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Madison, Wisconsin (WMTV)-Marcus Theatre (Marcus Theatre) provides guests with a private movie experience and rents out the theater.
Marcus Theatres across the country provide rentals of the entire theater, allowing guests to limit the journey of film screenings to friends and family. The group number varies by location. In Dane County, theaters comply with COVID regulations and can only allow ten guests to enter the theater at a time, whether it is a group rented theater or open to standard guests.
The theater also requires other security agreements regarding rentals, and theaters that are not rented, such as masking and social evacuation—the seats in the theater are taped to ensure that the space is maintained and the chairs are cleaned after each viewing.
Theater is
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Rachel Magana, senior visual designer at Fernish, a sustainable furniture rental company, said that she drew some cosmological decoration ideas from a colleague’s recent nursery project. "Your palette is based on dark blue tones, and then splashed in colors such as yellow, white or red."
Rachel Magana, senior visual designer at Fernish, a sustainable furniture rental company, said that she drew some cosmological decoration ideas from a colleague’s recent nursery project. "According to your color
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This is a difficult year on Earth, but 2020 is the highlight of space exploration. SpaceX pushed its futuristic "starship" to new heights. Three countries launched missions to Mars, and robots captured debris from the moon and asteroids.
More promises are expected next year, including plans to launch a successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.
Perhaps it is not surprising that the space theme has a place in home decoration. When many of us are trapped at home due to the pandemic, spatial images can add an adventurous or whimsical feel to rooms, walls and ceilings.
New York interior designer Patrice Hoban said: "I have finished outer space and starry sky." "My clients like to use stars as backgrounds in nurseries. I also work with Luminous Paint, It adds a sense of popularity to children’s rooms and home theaters."
She stuck tiny dark night stars on the ceiling. The light can last for several hours. She said: "This is the closest thing I have found to a planetarium."
Rachel Magana, senior visual designer at sustainable furniture rental company Fernish, drew some cosmic decoration ideas from a colleague’s recent nursery project.
She said: "The palette is based on dark blue tones, and then splashed in colors such as yellow, white or red."
She said: "Or create your own galaxy wall." "Draw a blue wall, and then use some faded white paint to splash it with tiny water droplets. You can just create some new constellations."
She suggested adding interesting space lights and vintage NASA posters.
For decades, outer space has inspired designers. In the 1960s, the "space race" between the United States and the Soviet Union, and with the development of the space age, the advent of synthetic materials, led to a proliferation of futuristic furniture such as molded plastic chairs and satellite-shaped lighting equipment.
Today, you can download artwork directly from NASA’s solarsystem.nasa.gov, or find artwork at retailers such as Red Bubble, Etsy, and Zazzle.
Magana also suggested making a space-themed quotation letter paper, such as Neil Armstrong's famous term "one small step for man."
Many astronomy-themed art on the market will appear in any room. There are moon graphics on Target's canvas. Tempaper has constellation wallpapers, but if you can't make wallpapers, please consider Kenna Sato Designs' wall or ceiling constellation decals.
Galaxy Lamps have a sphere that looks like an asteroid. Use the included USB to charge it, and cycle through 16 colors in three lighting modes. There is also a moon version. In Beautiful Halo, a series of rocket ship ceiling fixtures were found.
German designer Jan Kath has created a carpet collection called Spacecrafted, which is inspired by images of gas clouds and small planetary nebulae from the Hubble Telescope.
Studio Greytak in Missoula, Montana designed a Jupiter lamp with mineral aragonite, depicting the turbulent gas swirling on the earth. There is also an impact watch with cast glass on it and a large piece of desert rose crystal inlaid on it, as if an asteroid fell into a pool.
Zodiac wall decals and Milky Way carpets can be found in the nursery project. Crate&Kids and Pottery Barn Kids have hanging phones with planets, stars and clouds.
There are also luminous black duvet covers printed on the solar system on PBK, but if you are ready to go to the stars, check out Snurk Living's duvet suits. This studio, owned by Dutch designers Peggy van Neer and Erik van Loo, designed a suit printed with life-size astronaut suits.
