![]() .5300 Edmondson Avenue Baltimore
Maryland ( West Baltimore )...........
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Photo - Courtesy of the
Caplan/Pasco Family
Notes on the Westway Theatre
from Neil Caplan.......
"My grandfather Nathan Pasco owned the Westway Theatre from the 1950's till it closed in 1976. My father Abel Caplan was the general manager. I grew up working at the Theatre when I was 12 till I was 19. It was a great neighborhood theatre -it used to have a stage in it and in the 1950's and early 60's, my father would book stage acts that would perform before the movie was played. There were long lines of kids on a Saturday afternoons waiting to get in for 15 cents and receive a free bag of popcorn, and to see "Marco the Magnificent". the magician. (My uncle Alvin believes he set someone on fire at my father's theater in Poplar Grove). The interior of the theatre was a simple art deco design. There was an outdoor lobby behind the box office and a interior lobby that sloped up to the area were the candy counter was. Originally, there was only a nee wall that separated the candy counter area from the auditorium. The auditorium had dark green fabric walls with a decorative cream colored scroll with a leaf design with art deco sconces. In the 1960's, my father enclosed the wall with slatted shutters to separate the auditorium from the upper candy counter lobby. In the 1970's, my grandfather would remodel the interior by removing the louvered shutters and building a solid wall, which protected the auditorium from unwanted sound from the lobbies. The green fabric scrolled walls would be covered with pleated material. The old stage was covered with a new larger screen. The outside lobby was enclosed and new carpets were put down throughout the theatre. In the 1970's we used to play midnight shows that included 100 Hotels, Woodstock, The Beatles movies to sell out crowds. We had two projectionists who liked to play games with the audience. During a showing of Easy Ryder, during the motor cycle race scene, Joe drove his motor cycle up and down the isle to screaming crowds. During a showing at a sold out matinee for kids, Joe and Rick switched the men's room and ladies room signs. My grandfather was so mad because people who were regulars went to the correct bathrooms and new patrons followed the signs causing pandemonium in the bath rooms. There was an opening at the bottom of the screen. You could climb through it onto the old stage and I would sometimes sit on the stage and watch a movie from behind the screen. It was really cool, because there were thousands of colored dots that would jump all over the old stage and on me. I had great memories of The Westway Theatre.I thought I share some of them with you. I also wanted to share this photo of the Westway in the 1950's with the long lines of kids, waiting in the snow to see Laurel and Hardy. ( Above ) |
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![]() Baltimore's
Westway movie theatre - : Kilduffs / Thomas Paul
photo
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A look at the unusual marquee
of the Westway Theatre in the 1980's. This
theatre has a wild looking front, and is just
inside the City Limit, by about ten feet. It
sits on a corner, and the front takes advantage
of that angle, with glass blocks just above the
marquee, that I believe may have at one time had
lights behind them. Even with the front painted
over, the building still stands out to this day.
The Westway
Theatre opened in the 1930's and continued to
operate into the 1970's. When the theater
closed, it was converted into a church, and has
been a church ever since.
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![]() Baltimore's
Westway movie theatre - : Kilduffs / Thomas Paul
Photo - 1986
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![]() Baltimore's
Westway movie theatre - : Kilduffs / Thomas Paul
Photo 1986
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![]() Baltimore's
Westway movie theatre - : Kilduffs / Thomas Paul
Photo 1986
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![]() Program for the
Westway Theatre , circa 1940's
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![]() Baltimore's
Westway movie theatre - : Kilduffs / Thomas Paul
Photo 1986
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