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Empress Theatre
9104 West 2700 South
Magna, Utah
(801) 347-7373
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Empress Theatre

The name 'Empress' is spelled out in with white light bulbs, with a border of red lights.

The Empress Theatre
has opened once again! 
9104 West 2700 South
Magna, Utah
801-347-7373
Empress Theatre

    
 
The OHPAA group continues it's renovating efforts, with an expanded parking area now ready to use and two addtitional rooms now painted!   We have also been officially designated a Non'profit Corporation by the IRS!  The Empress is also the filming location for a new Disney Movie  ("Dadnapped") which will be aired on the Disney Channel next spring.  We are very excited!
  
And come see the new carpet in our lobby! It's gorgeous!
   
 Things are happening fast at the Empress.  You'll have to hurry to keep up!

Isis Theater
Salt Lake City, Utah

Open in 1908, the Isis Theatre was one of the first motion picture theaters in Salt Lake City.  Its manager in 1910 was Max Florence, who a year later tried to blackmail the LDS Church by selling amateur photos of the Salt Lake Temple interior.  Dan Kostopulos, a benefactor of underprivileged children, later renamed it the Broadway Theatre.  In a 1976 press conference, Palace Theatre operator Lee Harper complained bitterly of persecution, made acusations of police brutality, threatened the life of a local judge, and accused the LDS Church of being involved with the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luthar King.

 
 
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Full front outside view of Empress Theatre

Photographer: Mike Caldwell
Date: 18 November 2006

Empress Theatre
9104 West 2700 South
Magna, Utah
(801) 347-7373
empresstheatre@empresstheatre.com
http://empresstheatre.com
 
Status:
Open 
Total Seats:
178 
Open:
1916  
On National Register of Historic Places
 
The Empress Theatre opened in 1916[1] as a Burlesque show for the local miners at Kennecott.  In 1917 it began showing silent movies.[1] The theater remained open through at least 1930.[2]

Stephen Barker, a historian-writer, purchased the Empress Theatre and Gem Theatre and in 1978 began renovating them as part of a Magna City restoration project.
  Barker hoped to reopen the Empress Theatre for live performances and art films in January or February 1979,[3] but apparently his plans never came to fruition.

Leo W. Ware worked for over a decade, almost single-handedly, to renovate the Empress Theatre for live theater.
[4] Ware became the owner of the Empress Theatre after trading for it in a real estate deal in 1983.  He invested $30,000 in the renovation and worked for hundreds of hours to rip up tile, remove paint from brick and wood, tear down and erect interior walls, replace floors and repair the ceiling.  Some improvements to the exterior of the building were funded by grants from Salt Lake County, the National Park Service, and the Utah Division of State History.  Speaking of the hard labor of remodeling, Ware said, “It's only work if you'd rather be doing something else.  I'd rather be doing this.”[1]

An early obstacle to his efforts came in July 1984, when the Salt Lake County commissioners decided to raze the “abandoned” Empress Theatre because it was unsafe.
[5]  They later reversed their decision and gave Ware until 1 December 1984 to make a complete structural renovation of the theater.[6]

An accident and its subsequent physical limitations later prevented Ware from continuing the work on the theater.

In 2006 the Oquirrh Hills Performing Arts Alliance, a non-profit organization dedicated to bringing culture and education to the Magna community and surrounding areas, leased the Empress Theatre building and is now renovating the historic structure.  The theatre reopened on 4 November 2006 with "Forever Plaid", a traditional favorite. 

Leo Ware and his family were able to attend one of the first few performances of "Forever Plaid" in the now reopened theater.  We are grateful he was able to see his dream come true. Note: Leo passed away on January 3, 2007.

Renovation continues, but the lobby and auditorium are ready to go!



1. “Magna Theater Nears the Reopening 'Stage'”, Deseret News, 11 August 1991, Page A1
2. Polk's Utah Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1918-1919, 1920-1921, 1927-1928, 1930-1931; Polk's Salt Lake City Directory, 1930
3.
“Film historian brings new life to old Magna theatres”, Salt Lake Tribune, 14 May 1978, Page E11
4. “Magna Showing Signs of New Life”, 26 June 1994, Page M1
5.
"County Says Raze Empress Theater", Salt Lake Tribune, 27 July 1984, Page B3
6.
"Commission Spares Empress Theater", Salt Lake Tribune, 06 September 1984, Page 12C