It seems popular to create a night sky on the ceiling of a home theater. Houzz has hundreds of inspirational examples.
Maydan Architects in Palo Alto, California designed one for a recent project.
"Our client's grandfather is the owner of several movie theaters," Mary Maydan said. “One of them has a retractable ceiling that allows guests to experience the starry sky at night. When our client decided to build his own home theater, this installation actually fulfilled his lifelong dream.”
The ceiling is not retractable, but has an eight-pane fixed lamp, depicting the Milky Way and a meteor.
Maydan said: "It provides a very soft light, and intends to remain open during the film screening, and create a magical experience."
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A small film chain with venues in North Carolina and South Carolina has been vacant for several months after theater operator Dale Coleman made the difficult decision to keep it closed due to a lack of new films.
However, since March, this is the hall of one location-the hall of Pointe 14 in Wilmington, North Carolina, for the first time. People will not come to watch "The Croods: A New Age", and certainly will not appear on "Wonder Woman 1984". Instead, nearby residents will go to the local theater to buy the COVID-19 vaccine.
The local New Hanover Regional Medical Center has opened a shop in the theater to vaccinate people who are eligible for appointments. Currently, in North Carolina, only front-line health care workers, long-term care workers and residents, and adults 65 years of age and older can register for the vaccine. Carolyn Fisher, marketing director of the New Hanover Regional Medical Center, said that the facility has been using the clinic space and the area within the hospital, but the cinema allows them to accommodate more people in a shorter period of time.
Fisher said: "This has transformed us from managing hundreds of vaccines per day to about 1,300 vaccines per day."
On Wednesday, the first day the vaccination site was opened, hospital staff and volunteers gave 600 doses of injections, which were not used until 4 pm On Thursday, another 1,500 citizens were injected. Due to the large area, the wasteland officials in North Carolina plan to manage only 30,000 people in the Pointe 14 theater. The county is administering Pfizer vaccine, which requires two injections 21 days apart.
Coleman, vice president of Stone Theatres, said: "This is a perfect situation."
. "We have ample parking spaces and a spacious lobby."
The Pointe 14 Theatre will be open from Monday to Saturday from 9 am to 5 pm. Local residents have made appointments through the hospital's online registration system. Once in the theater, they check in at the box office, from ticket sales to distribution of medical forms.
Inside, there are 12 stations in the entire hall. After being vaccinated, people enter the auditorium to wait and make sure they have no adverse reactions. The team at the New Hanover Regional Medical Center brought special equipment, including medical refrigerators with temperature trackers, golf carts (which can help patients get from the parking lot to the box office), tables, chairs, laptops and other necessary supplies.
Coleman called the process of turning the theater into a vaccination site "quite easy to achieve." He and the New Hanover Regional Medical Center first obtained permission from the county and local fire officers. Coleman cross-referenced some insurance requirements and gave the hospital staff in Wilmington to handle everything there.
Now, Coleman is promoting the term, hoping that his other movie exhibitors will follow suit. The Stone Theater has two other locations in North Carolina and South Carolina, so Coleman has contacted officials from the local health department to provide a vaccination venue for his movie theater. He also convened the National Association of Theater Owners, the main lobby of the film screening industry, to encourage movie theater operators across the country to consider hosting vaccines in empty halls.
"This is part of the solution we can add to," Coleman said. "We are very happy and very proud that we can donate to the theater and participate in things that we consider extremely important, not only for our business, but also for the entire community."
The International Theatre Staff Union, a union representing technicians, craftsmen and other workers behind the scenes in entertainment venues, is also promoting
As a vaccination site. In Los Angeles County, Dodger Stadium recently transformed from a COVID-19 testing center to a vaccine site, and the Los Angeles Forum is also a large-scale vaccine site. Small towns with a population of about 100,000, such as Wilmington, are using nearby independent businesses.
For empty entertainment venues, this is a win-win situation. The faster the mass immunization of the public, the faster the return of movie nights, concerts and live theaters. When Christopher Nolan's "Tenet" debuted on the big screen, Coleman tried to restore his theater in September. But he soon discovered that people were not ready to return to the cinema, and he had lost more money in keeping the venue open than when it was closed.
