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Jan. 19, 2006
RUTHERFORD ON FILM: Another Last Picture Show in Huntington: Keith Albee to
Close Jan. 22; Four Spring MU Artists Series Shows Will Go Forward at The
Keith; Theatre Now Owned by MU Foundation
By Tony Rutherford
Huntington News Network Writer
Huntington, WV (HNN) -- One of the few fully functioning first-run movie
palaces left in the United States will cease operating as a movie theatre
Sunday Jan. 22, 2006.. Huntington’s Keith Albee survived the downfall of
vaudeville, a flood, the development of television, and mall competition,
but the Thomas Lamp atmospheric theatre built in 1928 could not withstand
the opening of the Marquee Cinemas 16-screen multiplex at Pullman Square.
“We are not getting enough film products to come close to breaking even,”
Derek Hyman, president of the Greater Huntington Theatre Corporation said.
Since the land on which the historic theatre sits has already been given to
the Marshall University Foundation, “we are making a donation of the
remaining time on our lease,” Hyman said. The 99-year-lease on the building
expires around 2027.
Hyman attempted to work a “partnership” with the Marshall University
Foundation to continue operating the Keith as a hybrid movie theatre and
performing arts center until the Foundation could clarify their plans for
the building.
“We would have continued to operate as a movie theatre and helped them by
paying some of the costs of building operation, but an agreement [with the
Foundation] could not be reached.”
The 2005 movie downturn was only a contributing factor to his decision.
“It helped push us further in the red,” but he added that with the new
Marquee Pullman Square megaplex, the Keith Albee “can not be use for
anything other than a performing arts center.”
Hyman’s family opened their first Huntington theatre, The Lyric, in 1912.
A.B. and S.J. Hyman then built the Keith at 925 Fourth Avenue, which at one
time had been the site of the Zenner-Bradshaw Department Store and The
Huntington Advertiser. When it opened newspapers called it “a perfect
theatre…comparable in every detail with the finest theatres everywhere.”
The decision to hand over the keys to the Marshall Foundation has
“everybody” in the company upset as “we’re all family.” But in the long run,
“We have to do what is best for the theatre and best for the city.” He
foresees three or four job losses but predicts that will be hired at
Marquee.
Although the showing of mainstream movies ceases Sunday evening, the
Marshall Foundation will ensure that the curtain goes up there for “Bugs
Bunny on Broadway” (March 15), “Sleeping Beauty” (March 27), “Willy Wonka”
(April 13), and “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” (April 24) , which are the
remaining Marshall Artists Series shows for the Spring semester.
The venue for the Spring International Film Festival has not been
determined.
The final films to play at the Keith Albee are: “Hoodwinked,” “Memoirs of a
Geisha,” “Wolf Creek,” and “Cheaper by the Dozen 2.”
Asked if he regrets not investing in the Pullman Square theatre, Hyman said,
“I don’t think so. My concerns were not about what happened when it
initially opened. Once someone builds new theatres in Ashland and/or at the
Huntington Mall, the number of people at Pullman will be too small for the
expense of the building.”
Originally, Hyman’s family was asked to invest approximately $5,000,000 of
their company’s money to complete the theatre at Pullman. When they declined
to make the personal investment, state funds were used to finish the theatre
which was leased to Beckley-based Marquee Cinemas.
“If I had been offered the same deal as Marquee, I probably would have taken
the chance,” Hyman said. But, under that circumstance, he would have closed
down the Keith, Cinema and Camelot prior to the opening of the Pullman
theatre.
Dana Sutton, Presbyterian Campus Minister at Marshall University, said he
was neither “greatly surprised nor distressed” by the news. “Every time I’ve
seen a film in the Pullman Square Theatre, I’ve been thankful for the
comfort (especially leg room), clear view and great audio.”
As for the Keith, “it’s a grand old theatre but clearly there has not been
sufficient funding to keep it up to date with regard to sound system and
seating,” Sutton said.
A couple of other preservationists have suggested that the closure might
inject the missing adrenalin into the efforts of currently slow acting
decision makers. According to Hyman, officials at the MU Foundation and at
Marshall are “studying” the situation.
GHTC closed the Camelot Theatre Jan. 5, 2006. The projection equipment has
since been removed. The company will continue to operate the Cinema IV in
Huntington, Park Place Stadium Cinemas in Charleston and the soon to open
Fountain Place Cinema 8 in Logan, WV.
Contrary to the gala that celebrated the Keith’s opening, Hyman has no
special plans for Sunday night. “We’ll just close the doors.”



