The Castro Theatre, in San Francisco, was built in 1922 and is a historical landmark. The theater has 800 seats downstairs and 600 in the balcony.
Hollywood's famous Chinese Theatre, now known as the TLC Chinese Theater, was built in 1926 and designed to look like a Chinese palace. Its entrance features now famous cement bricks, which bear the signatures and handprints of Hollywood stars.
Built by Sid Grauman, who constructed the Chinese Theater, Los Angeles' Egyptian Theater opened its doors in 1922 and hosted the first movie premiere, for "Robin Hood," later that year. Much of the theater was designed in a Egyptian Revival style, most likely because of the public interest in the excavation of King Tut's tomb about the same time.
The beautiful Orinda Theatre, in Orinda, California, was built in 1941 and was almost demolished in 1985, before being saved by preservationists. It still shows movies today.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe impressive Grand Lake Theater, in Oakland, California, built in 1926, has four separate, ornate movie screens, none more impressive than the main auditorium, seen below, which features an antique Wurlitzer piano that is still played before screenings on Fridays and Saturdays.
Founded as the Westwood Theatre in 1940 and now known as the Crest Westwood Theater, this landmark was closed for two years and was in danger of staying that way until it was reopened in 2013, thanks to a community effort.
Even the lobby of the Crest Westwood is stunning. In 2008, the cinema was designated a historic landmark.
The incredibly ornate Fox Theater opened in Oakland in 1928 to crowds of thousands, excited to get inside the movie palace. During an economic downturn for movie theaters in 1966, the theater closed its doors and sat unused for 30 years, before being renovated and reopened. While it is mostly used for concerts, you can still catch special movie screenings in the theater to this day.
Sometimes you're just in the mood for something more intimate. The historic Four Star Cinema, in San Francisco, is almost 100 years old, having opened its doors in 1918. In 1964, it became independently owned and has stayed that way since, showing foreign and smaller-release movies every day.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe Warner Grand Theatre, in San Pedro, California, opened in 1931 and was designed in an ornate art deco style by a team of esteemed movie palace architects. Today, it holds music and theater events, but still shows movies often, like when it hosts the Los Angeles Harbor International Film Festival.
Another product of renovation and restoration, the Alameda Theater, in Alameda, California, originally opened in 1932, before closing in the 1980s. The was reopened in 2008 and is now Incorporated into an eight-screen multiplex.
As we've seen, it's not just the auditoriums themselves that are so impressive. At the Paramount Theatre, in Oakland, you can buy your popcorn and candy in this beautiful art deco lobby, built in 1931.
One of the oldest movie theaters still operating in California, the Clay Theater in San Francisco was built in 1910, originally as a nickelodeon. Today, it shows independent, art house, and foreign films.
Opened in 1924 as the Roosevelt Theater, and later known as the York Theater, the renamed Brava Theater in San Francisco has a storied history. It is now a performing-arts space focusing on creative women, but still retains its screen for the occasional movie showing.
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