NATO President John Fitian told reporters: "We commend the public service spirit of the Stone Theater."
. "The sooner the vaccine is widely used, the sooner communities across the country will be able to return to normal life in the cinemas that serve them."
Coleman said his theater chain was responsible for turning off the lights and welcoming locals to buy vaccines. He estimates that in Wilmington alone, monthly utility bills are between $15,000 and $20,000. This does not include loans, rent, or other basic expenses, such as projector maintenance. The chain received PPP funding earlier this year and relies on additional funding provided by Save Our Stages, which is part of the government's COVID-19 relief bill and is designed to support independent entertainment venues.
"This is my top priority every day," Coleman said of the grant application. "We desperately need it."
He plans to continue using the theater as a vaccination venue until it runs out. He didn't want to go to the cinema to see miraculous rewards before the crowd was immunized. But for now, he is happy to give back to the community, which makes his theater a cornerstone of southeastern North Carolina.
"This is one of the most meaningful things our company has done," Coleman said.
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The marquee of the 18th cinema at the former Regal Hollywood Stadium in Huntsville. (Matt Wake/mwake@al.com)
The once vibrant building now looks like Godzilla stepping on it.
Demolition work began this week at Regal Hollywood Stadium 18 in Hansville.
But the countless memories and connections left there will not disappear soon. The theater opened in 1994 as a 16-screen Hollywood 16 movie theater. It was a fixed place for entertainment in Huntsville, but the city's options at that time were greatly reduced.
In an era where streaming media will forever change the way people watch movies, Hollywood 18th was renamed after adding two more screens around 2000, which made the business bigger. Maria Wilson, the general manager of the theater, went out of business from 1996 to 2020. He said that during the heyday of Hollywood18 from 2000 to 2010, the number of theater attendance will exceed one million.
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Wilson recalled: "Lines surround the building." "And we used to have six box offices and 14 franchise booths open, people still line up." Initially, the plan was to expand to 24 screens, until Wilson suggested to have Hollywood No. 18. The head of the record’s Cobb Theater said: "Our parking lot cannot accommodate more cars."
Hollywood 18 is located at 3312 S Memorial Boulevard, in the shadow of the former minor league baseball stadium Joe Davis Stadium. Next door is another landmark that has passed away, Finnegan's bar.
Wilson's name is Moon and he married her husband James Wilson last year. He recalled the 1997 disaster drama "Titanic" (Titanic), a customer accumulated 151 ticket stubs and saw the movie there. "She likes movies and Leonardo DiCaprio," Wilson said.
Wilson (Wilson) has 35 years of experience in the theater industry and worked at Madison Square 12 (Madison Square 12) before Hollywood 16. She also served as the general manager of travel and trained staff in other theaters. In the 18th district of Hollywood, sometimes she met a client for the first time when she was a teenager. A few years later, as her parents introduced her to her,
Teenagers. She told me: "There are many precious memories there."
Hollywood Stadium 18 Cinemas in Huntsville, circa 2001. (File picture)
Cobb Theater sold Hollywood 18 to the Regal Cinemas chain in August 1997. Regal media representatives did not respond to emails requesting an interview for this story. In 2020, the rich
. After the release of the latest James Bond spy film was recently postponed, according to plans, some spring plans for the Knoxville-based Regal Theater will reopen.
Hazel Green resident James Floyd spent many nights in Hollywood 18. Freud will first have dinner at the local Japanese steakhouse shogun, and then go to the movies, such as the 2019 superhero blockbuster "Avengers: Endgame." "Every Friday, this is where I go," said Floyd, a Butler High School graduate, who now takes college classes online. "My love for Hollywood 18 is just a selection of movies and good service. Other theaters have novel features, including reclining chairs and bars, etc., but Hollywood 18 is just a good old-fashioned movie theater."
The earliest movie Floyd (Floyd) can recall the 2003 horror film "Freddy vs. Jason". Last January, the last 2020 police sequel "Bad Boy of Life". After getting the ticket, he will give up and buy large popcorn, corn flakes and soda, and then enter the auditorium to find a seat.
