Just days before it came down, I was able to walk through the theater one last time and pick up a few souvenirs including old tickets, movie press packets, a theater catalog from the 1970s, an actual piece of film in the projectionist booth, lots of other paper items, even the sign on the door announcing the theater was closed. In 2008, I had the opprotunity to meet former owner Harold Engler, who showed me some of his own pictures and souvenirs of the old theater, and gave me insight on its history, and why he ultimately closed it down.
The Hopkins Theater in 1942 |
Newspaper ad for the grand opening of the Hopkins Theater on August 20, 1941. |
In the early years of the Hopkins Theater there was no television, so "going to the movies" once or twice a week was a way of life for much of the population, no matter what town they lived in. Harold Engler recalls that in the early days, theater patrons were treated to a full two-hour evening program. It would begin at seven p.m. with coming attractions, a newsreel (the closest thing anyone had to television news then) and cartoons such as Tom & Jerry, Bugs Bunny and Woody Woodpecker. At 7:30 the movie would start, and in those days the feature would change every Wednesday and Sunday, to keep people coming back to the theater. During the Second World War, which the United States entered just months after the Hopkins Theater opened, a big booth in the lobby sold war bonds, and posters throughout the theater encouraged patrons to buy more bonds.
As a boy, Harold Engler grew up in the theater. By junior high he was doing many of the jobs there, including working behind the candy counter and selling tickets. At age 17, before he graduated from high school, his father Abraham fell seriously ill and the decision was made to make Harold part owner of the theater. The teenager took over his dad’s duties, which included buying the movies, bookkeeping and advertising. “All those [newspaper] ads were handmade,” he says. “We didn’t have fax machines or copy machines then. I thought carbon paper was the greatest thing on earth.”
In 1948, the first television station went on the air in the Twin Cities and that changed the habits of moviegoers. “It hurt the theater business a lot for a while,” Harold says. “There was nothing we could do but wait it out. Thousands of theaters froze throughout the country. Then Cinemascope came in, in 1953, and that was the resurgence of the industry. Big, big screen and stereophonic sound. We had surround sound all the way around. We were one of the first theaters to put it in. Any innovation that came along, we had it right away. Then people started to come back to the movies.
“Prior to that, movies were really bad. When TV hit, they just weren’t making good movies. So the timing was really disastrous. People could stay home and could watch all this junk for free instead of coming to the theater to see it for fifty cents. So it woke up the moviemakers, and they started to make bigger and better movies. After that, theater attendance just soared.”
Harold Engler takes pride in the innovations that his father, and later himself, came up with at the
“I liked doing
innovative things,” Harold says. “I would look at what our competitors were
doing and I’d try to figure out what we could do different. We were the first
theater to run all day long outside of downtown Minneapolis . The Uptown [a similar-style
neighborhood theater in Minneapolis ]
used to, but we were the first suburban theater to run all day for bargain
matinees ‘til 6 o’clock. We put in Tuesday movie specials. It cost a buck to
get in. I loved to do stuff like that, just trying to get people interested in
coming to our theater.”
Other promotions he
had included a Wednesday two-for-one night sponsored by Dayton ’s
department stores where with a special Dayton ’s
card a moviegoer could bring a friend and get two admissions for the price of
one. For senior citizens there was a Golden Age Club where seniors could get in
for a reduced price with their Golden Age cards. This promotion brought a letter
of commendation from Mayor Charles Stenvig of Minneapolis . But probably the most popular
promotion was the Birthday Club. “We used to give prizes to all the kids that
came in for birthday parties. And then we gave the Birthday Girl or Birthday
Boy a bigger prize or nicer prize. We seated them all in one area together so
they’d always be together,” Harold recalls.
By the 1960s, the movie theater business had changed greatly since the forties when the
The features no
longer changed every Wednesday and Sunday. The era of the blockbuster had begun
and a particularly successful movie could be on the marquee for weeks. The
average run for a really good movie at the Hopkins in the early sixties was three weeks
or less, but in 1965, the James Bond feature “Goldfinger” broke the records. On
its Friday premiere it drew the biggest house in the theater’s history and the
next night the crowds were even bigger, according to an article in the Hopkins Sun, a
local newspaper. “Goldfinger” ran for almost two months, which was almost
unprecedented then. After that, however, bigger movies had longer runs. There were
also fewer movies being made than there were in the forties, which meant the
features were more expensive for the theater operators to buy, so they had to
run longer to recoup the costs.
