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Pacific Paseo 14 / ArcLight Pasadena/ Regal Paseo

336 E. Colorado Blvd. Pasadena, CA 91101 | map |

The news: It's reopened as the Regal Paseo

 
Original opening: October 19, 2001 as the Pacific Paseo 14. Its opening led to the closing of several nearby theatres such as the UA Marketplace 6 and the AMC Old Pasadena 6, now the iPic Pasadena. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 
 
 

A 2001 opening ad. Thanks to Mike Rivest for locating it. Visit his site: Movie-Theatre.org 

The Paseo got a remodel and re-emerged as the 14 screen Arclight Cinemas on May 7, 2010. ArcLight, a brand used by Pacific Theatres, offered reserved seating, a restaurant and other upscale amenities. The theatre operations were a unit of what they renamed the Decurion Corporation.

Closing as the ArcLight: The theatre closed in March 2020 due to Covid restrictions. In April 2021 Decurion, the parent company, noted that they would not be reopening any of their ArcLight or Pacific locations. See the Cinerama Dome page for links to stories about the closurre and the fate of some of the locations. This was just a leased situation -- the building is owned by Onni Group, the mall operator. 
 
Regal signed a lease in April 2023. They're still in the middle of Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings but also doing deals. The Hollywood Reporter had an April 13 story: "Regal to Reopen Former ArcLight Movie Theater in Pasadena." Thanks to Jonathan Raines for spotting the news.
 
Status: It reopened as the Regal Paseo June 2, 2023. 

Lobby views: 

The lobby in the Pacific Paseo 14 days. Photo: Bill Counter - 2007 
 
 

The east end of the lobby of the closed ArcLight. Photo: Bill Counter - August 2022 
 
 

The iconic clock and readerboard. It was showing the same attraction playing in all 14 auditoria: "Power."  Photo: Bill Counter - August 2022
 
 

The west end of the lobby.  Photo: Bill Counter - August 2022
 
 
 
Open for business as the Regal Paseo. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 
 

The bar at the east side of the lobby. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 
 

Looking in toward the snackbar. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 
 

The east inner lobby corridor. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 
 

 An inner lobby corridor on the west side of the complex. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 
 

The vista back toward the main lobby. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2023
 

More exterior views:


2007 - A pre-renovation view. Photo:  Bill Counter



2007 - Action at the boxoffice.  Photo:  Bill Counter
 

 
2019 - Operating as the ArcLight Cinemas. Photo: Google Maps  
 
 
 
2022 - An August view of the entrance of the long-closed complex. Photo: Bill Counter  
 
 

2023 - Temporary signage up in June during the first week of Regal operation. Photo: Bill Counter

More Information: Cinema Tour has 7 photos of the complex from 2003 and 2004 by Ron Pierce and Scott Neff. Cinema Treasures has some comments as well as several photos.

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Cinematheque 16

73 N. Fair Oaks Ave. Pasadena, CA 91124 | map |


Opened: April 1968. Cinematheque 16, an operation showing experimental films, used the main hall in the Masonic Lodge that's seen in the center of this c.1925 photo by Albert Hiller from the Pasadena Public Library collection that appears on the Pasadena Digital History Collaboration website. Thanks to Scott Babcock for finding it for his Noirish Los Angeles post # 44134.

The building was on the west side of the street just north of Union St. In the photo Union is just out of the frame to the left. The theatre on the right is the venue later known as the Oaks Theatre at 85 N. Fair Oaks.

In the 1969 city directory it's listed as the Cinematheque Theatre. The venture was an expansion of the earlier Cinematheque 16 located on Sunset Blvd. in what is now West Hollywood.

With Roger Delfont's articles on the site Ad Sausage that analyze the film ads that appeared in the Los Angeles Free Press is this discussion of the Cinematheque:

"The success of Sunset Strip location spurned two more locations; San Francisco and Pasadena (which didn't last long). Promoting itself as 'Possibly America's Most Unusual Theatre,' the Pasadena Cinematheque 16 opened at 7:00pm on April 25, 1968, and debuted with Warhol's 'latest triumph,' 'I, A Man.' The second feature was the 10-minute animation, 'Lapis' (James Whitney, 1966). Programming remained inspired with Paris Earl in 'Johnny Gigs Out' - also screened at the Watts Summer Festival, 'Pimple, Pimple, It's Only a Pimple' and 'Portrait of Jason' (Shirley Clarke, 1967) - 'A landmark in both queer and confessional cinema.' In 1968, the JFK assassination documentary 'Rush to Judgment' (Mark Lane, 1967) was shown..."

