Adams Shakespearean Theatre
Cedar City, Utah
In the early 1960s, business owners worried that the proposed Interstate 15 would divert tourists from Cedar City as they travelled to Zions and Bryce Canyon national parks. Fred C. Adams, a professor at Southern Utah State College, thought a theater festival might encourage passing tourists to exit the new freeway. For its first season in 1962, the Utah Shakespeare Festival used a makeshift outdoor platform as a stage, with the audience seated in folding chairs on the lawn. In 1977, the festival built the Adams Shakespearean Theatre, a replica of the original Globe Theatre.
Menu
Kinema Everywhere
A New Kinema Theatre is Being Built in Monroe
Richfield Reaper, 16 October 1920, page 9
The Kinema Consolidated Theatres Co., Inc., A. L. Stallings President and general manager, is expanding auspiciously. A new theater is being built in Monroe, the work on it is well under way and by November 1, if nothing interferes, it will be opened. As soon as conditions will permit, building operations will be started in Salina fora new Kinema. Other cities of southern Utah will follow, and if the company keeps up the speed, president Stallings' fondest dream, "Kinema Everywhere" will soon come true.
The new Kinema of Monroe will be where the Empire theatre used to accommodate the Monroe followers of the silent drama. A new front is being erected, new opera chairs will be installed, a basement is provided to house a modern heating plant, the stage will be remodeled and equipped with the best screen that money can buy and a most elegant curtain which will be opened and closed from the operating room. Equipment and machinery for operating will be of the best so as to insure perfect production of the films. The music will be furnished by the last word in musical instruments, an Ampico Reproducing Piano, which is the same in the player piano line as the phonograph for other music, reproducing the numbers as played by the great artists themselves.
The contract for the reconstruction and building work is in the hands of the Hanson Bros. Planing Mill. Leo Camp was appointed manager of the Monroe Kinema.