Since the Hollywood film on the 18th closed in mid-March, Freud (like many people) has only watched movies at home. Whenever things return to normal, he is not sure where he will go to watch new Hollywood movies now, and Hollywood 18 no longer exists. "It's hard to find a theater to replace it. Huntsville has many theaters, but it's not like the Hollywood 18th theater."
He said that after Floyd (Floyd) heard the news this weekend, Hollywood 18 will be demolished soon, "It makes me very sad." He drove to the theater, where the construction workers let him into the scene, now behind the barbed wire fence, and then into the theater itself to take pictures, this is the sake of the past.
Local movie fan James Floyd (James Floyd) in Huntsville's former Regal Hollywood Stadium 18 Cinema. (Courtesy James Floyd)
When Maria Wilson started working in Hollywood 16, she had approximately 130 employees. In the end, they dropped to about 30. John Paul Gindhart stayed there in the theater. Gindhart is a Madison County high school graduate who started out as a theater greeter. In the early days of his tenure, some of the biggest films included Tom Hanks's epic Hayseeds "Forest Fever" and Arnold Schwarzenegger's action comedy "True Lies." Around 1999, Gindhart moved to the booth as a projectionist.
At that time, the newly released films were still real motion picture films. Gindhart is happy to work with the projector and is relatively isolated in the dark booth. He also enjoyed a carnival in the theater with the projectionist.
He said that Hollywood 18 was fully digital around 2010. In the first few years of the digital age, movies arrived via blade drives. Soon, the title was transmitted to the theater via satellite. "No one has been upstairs in the past ten years or so," Kinderhart said. After things were automated, Gindhart assumed the position of assistant manager, supervising the operation of the theater while still supervising the projection equipment. Kindlehart is rarely excited about new movies now. He said: "But back that day, I will watch everything."
In recent years, it has become common for movies to start their weekend screenings on Thursdays. But this used to be a theater, and new movies were not shown until 12:01 on Friday, so tents like George Lucas's "Star Wars" prequel at the turn of the century, "midnight screening" are popular. "This is a big event, everyone will be there," Kindlehart. "And super fun."
A "Star Wars" fan at the 18th cinema at Regal Hollywood Stadium in Huntsville. (File photo)
While the theater was still using 35mm reels, Gindhart had to stitch all the movies together when the new version was released. Then, he and some selected friends and friends of friends will watch the movie earlier than those who watch the movie. "We will have so many people watching (in the screening room), like on Wednesday, Thursday morning at 1 AM. This is my biggest highlight, which is to have as much fun at work and as much as possible Increase the pressure." On the Gindhart website, someone asked their favorite personal movies released in Hollywood 18 "Fight Club" or "The Matrix".
Sometimes, real life can be as interesting as a novel. Just like that night, the prince rented a theater at the 1998 "Purple Rain" superstar concert at the Von Braun Center. Late that night, the prince's tour bus stopped behind the theater. Prince and his entourage entered the 18th district of Hollywood through the back door and drove towards Auditorium 6. That night, Gindhart operated the projector for Prince's entourage and recalled that the movie was Halle Berry's comedy "BAPS", but Prince just stayed in the theater After a few minutes, he returned to his tour bus.
There is also a complete film premiere called "Constellation", which is a 2007 period drama filmed and filmed in Hansville. The red carpet, movie stars, the whole deal. "Constellation" starred by Billy Dee Williams, handsome actor Billy Dee Williams (Billy Dee Williams) was originally a sneaky smuggler in the "Star Wars" trilogy Portrait of Lando Calrissian. While in the city, Williams even signed several autographs with the charm of prosperity: "May the force be with you." The "Constellation" cast also features future "Star Trek" star Zoe Saldana and "Bring It" groundbreaking Gabriel League.
Celebrity Billie Dee Williams shakes hands and signs at the world premiere of Huntsville's movie "Constellation". (File photo)
When "Star Wars Episode One: The Threat of Phantom" was released in 1999, the Hollywood film No. 18 was running 24/7. Literally. "I think I slept there that morning," Kindhart recalled with a smile, "I was like,'I'm going to lie on the floor and everyone wakes me up.' Yes, that's crazy."
