5-693: The University Theatre was a single-screen cinema located at 100 Bloor Street West along the Mink Mile , just west of Bay Street in Toronto , Ontario , Canada . The area was once home to a number of cinemas, most notably the Uptown Theatre . For several decades, it was one of the premier movie cinemas in Toronto, and was a centre for the Festival of Festivals . At the time of its closing it
10-560: A 150-unit condominium tower. However, the cinema plans were abandoned and the building was constructed with retail along Bloor Street. The University Theatre's facade now serves as an entrance to a two-level store space, which was a Williams-Sonoma and Pottery Barn from 2002–2015. [REDACTED] Media related to University Theatre at Wikimedia Commons 43°40′11″N 79°23′29″W / 43.669636°N 79.391500°W / 43.669636; -79.391500 Bloor Street Too Many Requests If you report this error to
15-558: The theatre and build a condo residential complex with a cinema. Its closing was delayed several times, with the Famous Players theatre chain trying, but not able, to sign a long-term lease. It shuttered soon after the 1986 film festival, where it hosted the gala opening screening of The Decline of the American Empire . Despite the closure, it was agreed that the unique facade of the building would be preserved. When
20-409: The theatre was torn down the front wall was left standing with a scaffolding at the rear supporting it. These supports were meant to be temporary but were left in place for over a decade due to the early 1990s recession. With the revival of the property market in the late 1990s, developments were again proposed for the site. The first plan called for a new 3100-seat multiplex cinema to be topped with
25-688: Was the largest movie house in Canada. The University Theatre opened on 25 March 1949, and aimed to be the premier cinema in the city. It was a single screen theatre with seating for 1300 people. The cinema would host many of the most important films of its day. For major productions it would use reserved seating where patrons would buy specific seats ahead of time. The cinema also helped introduce new technologies to Toronto such as CinemaScope , Cinerama and 70 mm film Dolby Stereo . In 1985, Famous Players Realty Investments Inc. – not to be confused with their tenant Famous Players – announced plans to demolish
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