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Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
23
2020

A Part of Paramount's History

Anonymous (not verified)
23 Jan 2020

In 1922, Para

Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
23
2020

From Film Prop to Theatre Mascot: The Bagdad Theatre's Pet Camel

Anonymous (not verified)
23 Jan 2020

When the Bagdad Theatre opened on January 14, 1927 in the Hawthorne District audiences were drawn to the theater by bright lights, live music, and street dancers.

Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
22
2020

Burnside Theater - A Christmas Benefit Show

Anonymous (not verified)
22 Jan 2020

In the dawn of our first world war, with Christmas right around the corner, the people of Portland in December of 1914 seemed to enjoy the basic shopping and merriment that comes around the holiday season.

Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
22
2020

Free to Men; The Empress Theater

Anonymous (not verified)
22 Jan 2020
Analysis of an Empress Theater Ad in The Morning Oregonian on March 1, 1916
Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
22
2020

A Little Kid with a Big Salary; The Liberty Theatre

Anonymous (not verified)
22 Jan 2020

In 1921 there was only one movie more successful than Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid.

Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
21
2020

Columbia Theater - For the People

Anonymous (not verified)
21 Jan 2020

Precautions and Prestige

Unfortunately the movie business was not always the safest or the most secure by any means in the early days of exhibition. Portland was by no means an exception to this trend and as time went on, it didn't take long for entrepreneurs to take preventative measures.

Anonymous (not verified)
Jan
20
2020

Promoting Attractions at the Lyric in Prineville

Anonymous (not verified)
20 Jan 2020

The Lyric theater was a small theater located in Prineville, Oregon. Prineville is about an hour-long drive northeast of Bend, Oregon. While researching the Lyric theater, I learned that it originally opened at a now-unknown location, then moved three more times before finally settling at its final, and most well-known location at 216 N. Main St, Pineville Oregon. The operator of the theater, Ken Piercy, opened another theater across the street and named it the Pine theater. The Pine theater is still open today, standing from 1938 to now, and serves as Prineville’s main theater.

Display Name
Michael Aronson
aronson
Nov
25
2019

Alta Theater & Water Fountains

Display Name
Michael Aronson
aronson
25 Nov 2019

The Alta theater was located in Pendleton, Oregon. The theater was opened on September 6, 1913, and was made to accommodate the needs of viewers in response to those lacking said needs. It came equipped with extra space in the back so that late-comers would not be crowded together and a large number of people could sit comfortably and maneuver the theater with ease. The owner of the venue, C.E.

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Display Name
Elizabeth Peterson
emp
Nov
06
2019

From Small-Town Exhibitor to Hollywood Cameraman

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Display Name
Elizabeth Peterson
emp
06 Nov 2019

Dan L. Sharits was an enterprising and ambitious manager of the Star theater (1911-1918) in Medford, Oregon, who leveraged his movie theater experience into a career making pictures in Hollywood.

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Display Name
Elizabeth Peterson
emp
Nov
06
2019

“A Pippin of an Exhibitor” in Ontario, Oregon

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Display Name
Elizabeth Peterson
emp
06 Nov 2019

Dorothy Jaquish was a movie theater prodigy, as this article in the exhibitors’ trade journal Motion Picture World explains. When she was still a teenager, she took over running the Dreamland Theatre in remote Ontario, Oregon, after her father died in 1918.

The Dreamland opened in the small (pop. 1,248 in 1910) eastern Oregon town of Ontario in September 1912, and was the sole movie theater in town through the 1910s.

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About This Project

What is the Oregon Theater Project?

The Oregon Theater Project provides a historical sketch of movie theaters in Oregon from the beginning of cinema at the end of the 19th century through the "silent era" (1896-1930). The website aims to document the history of moviegoing in Oregon–why people went to the movies, where people watched them, and what people thought about them. Movie theaters were often a vital part of the social and economic life within communities, and movies were available in towns of all sizes throughout Oregon.

Latest Research Posts

Community at the Sunset - Jonathan Down (Blog Post 2)

 One thing has become clear to me while researching the Sunset Drive-in Theater, and…

Jun 8, 2026
- 0 comments

Programming at the Guild theater

The programming at The Guild Theater has changed a lot over the years. At the…

Jun 3, 2026
- 0 comments

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