As the trend toward box office blockbusters with longer theater runs continued, the Hopkins was one of the first theaters in the country to become a multiplex; several screens under one roof. Just about all theaters are like that now but in the late sixties when the idea first came to Harold Engler, the concept was radical.
“I heard about a
theater in Kansas City
that had four screens. There happened to be a theater convention down there and
I went down to see it [the four-screen theater] but I couldn’t get anybody to
come with me. They thought it was just nuts. It wasn’t accepted. So I took a
cab and went to this theater [owned by the company that later became the AMC
Theaters chain] and took a look at it. I was enthralled. They had automated
equipment in the projectionist booth, one candy counter, one box office and
four screens. I thought, this is it! I came back, and I talked my partners into
converting the upstairs balcony of the theater.”
In 1971, the
Hopkins Theater became the Hopkins
1-2. The balcony was converted into a second smaller theater by suspending a
screen and floor over the main theater with steel girders. Some thought there
had to be some funny business going on with that second theater in the balcony.
“Everyone seems to think we’re going to start running dirty films upstairs. We
aren’t,” Harold Engler explained to Minneapolis Tribune columnist Will Jones as
the new theater was getting ready to open. “But I think it would be a good idea
to have a film with adult appeal playing in one theater and, say, a Disney in
the other one.”
Downstairs, where the smoking loges were, a new automated projection booth was built, making the
“The union was not
very happy with us,” Harold says. “We eliminated the projectionist. What we
actually did was take our projectionist and made him the theater manager and
operator, and paid him more money. He was still union, but we only paid one
person instead of having multiple projectionists. We became multiple choice.
You didn’t see just a Betty Grable movie, you could see a Betty Grable movie
and an Edward G. Robinson movie.” (Not that the Hopkins was exactly showing
those kinds of movies in 1971.) “You could see a murder mystery and a musical.
It was unheard of to have more than one screen. And then everybody started
doing it.”
In 1973 a third theater was built in some of the former retail space that was connected to the building. The numbers 1-2-3 were painted in bold black and white squares on the sides of the big neon tower, alternating with the word
In 1981 yet a
fourth theater was put in, in the old liquor store that was located in another
part of the building. It was a tiny one with just 150 seats that would be good
for showing independent and niche films. But there was resistance from
the City of Hopkins .
Harold recalls,
“The architect came back and said, yeah, we can put a theater in there, and I
said ‘well go to the city and get a building permit. I’d like to have it open
by Labor Day.’ He came back and said the city won’t give you a building permit.
They said you don’t have enough parking spaces. They had a ratio of so many
seats to parking spots. It was so stupid.”
The son of one of Harold’s business partners volunteered to go down and talk to the city administrators. He offered to remove some 300 seats from the main auditorium in exchange for allowing the fourth theater but the city still objected on the grounds that there would be parking problems. So Harold went to some of the neighboring businesses, many of which weren’t open on weekends or evenings when the theater traffic would be heaviest, and got them to agree to allow use of their lots for overflow parking. Finally the city relented and allowed the fourth theater to be built, with the stipulation that seats be removed from the main auditorium.
“About two, three months later we were ready to open the theater, the seats were out, we had them taken out, and I called the seat man and said I want them back in by Friday,” Harold says. “‘They’ll be there,’ I was assured. So we had them reinstalled. I came to the office the next day [and] my partner’s son called me and said, ‘What are you doing?’ I said ‘We’re putting the seats back.’ He says, ‘You can’t do that! I promised the city that I’d take them out.’ And I said, ‘But I didn’t promise the city I’d take them out. So if they call you, you have them call me.’ They never said a word.”
Over the years, Harold and his partners purchased or built dozens of neighborhood theaters in the Twin Cities area and Engler Theaters became a well-known and successful chain in the region. The crown jewel was the
“The theater was
doing very well. We had no thought of ever selling it. Then I got a phone call
one day from Rudy Luther, and he wanted to buy the theater [property] and I
said it’s not for sale. It’s been in the family, my father built it and it’s
doing very well. But it got us thinking, and we sat down with the family and
decided ‘Let’s go to our accountants and see what they think it would be
worth.’ So we decided to come up with a figure and we called him back.
“I’ll never forget,
he looked at me and he said, ‘Do you think you’re in Hollywood ?’ I said, ‘Well, this isn’t just a
piece of property. It’s a growing business that’s been in our family for
umpteen years, it makes a profit. If you sold one of your car agencies with a
big building on it and you were making money on it wouldn’t you ask a lot?’ He
accepted our offer and he bought the theater from us and that was the end of
it. I never got one phone call from the city, the chamber of commerce, another
businessman, nobody saying ‘What can we do to keep you in Hopkins ? Can we find you another location?’ I
would have built again. Nobody showed any interest whatsoever.
