Curtain closing on city’s old theater
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Alex Coolman
COSTA MESA -- It wasn’t the wrecking ball, exactly, but it was close.
At the old Edwards theater on Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue, a crew
of workers dismantled the marquee Monday. The M and the A from the CINEMA
sign already lay discarded in a heap in the parking lot.
From the basket of a crane above, a technician reached to slice off the
Theatre sign with an acetylene torch.
For local residents, the loss of the pleasantly garish sign, with its
quirky, early ‘60s-style lettering, will be the first, most visible
indication that the Adams Avenue movie house is officially kaput.
Edward Theaters decided earlier this month to pull the plug on the space,
which it had run for 38 years.
Workers are also gutting the interior of the theater, wrenching out its
seats and tearing up the carpeting.
When the building has been thoroughly cleaned out, said Tom Sparks of
Sparks Enterprise, the company that leased the theater to Edwards, a Paul
Mitchell beauty salon will be opened.
Hair spray and conditioner will take the place of popcorn and Jujubees.
For the workers toiling in the parking lot, dismantling the sign was the
occasion for a certain amount of reminiscing.
“All the signage is coming down here today,” said Mike Bennett, who was
supervising the work crew.
A moment later, he sounded a little less official: “I saw ‘Mary Poppins’
here when I was a kid.”
Sandy Genis, former mayor of Costa Mesa, said she was sorry to see the
theater go.
“That was the premier theater in Orange County when it was built,” Genis
recalled. “They don’t make theaters like that any more, and it’s really a
shame. You go to these multiplexes today, you might as well be in your
living room watching a video screen.”
And though the chance to watch movies on a big screen was always an
attraction -- Genis remembered seeing “Lawrence of Arabia” and “The Sound
of Music” at the Adams Avenue cinema -- the sign itself, with its
cheerful bad taste and rows of shiny white light bulbs, was once a draw
itself.
“People used to drive from other cities,” Genis said. “Just to look at
the sign.”
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