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  1. 75201. The Palace Theatre (the 3rd on Elm Street with this name) opened on June 11, 1921 with Gareth Hughes in “Sentimental Tommy”. Initially an independent theatre, it was taken over by Paramount-Publix Theatres in 1927 and then by Interstate Theatres Inc. in 1930.

  2. Dec 9, 2016 · by Paula Bosse. In the 1950s, the two prestige movie theaters in Dallas were the Majestic and the Palace, mainstays of “Theater Row” and just a few blocks apart on Elm Street. The Palace Theater (at Elm and Ervay, across from the Wilson Building) is seen in the two postcards featured here. The one above shows Elm Street looking west.

  3. Oct 4, 2018 · The movie on the marquee is “A Nice Girl Like Me,” starring Barbara Ferris, which opened at the Palace on Sept. 19, 1969. The Palace Theatre was located on the north side of Elm Street, just west of Ervay, at 1625 Elm — by 1969, “Theater Row” consisted of only a handful of theaters.

  4. Nov 15, 2016 · Photographed by Bill Kirchner, November 15, 2016. 1. Palace Theater Marker. Inscription. Palace Theater. . F.M. Phipps and G.S. Layton opened the Palace Theater in 1926. The theater suffered two fires, the second burning it to the ground in 1936. Phipps' widow, Mable, and Layton's son G.R. hired W. Scott Dunne of Dallas to design a new ...

  5. Jun 17, 2021 · Levy sold the remodeled building to E. H. Hulsey of Dallas. Hulsey owned several theaters. In this rather folksy open letter, note the reference to Barry Burke (see Part 2). The Palace Theater opened on October 19, 1919 with The Hoodlum starring Mary Pickford. In 1921 the “truly marvelous photoplay” The Last of the Mohicans was presented.

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  6. The theater suffered two fires, the second burning it to the ground in 1936. Phipps' widow, Mable, and Layton's son G.R. hired W. Scott Dunne of Dallas to design a new moviehouse at the site. Built by H.J. Naylor, the Palace reopened in February 1937, and the Palace Barber Shop and City Newsstand also operated from the building.

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  8. May 15, 2024 · It closed in the early 1900s. The second Palace Theater was also on Elm Street and was renamed the Harlem Theater. But this entry is about the third Palace Theater to appear on Elm Street, that of Southern Enterprises’ Palace Theater, a $1,000,000 showplace designed by Thomas W. Lamb of Chicago and built by C.D. Hill of Dallas.