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The Blue Mouse Theatre title was used for several historic vaudeville and movie venues opened by John Hamrick in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. The name may have been inspired by a lounge in Paris.〔 Hamrick is said to have used the colored rodential title for his first theatre in each city.〔(Blue Mouse Theatre 626 SW ) Cinema Treasures (excerpted from excerpted story appeared as the article with the nifty title: "THE SAD DEMISE OF THE DESPONDENT RODENT" by Loren Shisler in Marquee magazine of the Theatre Historical Society 3rd Qtr. 1977)〕 ==Blue Mouse Theatre in Proctor District, Tacoma== The Blue Mouse Theatre (1923) (originally known as Blue Mouse Jr.) is a small second-run movie theater located in the Proctor District in the north end of Tacoma, Washington. It is Washington's oldest continuously operating theater (a few blocks from the state's oldest bowling center),〔〔(Blue Mouse theatre (Proctor district) ) Cinema Treasures〕 opened November 23, 1923. 〔Phuong Cat Le (Friendly roots go deep in Proctor District ) Tacoma neighborhood's past is wrapped in mom-and-pop service May 7, 2008 Seattle Post Intelligencer〕 When it was designed in the 1920s, the theater was promoted as being one of the finest suburban theaters and was referred to as "Blue Mouse Jr." to distinguish it from the larger downtown Tacoma theater of the same name. The "A spectacular melodrama" ''The Green Goddess'' may have been the first "picture show" shown on the theatre’s "silent screen". By 1929, the theater was renamed the Proctor Street Theater, according to the Polk's City Directory for Tacoma. The theater was successful and in 1932 was sold. In 1972, it was re-purchased again and renamed the Bijou in 1980, but struggled to compete against area multiplexes and was threatened with becoming an office complex. It was saved in 1993 by 17 activists and preservationists (the Blue Mouse Associates) who bought and restored "the building's original Craftsman-style timbers, stucco, pillars, marble terrazzo and original mahogany doors."〔 The group renamed it back to the Blue Mouse Theatre and it has become a community attraction, showing popular movies on a second run basis. The theater is partially supported by generous community donations. Tacoma glass artist Dale Chihuly designed neon blue mice "seen scurrying across the marquee" for the 221 seat theater.〔 It is located at 2611 North Proctor Street in Tacoma. On January 13, 2010, this Blue Mouse Theatre location was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Blue Mouse Theatre」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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