BUSINESS
Gus G. Sentementes | May 1, 2012
I will admit to knowing little about the inner workings of the movie industry, from Hollywood to film distribution to the big screen complexes and smaller screen venues, such as Baltimore's much-loved Senator Theater . But I think I know what I want as a movie-goer. As I drove by the Senator last weekend, I noticed that it was closed for renovations. The new owners are planning three screens instead of just one, and a restaurant. That sounds nice. I can't wait to see what they do with the place.
NEWS
By Alison Knezevich, The Baltimore Sun | January 27, 2012
One of the nation's largest movie theater companies will anchor the Towson Circle III development, becoming the first announced tenant of a delayed project officials hope will spur revitalization in the heart of the Baltimore County seat. Cinemark plans to open the state-of-the-art movie complex in the fall of 2014, featuring 16 wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling screens and 3,200 stadium-style seats, county officials and developers said Friday. They hope the $85 million Towson Circle III — located on four acres bounded by East Joppa Road and Delaware, Pennsylvania and Virginia avenues — will drive other development in Towson's center.
EXPLORE
October 18, 2011
I heartily agree with a fellow Columbia resident who wrote recently about films that do not come to our theaters here in Columbia. If my husband and I don't go to Baltimore to see foreign and independent films, we wait for Netflix to offer them on DVD. How great it would be if our movie theaters showed movies outside the mainstream pop culture! I believe there are many people here that would support these types of films. Kathy Guerin Owen Brown
ENTERTAINMENT
By Erik Maza and The Baltimore Sun | July 15, 2011
Parents taking your kids to "Harry Potter" tonight, don't fret. If you go to Landmark's Harbor East Cinema, at least you won't have to watch the movie sober. The theater's bartender, Ginny Lawhorn, has come up with a "Harry Potter"-themed cocktail menu to coincide with the movie's release. Not that the movie's bad. In fact, reviews have been ecstatic . But who can keep up with all that nonsense about muggles and mudbloods? Now, when your kids - or maybe your significant other with the Harry Potter obsession - is blathering on about Horcrux or Quittich or whatever, you can tune out for a couple of hours with one of Lawhorn's anesthesizing cocktails.
ENTERTAINMENT
By Tim Smith, The Baltimore Sun | June 9, 2011
Four decades ago, "Company" opened on Broadway, putting Stephen Sondheim firmly on the music theater map. The show left an indelible impression on a young person who saw the premiere in 1970. "I was taken to the show when I was 11 years old for my birthday," said actor and director Lonny Price. "'Company' has one of the best collections of theater songs ever. This show never gets old for me. It never disappoints me. " Back in April, Price directed a starry concert version of the Sondheim classic presented by the New York Philharmonic at Lincoln Center.
BUSINESS
By Arthur Hirsch, The Baltimore Sun | May 5, 2011
Nearly 20 years after opening, the eight-screen movie theater at Towson Commons that once seemed the center of the county seat's downtown will be closing this month. "I think it was pretty inevitable the movie theater was going to close," said David Marks, the county councilman who represents the Towson area. Still, he said, "It's a sad ending. I remember going there in the early 1990s. It was the cornerstone of Towson. " According to an article in the Towson Times, the owner has terminated the lease with AMC, and the theater will show its last movies on Sunday, May 15. The theater has been expected to close for some time, as crowds had dwindled in recent years and other businesses left Towson Commons one by one. For years the three-story shopping center at York Road and Pennsylvania Avenue has been vacant but for the movie theater, which has struggled since theaters with stadium seating opened at Hunt Valley and White Marsh.
BUSINESS
By Lorraine Mirabella, The Baltimore Sun | April 25, 2011
Regal Cinemas will open a theater at Waugh Chapel Towne Centre, a planned mixed-use development in Gambrills in West Anne Arundel County, project developer Greenberg Gibbons said Monday. The theater will offer digital projection and will be the first IMAX cinema in the area. The 52,000-square-foot theater will join anchors Wegmans, Target, Dick's Sporting Goods and Petco in a 1.2 million-square-foot center with 650,000 square feet of shops, 125,000 square feet of offices and 380 apartments.
NEWS
By Mary Gail Hare, The Baltimore Sun | March 4, 2011
Roy Wagner's musical treasure requires considerable space, with its 500-some pipes, its floor-to-ceiling relay panel filled with thousands of tiny pneumatic devices and a cumbersome blower with huge, noisy fans and belts. The instrument's elegant console, white and trimmed in gold leaf, dominates any room. And the sound that emanates when a musician tackles its double keyboard, numerous controls and floor pedals is equally grand. Believed to be the last remaining theater organ from a Baltimore movie house, the 1927 Wurlitzer has captured Wagner's fancy since the 1960s, when he used to borrow a key to the old State Theatre on Monument Street to play the shuttered playhouse's 2.5-ton wonder.
ENTERTAINMENT
By Chris Kaltenbach, The Baltimore Sun | October 15, 2010
Old friends Virginia Stein and Gretchen Hathaway welcomed back another old friend Friday afternoon. The two women were among the 50 or so movie fans who showed up for the quiet reopening of Baltimore's 71-year-old Senator Theatre , which had been dark for nearly three months. With just a few minutes to go before the movie started, they agreed the day offered a genuine cause for celebration. "I've been coming to this theater all my life, and that means back to the 1940s," said Stein, who lives in Gardenville.
NEWS
By Chris Kaltenbach, The Baltimore Sun | July 20, 2010
The tempest brewing around the fate of Baltimore's sole surviving single-screen movie theater continued to churn Monday, with one potential operator denying it had been forced to withdraw from consideration while another revealed an unexpected, last-minute appeal to take over the building. Towson University and its radio station, WTMD, dropped out of the running to operate the Senator Theatre because of economic concerns and not because of pressure from the Baltimore Development Corp.