Joe Vogel recalls the Cinematheque in his Noirish Los Angeles Post #44132:

"In the mid-1960s I once visited the Pasadena Auction Gallery, which was then located in the old Pasadena Masonic Lodge at 73-77 N. Fair Oaks...[It] was dedicated in 1905 and served as the Masons' home until they moved to a new, much larger building on South Euclid in the latter half of the 1920s. I'm not sure when the Pasadena Auction Gallery took over the old building, but it was there for quite a while. In 1968, the gallery let that meeting room to the operators of Cinematheque 16, which had been operating a theater on the Sunset Strip for a couple of years. They ran indie and experimental films..."

 

A Los Angeles Free Press ad for a November 1968 "Film and Dance Orgy." Thanks to Nick Nelson for spotting the post on the Los Angeles Free Press 60s Music Facebook page. Performers included the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Dillard & Clark, Mugwumps, Tim Rose, Lee Michaels, David Blue, MC2, Bob Lind, and The Morning."
 
Closing:  It was running into the 1970s. Joe Vogel notes that at the end it was running X-rated product.

Status: There's now a new office building on the site.

Joe comments: 
 
"The old lodge building and everything else on its block was demolished in the mid-1970s to make way for a big parking garage for Parsons Engineering, still there today. The Masonic Temple was a very handsome old building, and would have made a significant contribution to today's Old Pasadena, so it is especially unfortunate that it was knocked down only a few years before the surviving part of the neighborhood became such a roaring success."
 

 
A 70s photo located by Jose Sotela for a post on the Suicide Bridge Social Club Facebook page.

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Colorado Theatre

2588 E. Colorado Blvd. Pasadena, CA 91107 | map |


Opened: January 7, 1949 as a first run arthouse for Westates Theatres / Hatch & Blackman. The initial film was "The Mozart Story" with the grand opening broadcast over local station KXLA. The photo, reproduced on the Cinema Tour page about the theatre, is one that appeared in the 1949-1950 edition of "Theatre Catalog," published by Quigley Publishing.

The building is on the south side of the street between Altadena Dr. and San Gabriel Blvd. The Uptown Theatre is four blocks to the west and the former Esquire Theatre is a block to the east.

Architect: Clarence J. Smale designed the building. The auditorium features an arched Lamella roof, a style of construction using short pieces of wood in prefabricated segments bolted together in a rhomboid pattern.



The specs on the project from the 1949-1950 "Theatre Catalog." The original interior color scheme was sunset red and green with the theatre's proscenium called a "pie-crust frame." The building cost was $80,000 with an additional $29,500 spent on equipment. Thanks to Cinema Tour for reproducing the "Theatre Catalog" items.

Seating: Originally 748, all on a single level. Later it was down to 650.

Projection: Motiograph AAA heads, Motio Mirrophonic sound, Ashcraft C-70 lamps.

Matt Hormann, in Part 2 of his now-vanished 2011 Hometown Pasadena article "Ghost Theaters of Colorado" discussed a 1952 censorship battle:

"When the theater announced it would show Japanese film 'Rashomon,' a 1951 Academy Award winner for Best Foreign Film, city officials objected, and Pasadena Mayor A.E. Abernathy, stated that he didn’t think the city should be 'opened up to a certain type of foreign film.' A strangely archaic notion today, until 1961 Pasadena had a film censorship board, and any film shown in the city had to meet the approval of a panel of censors, and be issued a certificate stating that it was family-appropriate.

"Films could be arbitrarily pulled from theaters if they did not meet the panel’s standards. It took a letter of complaint from Westates Theatres, testimony from a prominent Pasadena art critic, and a strong protest from the Colorado’s owner, Terry McDaniel, before Rashomon was eventually approved by the censors—a process that took several weeks."