For things like the 2001 children’s fantasy adventure film "Harry Potter," fans would form a row around the building when the tickets were first sold. "Because you couldn't buy tickets online at that time," Gindhart explained.
Located in Huntsville’s former Regal Hollywood Coliseum 18 Cinema. (Matt Wake/mwake@al.com)
In general, consumers tend to be mag-lovers and fly to the next spark. Kinderhart said that when the luxurious Monaco Pictures opened at the Bridge Town Center in 2007, just after Valley Bend's 2006 fashion show, the business of the Hollywood 18 companies "dropped substantially." . But there are still periodic peaks. Movies such as "Black Panther", "Magic Mike" and "American Sniper" brought large audiences back to Hollywood18.
Unfortunately, Gindhart watched the last movie in Hollywood on the 18th in mid-March, and then locked the theater door in the last scene of last night. Unfortunately, this is "Impractical The Joker: The Movie. Last weekend was the Monday after the pandemic started to put reality sideways. He said: "That night, it was easy to end, I felt very strange." The film studio pulled the main release to the left and right.
Inside the 18th cinema in Huntsville’s former Regal Hollywood Stadium. (Courtesy James Floyd)
Soon, the Hollywood employee on the 18th was fired. Wilson was the only employee left to check in the theater and handle company conference calls. In the next few months, when and whether Hollywood 18th will open again is a process of pushing and pulling. . Finally, around August/September, Kindlehart said that this was the final decision. Hollywood No. 18 is over.
This Wednesday, the demolition was in progress. He drove into the theater because the front wall of the ticket office was smashed. "It's really weird," Kinderhart said. "I spent more time building houses anywhere else on the surface of the earth."
Now, Gindhart works for FedEx and has been in contact with Wilson and his assistant manager Christina Corbett. Kindlehart said: "I am still chatting with all my friends. I met them in the theater." "For me, everything happens in the theater or revolves around the theater."
If it cannot be as popular as Hollywood 18, and the previous moviegoers are used to watching new movies on their home screens, what is the real prospect of the movie industry? Gindhart believes that unless theaters can restore longer exclusivity, this will be difficult. He still saw a glimmer of hope. "People want to leave home at some point, and movies are a super easy way to do so."
The Regal Hollywood Stadium 18 Cinema in Huntsville. (File photo)
For Wilson, working alone in the once prosperous 18th district of Hollywood is very difficult. Gindhart and Corbett would stop and visit her, "Let me stay sane." Once, she posted a sweet message in front of the theater gate: "I miss my Hollywood 18 family." She especially misses her former assistant manager and long-term maintenance worker Donnie Dodson. Wilson said: "I am so full of love for everyone that I get excited when I talk about it or think about it." "They are like family and will be cherished forever."
Although several employees have worked there for decades, Hollywood 18 has left its mark on other people with shorter working hours. William Messervy, now a local lawyer, worked in the theater for a few years when he was a student at Grissom High School and later at the University of Alabama in Hansville. Messervy initially worked as a doorman in Hollywood at the age of 18 and was later promoted to assistant manager.
"For children, this is a springboard," Meswelli said. "It keeps you out of the high school crowd and teaches you how to work with people from all walks of life. But no one doesn't like the movies that are shown there, so everyone there automatically has something in common."
Jesse Pollard mainly works in the franchise in the 18th district of Hollywood-making popcorn, selling sweets, etc. He was 19 years old and just graduated from Grissom High School. He recalled that some fans would appear in the complete Spidey cosplay to watch Tobey Maguire's 2002 debut film "Spider-Man".
Pollard said Wilson, who he still calls "Ms. Moon", is a "really nice lady who makes everyone feel at home." He added that working at the 18th Theater in Hollywood "is really busy and crazy, but that place is like a gasoline engine." Today, Pollard assists in running the Shenanigans comedy theater in Huntsville and performs as a stand-up comedy. He recalled Hollywood 18 as "a truly cool environment, like a family disorder." Over the years, Pollard still kept in touch with his 18 colleagues in Hollywood through Facebook, most of the time in 2021.
