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Star-Vue Drive-In
650 South Main Street
Huntington, Utah
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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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| Home » Theaters » Star-Vue Drive-In » Photos |
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Star-Vue Drive-In Photos

An aerial view of a drive-in theater 2 kilometers
south of Huntington. The theater was probably known as the
Vali Drive-In from about 1961 to about 1975, and then as the Star-Vue
Drive-In in about 1985.
Image courtesy of the US Geological Survey, 19
July 1998 |

The Star-Vue Drive-In or Vali Drive-In on a 1991
geological survey map.
Image courtesy of the US Geological Survey, 1 July 1991 |

The projection building and snack
bar, from near where the screen tower was located.
Star-Vue Drive-In, Huntington,
Utah
Photo by Grant Smith, 2 July 2005
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The projection building from the side.
Star-Vue Drive-In, Huntington,
Utah
Photo by Grant Smith, 2 July 2005
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The windows of the ticket booth are now boarded
up. A trailer sits beside it.
Star-Vue Drive-In, Huntington,
Utah
Photo by Grant Smith, 2 July 2005
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The theater's sign has fallen into disrepair.
Star-Vue Drive-In, Huntington,
Utah
Photo by Grant Smith, 2 July 2005
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