City Public Library collection.


106 KB 406x625

 External Links

---
---

Return to the top of this page   or   Return to the main page


Last featured 3/8/2005. Last edited 12/5/2011.


The content of this website is a research work in progress and is being provided to the public for informational purposes only. As such, articles may contain errors, bias, duplication, or need to be cleaned up. Some documents, images and logos contained in these documents belong to various organizations and corporations. Their inclusion here is for the benefit of the reader and for the benefit of the particular organization, but they are, in fact, the copyrighted property of those organizations. Their presence here does not imply any endorsement of CinemaTour by those organizations. CinemaTour is not affiliated with any cinema or circuit.

© 1995-2024 Vision Entertainment Services. All rights reserved.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service.

www.cinematour.com :: 0.62 MB :: 6.34 MB