'' at the Uptown Theater Theater entrepreneur
John Hamrick opened the Uptown Theater on May 25, 1926 as a single screen movie theater capable of seating 800. It was designed by architect
Victor W. Voorhees. Capable of only showing silent films, it opened with
The Sea Beast accompanied by an orchestra. In November 1936, realtor
Henry Broderick's firm leased the theater for ten years. In April 1939, the remodeled theater reopened with a policy of "showing first-run foreign films," beginning with
The Lady Vanishes. Sometime in the 1940s the flat marquee was replace with a neon sign on a triangular marquee.
B. Marcus Priteca oversaw renovations in 1947 and 1953. In 1984, an adjacent building next door was demolished. An expansion to the Uptown Theater on that site added two new theaters. Renovations to original theater expanded the lobby and the refreshment counter, added adjacent rest rooms, and reduced the seating capacity of the original theater. However, in November 2010,
AMC Theatres, the owner at the time, closed the theater. ==SIFF era==