A LOOK BACK -- JERRY PERSON
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Many locals are concerned about the bankruptcy of the Edwards Cinema
chain, especially the multiplex Downtown.
Over the years, Downtown Huntington Beach has seen many a movie
theater come and go. Starting with the Princess Theatre in the second
block of Main Street in the early 1900s and the old Surf Theatre that J.
Cleve Scott built with state-of-the-art projection equipment in 1925 on
5th Street to the 1960s Huntington Theater at the Five Points Shopping
Center.
This week, we’ll look at a theater planned for the post-World War II
boom but never built. In late 1946, plans were submitted to the city to
build a $75,000 swank new movie theater at the corner of 7th Street and
Pacific Coast Highway.
Its builders -- Roy Churchill, Ray Dolan Sr. and Ray Dolan Jr. -- had
high hopes that this theater would attract large crowds from the western
parts of Orange County. Churchill was a film distributor for Fox, RKO and
Goldwyn pictures.
The elder Dolan owned and operated the 107 Club at 107 Main St. and his son, Ray Jr., was a graduate of Huntington Beach High School.
Architect Everett E. Parks of Santa Ana was hired to draw up the
blueprints.
The theater would take up most of the 75-foot-by-110-foot property,
and the theater would be built of reinforced concrete with a colored
concrete facade. Because the theater was so close to the ocean tidewater,
the three chose the name Tide for their new theater.
The Tide would embody the ultra modern styles that were appearing in
Orange County after the war. Inside the theater, 850 seats would comfort
its patrons in the lower floor and balcony, and as was a common custom in
those days, smoking would be permitted inside. Indirect inside lighting
would be used to accent its architectural features. Also there would be
comfortable loge seats in both sections.
A lighted marquee would extend 12 feet out from the U-shaped building
and over the sidewalk. But the major element of the building would have
been a 60-foot tower reaching skyward, and on this tower would be in
large letters -- Tide.
The three owners were looking for an experienced person or company to
lease the theater. Remember that this was the time television was just
coming into your living rooms. Plans were approved by the city but, as we
know, the theater was never built.
Instead Dolan built Dolan’s Drive-in liquor store on the property, and
today there stands the only gas station in the original Downtown area.
I’ve seen a sketch of the theater and, if it had been built, it would
have been something for the city.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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