The theatre's art policy was soon abandoned and forgotten. When the Esquire opened in the 60s, it was acclaimed by the L.A. Times as Pasadena's first art house.

The Colorado was later operated by Fred Stein's Statewide Theatres. Loew's took it over in November 1967 and advertised it as as Loew's Colorado. General Cinema got the theatre in June 1972 when they took over the southern California Loew's houses. Century Cinema Circuit took over in November 1973. They were a new company headed by Fred Stein and his son Robert and no relation to Ray Syufy's Bay Area-based Century Theatres. 

Century actually owned the building and when they headed into bankruptcy in late 1976, Seattle-based Sterling Recreation Organization bought some of their assets, including the Colorado. SRO took over in October 1976. When they got out of the southern California market in June 1985 they sold their houses to Pacific Theatres. It was acquired by Laemmle Theatres in 1986.

Closing: The Colorado was closed by Laemmle in 2001. Matt Hormann commented:

"As the years progressed, wear and tear took its toll on the theater, and as with the Esquire, the opening of the Playhouse 7 signaled the inevitable end of the Colorado. The theater went out with a bang, however. Foreign film 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' played for six weeks straight at the end of 2000, selling out shows two hours in advance, and, according to a Laemmle spokesperson, becoming 'the biggest hit in the history of the theater.' In January 2001, the Colorado shut its doors for good."

Status: It's now a church called the Pasadena City Church, formerly the Pasadena Christian Center.


Interior views: 


A lobby view from the 1949-1950 "Theatre Catalog," via Cinema Tour.



The auditorium with its "pie-crust" proscenium. It's a photo from the 1949-1950 "Theatre Catalog" appearing on the Cinema Tour page about the Colorado.



 A 2013 view of the auditorium. Photo: Facebook.com/PasadenaChurch



A roof detail near the screen end of the building. Photo: Facebook.com/PasadenaChurch - 2015



A curious view to the rear. Photo: Facebook.com/PasadenaChurch - 2015



More exterior views:  

1966 - "Fantastic Voyage" and "How to Steal a Million" were playing at the time of this shot from the Theatre Historical Society collection. Thanks to Kelli Shapiro for locating the image for her discussion of the Colorado on page 124 of her 2024 Arcadia Publishing book "Inland Empire and San Gabriel Valley Movie Theatres." 


1979 - Thanks to the now-vanished American Classic Images site for this view looking east. Note the added metal cladding on the facade.



1981 - A photo shared by a contributor going by the name of Hoppy that appeared on the now-vanished site Webshots.



1983 - Thanks to American Classic Images for this photo.



1997 - The theatre under Laemmle management. It's a photo appearing on Cinema Treasures, a post from that site's contributor Marcel. 



2009 - A terrazzo view. Thanks to Michelle Gerdes for her photo. For more great photos from this ace theatre explorer see her various Theatres albums on Flickr. This view of the churched version of the Colorado is in her Theatres - California album.



2010 - Checking out the marquee soffit and the rest of the facade as fancifully redone by the church. Photo: Bill Counter



2010 - The facade from across the street. The church gets points for uncovering the upper part of the original facade and doing a more interesting marquee and display case treatment than the theatre had in its final decades as a film house. Photo: Bill Counter



2010 - A photo from Matthew H. on Yelp



2011 - A view west. Photo: Google Maps



2015 - A nice shot showing off the trim around the doors and display cases. Photo: Google Maps


 
2019 - Banners on the marquee for a new name. Photo: Bill Counter 
 

2024 - The Pasadena Fire Department in action for "a small structure fire." Thanks to Dave Lessig for spotting the February post on the Department's Facebook page.

More information: See the Cinema Treasures page for some nice comments.

Thanks to the Cinema Tour page on the Colorado for the research on the dates for the Colorado's many different operators. In addition to the items appearing here, the page has some 2003 views from Scott Neff. Ignore the 1997 photo -- it's from the Academy Theatre.

Check out Kelli Shapiro's 2024 Arcadia Publishing book "Inland Empire and San Gabriel Valley Movie Theatres."

