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HISTORY
The history of Bow Tie Cinemas begins
over 100 years ago, in the era of the Nickelodeon, when B.S. Moss
began his long and illustrious career providing popular
entertainment to the public.
The business of operating street front
Nickelodeons quickly gave way to Vaudeville, which was the heart of
B.S. Moss Theaters until the 1930s when B.S. Moss sold his last
Vaudeville theater and dedicated himself fully to building and
operating motion picture theaters.
B.S. Moss’ Theaters were the
springboard of many famous vaudevillians. The former Colony Theater
on Broadway was home to premieres and exclusive engagements of early
Walt Disney films. The cartoon that launched Mickey Mouse to the
world, Steamboat Willie, had its first showing here. The
Colony also premiered Disney’s Fantasia, followed by an
exclusive run of that film for more than a year in “Fantasound” a
revolutionary sound process for the time.
In 1936, B.S. Moss opened the Criterion
Theater, known then as The Theater of Tomorrow, on Broadway in the
heart of Times Square. The Criterion was the first motion picture
theater built exclusively for the exhibition of talking motion
pictures. It operated continuously for 63 years and was the home of
several major New York film premiers including Sleeping Beauty,
My Fair Lady, Funny Girl, Lawrence of Arabia
and Alien.
Throughout the 20th Century, B.S. Moss
Theaters provided entertainment to many, becoming what was then the
largest independently-owned theater circuit in the New York
Metropolitan Area.
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B.S. Moss
Franklin Theater
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B.S. Moss Coliseum
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World Premiere
of "Alien"
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Click on a photograph to
see an enlarged view.
BOW TIE CINEMAS TODAY
Today, Bow Tie Cinemas, now a four
generation family-owned company, is dedicated to returning style and
elegance to the movie-going experience. In each of its 18 locations
and 150 screens, Bow Tie Cinemas provides the best possible
presentation and service to its patrons, continuing in the tradition
of its founder.
In November, 2004 stylish movie going
returned to Downtown New Haven, CT, with the grand opening of the
Criterion Cinemas. Twice expanded, the Criterion now boasts nine
screens of first class entertainment in a classic 1936 building.
In 2006, Bow Tie Cinemas expanded again
with the purchase of twelve theater locations in Connecticut and
Maryland, and in the spring of 2007, first-run movies returned to
Downtown Schenectady, NY with the opening of Movieland. In the fall
of 2007, movies returned to the town center of West Hartford, CT,
with the opening of Criterion Cinemas at Blue Back Square.
Richmond had its first new movie
theater in more than forty years when Movieland at Boulevard Square
opened in early 2009. Featuring seventeen stadium-seated
auditoriums, Movieland is a themed adaptive reuse of a 19th Century
former locomotive assembly plant.
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Lobby of the Criterion Cinemas in
New Haven, CT
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Bow Tie Cinemas blade
sign
at the Movieland in Schenectady, NY
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The Majestic in Stamford, CT
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Click on a photograph to
see an enlarged view.
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