The theater was built by Walter Tebbetts in 1923. Tebbetts later built the
Hollywood Theatre (1926) and the
Oriental Theatre (1927). In 1924,
The Sunday Oregonian described the $30,000 theater as "one of the most up-to-date motion-picture houses in Portland's suburbs."
Charles W. Ertz was the building's architect, and G.O. Garrison was the original owner of the theater, which had a $15,000
pipe organ and seated an audience of 700 people. and marquee, in 2002 The original theater had a single screen. In 1949, the Laurelhurst closed briefly for another remodeling, and in 1953 management replaced the theater screen with an "ultra-wide curved screen." Eventual expansion to four viewing rooms with separate screens was not enough to compete successfully with the new
multiplex theaters built elsewhere in Portland in the 1980s. Childhood friends Woody Wheeler and Prescott Allen purchased and renovated the theater again in 2000. In the early 21st century, Laurelhurst Theater screens second-run films. It has a theme each month and a new feature film every week. Unlike typical first-run theaters, Laurelhurst serves food such as pizza, wraps, and salads, and local
microbrewed beer.
Willamette Week readers ranked Laurelhurst Theater first place in the following categories: "Best Place to See a Film" (2004), "Best Movie Theater (Local)" (2006), "Best Locally Owned Movie Theater" (2007), and "Best Cheap Date" (2009). ==Events==