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Esquire Theatre

2670 E. Colorado Blvd. Pasadena, CA 91107 | map |

Opened: April 1, 1964 by Laemmle Theatres as a first run art house. "The Lovers of Teruel" was the initial film. The building is on the south side of the street just a bit west of San Gabriel Blvd. Thanks to Marcel for posting his 1997 photo of the theatre on Cinema Treasures.  L.A. Times film critic Kevin Thomas commented in an April 3 article: "Pasadena’s first art theater, the Esquire, combines elegance and comfort." 

Architect: It was a conversion of a space that had been a pizza joint. Noted motion picture art director Eugène Lourié designed the various aspects of the remodel.

Seating: 525


An opening day ad. Thanks to Mike Rivest for locating it.
 
 
 
An April 1964 ad for the opening film "The Lovers of Teruel." Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating this and other Esquire ads for a Facebook post on Ken's Movie Page.   
 
Joe Vogel located an April 6, 1964 Boxoffice article that noted the opening and listed several interesting features including a wheelchair platform and a row of seats wired for hard-of-hearing patrons.

The Esquire was discussed in Matt Hormann's now-vanished 2011 Hometown Pasadena article "Ghost Theatres of Colorado (Part 2 of 2)." He noted:

"A no-frills art house, its programming epitomized the independent spirit of the Laemmle franchise. It hosted an annual Cinéma Français series, ballet film festivals, performances by the Youth Theater Workshop, and periodic retrospectives devoted to the work of Michelangelo Antonioni and others. 
 
"It was also noteworthy for presenting live acts such as singer Marni Nixon and pianist Lillian Steuber. The Esquire could even boast of having violinist Jascha Heifetz attend one of its classical music performances, according to a 1988 L.A. Times article."


Closing: The Esquire closed in late 2000. This theatre and the nearby Colorado (also a Laemmle operation), were made superfluous with the opening of the chain's Playhouse 7

Status: It was converted into a Washington Mutual branch in 2004 and later was a Chase branch. As of 2019 it was vacant. By 2022 it had become a thrift store to benefit Huntington Hospital. 
 

More exterior views: 

1992 - Running "The Crying Game" with Stephen Rea and Jaye Davidson. Thanks to Kelli Shapiro for locating the image for the discussion of the Esquire on page 125 of her 2024 Arcadia Publishing book "Inland Empire and San Gabriel Valley Movie Theatres." It's a photo from the Tom B'hend/Preston Kaufmann Collection at the AMPAS Margaret Herrick Library. 


1997 - Thanks to Scott Neff for his photo. It appears on the Cinema Tour page about the theatre. 



c.1999 - A photo of the closed theatre that once appeared on the now-vanished website L.A. Okay. 



2010 - The building as a Chase branch. Photo: Bill Counter



 
2019 - The former theatre available for lease. Photo: Bill Counter 
 

2022 - A new life as a thrift store. Thanks to Chris Nichols for doing the reconaissance and snapping the shot. He's an editor at Los Angeles magazine and is also the author of the Taschen book "Walt Disney's Disneyland."
 

Recent interior views:

A 2023 photo by Chris Nichols. As he says: "Not much left inside except for the badly patched terrazzo floor at the (former) entrance."
 


Looking south toward the screen end of the building. Photo: Chris Nichols - 2023
 

The view back toward the street. Photo: Chris Nichols - 2023. Thanks!

More information: See the Cinema Treasures page for more data and recollections. The Cinema Tour page has a 2003 Ken Roe photo in addition to the 1997 Scott Neff photo here on this page. 

Check out Kelli Shapiro's 2024 Arcadia Publishing book "Inland Empire and San Gabriel Valley Movie Theatres."

| back to top | Pasadena theatresSan Gabriel Valley, Pomona, Whittier theatres | San Gabriel Valley: theatres by address | Downtown | Westside | Hollywood | Westwood and Brentwood | Along the Coast | [more] Los Angeles movie palaces | the main alphabetical list | theatre history resources | film and theatre tech resources | theatres in movies | LA Theatres on facebook | contact info | welcome and site navigation guide |