Vaudeville to films Wealthy Theatre was constructed in 1911 for
vaudeville and live theater, and later became a neighborhood movie house. The original name of the venue was the Pastime Vaudette. Due to the decline in popularity of vaudeville, the Pastime closed its doors before the end of the decade, becoming a warehouse for the
Michigan Aircraft Company during
World War I. The Theatre was renamed Wealthy Theatre (the Wealthy Street theatre) in the 1920s after being purchased by Oscar and Lillian Varneau and resumed operation as a movie house.
Bombing In 1930, theaters in the area had a
labor dispute with the union over hiring non-union staff. Two union
projectionists blew up the rear of Wealthy Theatre with dynamite on March 19. Weeks earlier, explosions also took place at two other Grand Rapids theatres, with bombs planted in their ticket offices. The projectionists also confessed to the March 17 bombing of
Muskegon's Regent Theatre (eventually demolished in 1972).
Restoration By the 1960s it had shifted to foreign films, and by the mid-1970s, operations ceased. The building stood empty and decaying for more than 25 years before the South East Economic Development neighborhood association launched a capital campaign to fund its restoration. The theatre re-opened in 1999 as an independent not-for-profit community arts center. In 2005 Wealthy Theatre was acquired by the Grand Rapids Community Media Center, a
non-profit organization operating the local
public-access cable TV channel, GRTV, as well as
community radio station 88.1FM
WYCE, and
The Rapidian, an online
citizen journalism platform. == Facilities ==