The year is 1929.
It’s Saturday and you’ve got some coins in your pocket and a few kids in tow. You head down Jasper Avenue towards 101 Street until you see it: the grand new Capitol Theatre, the first of its kind in Edmonton.
You shell out $0.15 for your ticket and $0.10 per kid and head inside to find a seat. Do you choose a row on the balcony or one below? With 1,110 seats, there’s a lot of space.
Either way, you’ll be able to hear the 20-piece orchestra in the pit beneath the screen, accompanying the silent film.
Alongside you are people from all walks of life. Cinema is just emerging as an art form and this theatre is generally an accessible option for entertainment, unlike, say the symphony or ballet.
Take Me to the Movies
The Capitol Theatre was a mainstay in Edmonton for decades until large-scale venues became unprofitable and it was ultimately knocked down in the ’70s.
But that’s not where its story ends.
In 2011, Fort Edmonton Park built a replica of Edmonton’s first movie theatre — although it’s far from identical.
“Fort Edmonton did its best to try and capture the ambiance of what the Capitol Theatre would’ve looked like in its prime,” says Owais Siddiqui, multicultural narratives supervisor for Fort Edmonton Park. “It was really to commemorate the roots of Edmonton’s arts and culture scene.”
For one, the new theatre’s scale is much smaller, with capacity for just over 200 people. When it first opened its doors, it was also equipped with 4D technology to accommodate continual screenings of Northern Lights, a short film about Edmonton’s history that culminated in real snow falling from the roof.
“That entire system took a lot of wear over the years,” Siddiqui says. “Very recently and in increments, Capitol Theatre has been renovated so that it can host more conventional cinema that doesn’t require the side panels of our auditorium to open up or anything falling from the ceiling.”