It is unclear what the next steps are planned at Memorial Parkway’s former Hollywood 18 property. Local CBS member
Realty Income Corporation sold the theater to a local company, ANA Hollywood, LLC, for $3.5 million in October. According to WHNT, “documents show that the agent of ANA Hollywood, LLC is Dr. Madison, and the organizer is a lawyer in Huntsville.” To be continued...
For the first time since her career began to kick off, Maria Wilson enjoys a weekend vacation because "Pink Pretty" and "My Stand" are in the theater. When asked what he missed most about Hollywood 18, Wilson said: "All the energy from people and the environment-movie fans are the best."
Wilson's next scene begins on a farm with the help of her husband, children and grandchildren. They have obtained chickens and goats. One Pyrenees also ran around the farm. Then, like an action hero, she said: "Life will be an adventure."
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The Bing Arts Center at 716 Sumner Avenue in Springfield has not held any events since March 2020. (Don Triger | Republican)
SPRINGFIELD-The non-profit organization behind
It said that there is no money, and the 71-year-old venue has been sold.
The building has a 10,000-square-foot theater, gallery and meeting place, and the asking price is
Bing Executive Director Brian F. Hale said: "Our whole purpose is to bring people together." "Now you can't bring people together."
There has been no activity since March, and the volunteers who took over Bing from the city (only paid $1 nearly 20 years ago) can no longer pay the bills and the small mortgage they lent to the property for renovation.
Hale said of the financial difficulties at the conference: "It really doesn't make any sense to talk about a sum of money."
If Bing has a donation of $20,000 or $30,000 tomorrow, it has the ability to move on. However, for COVID, the uncertainty lasts for how long, when theaters and art galleries can reopen, and how long the public is willing to participate in events," he said.
Haier added: "You are trying to attract people to the event. You are trying to build motivation. After one year, the idea of starting again...it will take six months to start planning again."
Bing has never been able to continue to refurbish the cinema auditorium at the rear of the building, which is an estimated $1 million project.
"We have been open for 10 to 11 years," Hale said. "We never really achieved financial sustainability. We did build a nest egg. Now that it is gone, we have no choice."
He said that if there is money to do theater, it may be a bit painful.
Hale said: "If we could get the funds, it could have been as fun as in the valley," "You can only go so far without that much money."
But there are also good memories. Over the years, Bing has hosted five Grammy Award winners. At night, saxophone players jump on the table, and people push chairs aside to dance.
"It's worth doing," Hale said. "This is a great moment. We met a lot of great people."
Bing opened in 1950 as a movie theater and got its name from Bing Crosby, notorious for "White Christmas". Since March, the venue at 716 Sumner Avenue has never hosted any events.
Bing Art Center for sale
During the pandemic, performance venues were severely hit, and in order to curb the spread of COVID-19, most people were prohibited from gatherings.
Holyoke's popularity
It is caused by the prolonged coronavirus shutdown and can be sold.
Last November, Northampton’s Newsing Theatre withdrew from performances, which performed at Smith College instead of a separate performance venue.
Bing is owned by the non-profit organization "X" Main Street Corp., which purchased the building from Springfield in 2003.
. The city had taken over the property four years ago to avoid paying taxes.
Over the years, Bing has offered various courses, from basic photography to African drum music, as well as folk and rock performances, open microphone nights, gallery performances and
The real estate listing shows that the front of this converted 2,902 square foot building has a lobby and three separate rooms that can be used as offices. There is a kitchen and toilet.
The list says that the theater is in pristine condition, has not been updated, and currently has no electricity.
In 2003, the city government transferred the property to the "X" Street Company for only $1, and also imposed restrictions on the use of the property-no adult entertainment venues, no office buildings or car companies, and no houses-and also gave The city government explains how to change or renovate the building, or change its use.
Hale said that if there is money left, X'Main Street Corp. may continue once Bing is sold. After the pandemic is over, he wants to continue to sponsor events.
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