News

Installation starts June 30. The new marquee will makes its debut with a “Light the Town Red Soiree” to be held at the ...
The theater opened on Christmas night, 1928, as the Keith-Albee Palace. Built as a vaudeville house, the theater had "lavish" dressing rooms backstage, and motion pictures originally were featured ...
Built in 1925, this mighty Wurlitzer once entertained crowds at the old RKO Keith theatre in Downtown Syracuse — but when the theatre was demolished in the 1960's, the organ was relocated to the ...
I am one of only two people left who helped to move "the Mighty Wurlitzer" from the RKO Keith's Theater on Salina Street in Syracuse to the state fairgrounds in 1967.
I was living in Queens when they closed the RKO Keith’s in Flushing, the Roslyn Theatre in Roslyn, New York, The Utopia on Union Turnpike and the much beloved Quartet on Northern Boulevard.I had ...
RKO Keith’s Flushing Theater, Queens, New York [Photo: Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre/courtesy Prestel] Marchand and Meffre have long been fascinated with all forms of ruins.
In 1929, the theater was sold to Radio-Keith-Orpheum Radio Pictures, Inc. and became one of the first theaters in New York City to show “talking pictures.” Since then, the theater has been repurposed ...
It wasn't until 1930 that it became a movie theatre for the RKO-Keiths, according to Cinema Treasures, and it operated as such until closing in 1969. RKO Bushwick, December 2020.
Madison Realty Capital arranged the financing for Xinyuan Real Estate, which intends to use the funds to build a 17-story condo property with retail and common space components.
NEW YORK CITY—The former RKO Keith's Theater at 135-35 Northern Boulevard in Flushing, Queens, has received a $30 million financing loan from Madison Realty Capital. In July 2016, Xinyuan Real ...
RKO Keith Theater at 135-35 Northern Boulevard in Flushing. The theater opened on Christmas Day in 1928 and has hosted many notable names such as Bob Hope, Jerry Lewis and Judy Garland. It maintained ...
April 14, 2019. It never really mattered what movie was playing at the 3,000-seat RKO Keith’s Theater in Flushing, Queens. The main attraction was always the theater itself.