“Then I get this
call, this is how the city operated. I got a call from Rudy Luther’s general
manager. ‘Would you come to a city planning meeting? They’re giving us a real
hard time about giving us a license to run the car lot.’ So I sit in the back,
the place is packed, and Luther’s people are making presentations. They showed
pictures of this beautiful building and the shrubbery and the trees, the whole
thing, and the city is saying ‘Oh, we don’t want another agency up there.’
Finally I raised my hand. A lady looked down and said, ‘I think Mr. Engler is
in attendance. That’s him back there.’ So I stood up and I said, ‘Do you know,
folks, you ought to be proud and excited to have a merchant like Rudy Luther,
successful automobile agency, to want to build this beautiful building on the
corner of Fifth and Excelsior Avenue. Because, the theater’s not going to be
there anymore. It’s all over with.”
Leaflet from the ill-fated "Save the Tower" campaign. |
The last stand for
the Hopkins Theater was on July 16, 1985. “GOODBYE HOPKINS . THE END IS TONIGHT” read the
marquee. All 1,320 seats in the four theaters were packed with patrons who came
from all over to see the grand cinema for the last time. The features shown
that night were “The Gods Must Be Crazy,” “Emerald Forest ,”
“Fiddler On the Roof” and “Beverly Hills Cop.” When the night was over and the
lights were shut off for good, a sign taped to the door informed passersby that
the theater was closed and suggested they can see “The Gods Must Be Crazy” at
Studio 97, another Engler theater.
Before the
bulldozers came there was a frantic effort on the part of some area residents
to “save the tower.” The idea behind the Save the Tower campaign was to raise
enough money to dismantle the big Hopkins tower
before the building was demolished, and then re-erect it somewhere in Hopkins as a local
landmark. The group collected over 3,800 signatures on petitions during the
1985 Raspberry Festival (the town's big summer event) to convince the city this was a worthy endeavor and
even Rudy Luther made a token contribution to the effort. The group tried to
raise $7,000 by Monday, August 19, 1985.
The whole thing was
an exercise in futility. Not only were they unable to raise the money, but, “we
offered the City of Hopkins
the tower for free,” Harold Engler says. “But the city wasn’t interested. They
weren’t interested in keeping the theater either, by the way.”
It was around
August 30, 1985 that a crowd gathered in the back parking lot of the theater
and other strategic viewing locations around the block as a backhoe, starting
on the east end where the auditorium was, smashed the building scoop by scoop,
turning 44 years of memories into dust. The big tower continued to stand
stoically on the other end as the backhoe slowly bulldozed its way toward it.
Souvenirs picked up inside the Hopkins Theater days before it was demolished. |
Harold Engler was
not among the crowd that came to watch the demolition. “I left town. I left
town," he says. "I was gone for a week. I couldn’t be around. I couldn’t go past that
corner for several years. I couldn’t go by until long after the new building
was built.” Shortly thereafter, Harold sold off the rest of the theaters he
owned and got out of the business.
Rudy Luther’s
Hopkins Honda opened for business at the former theater location in early 1986, but it only operated until the mid 1990s. Meanwhile, for more than a decade the city of Hopkins
had no movie theater. Then in 1997, in something of a turnabout, the historic
Suburban Chevrolet dealership further down the main street was demolished so
the city could build a new Hopkins Cinema 6, a six-screen second-run movie
theater. Harold Engler had nothing to do with the building or operating of this newer
theater.
Read a more in-depth version of the Hopkins Theater story in the Chronicles from the Analog Age book, published by Studio Z-7 Publishing.
Read a more in-depth version of the Hopkins Theater story in the Chronicles from the Analog Age book, published by Studio Z-7 Publishing.
Fantastic story!
ReplyDeleteI always wondered how theatre owners made any money when tickets were fifty cents each.
As a chronic movie goer starting at the age of eight, I often dreamed of owning a theater like this. Naturally, the Engler family story is fascinating to me. Your story leaves me wanting to know more which is always the sign of a good writer. Excellent work.
Very interesting. I was looking for information about a 4 oz. shot glass/jigger I inherited from my father, who grew up in MN. and found this article. The measurements on the glass say 1 oz. for ladies, 2 oz. for men, 3 oz. for pigs and 4 oz.for jackasses. It also says Engler's Liquors on it.
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