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Fox–Watson Theater Building

Historical theater From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fox–Watson Theater Buildingmap
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The Fox–Watson Theater was opened in 1931 as a movie theater in Salina, Kansas. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988 as the "Fox–Watson Theater Building".[1] It was turned non-profit, and was restored and renamed in 2003 as Stiefel Theatre, a performing arts venue.[2]

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History

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The Fox–Watson Theater was opened on February 23, 1931,[3] by Winfield W. Watson, a local businessman and banker who led the campaign and donated the land to bring a movie house to Salina.[4][1] Fox West Coast Theatres built the Art Deco movie house at a cost of $400,000 (equivalent to $7,300,000 in 2024).[1] Boller Brothers, an architectural firm from Kansas City, Missouri, designed the structure, which features Spanish Colonial influences in its terracotta facade and interior plasterwork.[1][5] The opening night feature was the Western film Not Exactly Gentlemen, starring Fay Wray.[1]

The theater operated as a first-run movie house for decades.[1] By the 1980s, then-owners Dickinson Theatres operated it as a discount theater until closing it in August 1987, citing competition from the company's own mall-based cinemas.[2] Dickinson gave the theater to the city in 1989.[2]

A non-profit group[who?] spent several years and US$3.2 million on renovation, and reopened it as the Stiefel Theatre for the Performing Arts on March 8, 2003.[2][4] Its mission is to "enrich, educate, and entertain", and the programming goal is to "offer a broad base of quality entertainment in a variety of genres that will appeal to a large demographic".[5] It houses the Salina Symphony.[6][7]

The Salina Symphony performs its subscription concerts at the theater.[6]

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References

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