The Ray Evans Seneca Theater is a stage theater located in the city of Salamanca, New York at the corner of Broad Street (New York State Route 417) and Main Street in the center of the city. The theater is named after Ray Evans, a songwriter who was born and raised in Salamanca.
The theatre was originally called the Seneca Theatre and built by the Schine Chain to replace an aging venue a couple of blocks up the street. The building was designed by John and Drew Eberson. Construction was started in 1941 just before the outbreak of World War II. Because of a shortage of building materials caused by the war, construction was not completed until 1945 after the war ended.[ citation needed ]
The theatre was called the Seneca after the Indian nation which owns the underlying ground. The entire city of Salamanca is located on the Seneca Indian reservation. The land is ground-leased from the Senecas and everyone in the town pays an annual rent to the Seneca Nation.
The theater lobby originally featured many sculptures in crevices on the walls. It was operated by the Schine Chain until 1965. The theater continued to show movies until June 1972 when the auditorium ended up under eight feet of water in the flooding which accompanied Hurricane Agnes (exacerbated by the recently built Kinzua Dam). The Theater originally had 1272 seats.[ citation needed ]
The Seneca sat abandoned until the early 1980s when Cattaraugus County acquired the building. Over the next several years the theatre was slowly renovated and transformed into Cattaraugus County Living Arts Association (CCLAA), [1] also known as the Cattaraugus County Center For the Performing Arts. [2]
The theater shut down in 2011 due to the building's electrical system falling into disrepair and a lack of funding to repair it. [3] Stage events were moved to the Salamanca High School auditorium and to the Seneca Allegany Events Center on the west side of the city in the interim. The CCLAA remained active and maintained the theater's marquee as a billboard, seeking to use revenues from the marquee rentals as well as rentals from other CCLAA properties to renovate the theater back into usable condition.
The theater was re-opened in November 2013 with an announcement that films could once again be played in the theater through the use of a temporary film screen. The first film in the reopened Seneca Theater would be The Lemon Drop Kid , for which Evans and Jay Livingston wrote the score; When Harry Met Sally... followed in February 2014. Most of the films shown at the theater in its current incarnation are films that have recently been released on DVD. Live theater productions resumed in 2014. [4]
Most of the performances at the theater are amateur community theatre productions run by the CCLAA itself, with two full-scale productions each year (one in winter and the other in summer); an annual Christmas variety show is a regular part of the theater's schedule.
Until 2019, it was the lone standalone performance venue in Cattaraugus County. This will eventually change when Olean's Temple B'Nai Israel is deconsecrated and repurposed as a theater in late 2019.
Cattaraugus County is a county in western New York, with one side bordering Pennsylvania. As of the United States 2020 census, the population was 77,042. The county seat is Little Valley. The county was created in 1808 and later organized in 1817.
Little Valley is a village in Cattaraugus County, New York, United States and as the county seat, is the location of the county fair. The village is in the northwest corner of the town of Little Valley, which is north of Salamanca. The village population was 1,143 at the 2010 census, out of a population of 1,740 within the entire town.
Salamanca is a city in Cattaraugus County, New York, United States, inside the Allegany Indian Reservation, one of two governed by the Seneca Nation of New York. The population was 5,929 at the 2020 census. It was named after José de Salamanca, a Spanish nobleman and cabinet minister of the mid-19th century.
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The Venetian Theatre is a former movie theater and performing arts venue in downtown Hillsboro, Oregon, United States, which since 2021 has been in use by a restaurant named The Venetian Hillsboro. Formerly the Town Theater, the building re-opened in 2008 after more than a decade of inactivity and revitalization plans. Built in 1888 as a bank, later mayor Orange Phelps converted the property into a theater in 1911 and in 1925 converted it into a two-story Italianate building with a larger auditorium. Prior to renovation the theater was owned by the city of Hillsboro who purchased it from Act III Theatres.
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Schines Auburn Theatre is a historic theatre building located at 12-14 South Street between Genesee and Lincoln Streets in Auburn, New York. It is owned by the Cayuga County Arts Council. It is an outstanding example of the later Art Deco style of architecture in the Streamline Moderne vein designed by the noted theatre architect John Eberson. It was completed in 1938 and features a ceramic brick and terra cotta facade, a stylized marquee, and a 2,000 seat auditorium with a complex arrangement of flat and curvilinear wall and ceiling surfaces and reveals and decorated with a shooting star motif.
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Coordinates: 42°9′19.05″N78°42′57.55″W / 42.1552917°N 78.7159861°W