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Moolah Theatre Now Open at Lindell & Vandeventer

Moolah Theatre Now Open at Lindell & Vandeventer

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PostDec 18, 2004#1

New movie theater to open on Lindell

By Joe Williams

Post-Dispatch Film Critic

12/19/2004





GRAND OPENING

MOOLAH THEATRE

Lindell & Vandeventer

St. Louis's BIGGEST SCREEN movie theatre

a 500 seat deluxe MOVIE THEATRE & MUCH MORE

balcony seating

COUCH AND STADIUM SEATING

Full Bar!!

Live Music!!



OPENS WEDNESDAY

DECEMBER 22ND!!



Harman Moseley stands in the upper level of the main auditorium that will house the movie screen.

(David Carson/P-D)



In 2004, the only thing dicier than opening a single-screen movie theater might be opening a single-screen theater with "Arabian Nights" decor. But Harman Moseley has been betting against the conventional wisdom for more than 20 years. When he inaugurates the lavish Moolah Theatre and Lounge on Wednesday, it will be the costliest in a string of theater ventures that have bucked the trend of building mallplexes to serve the latest Hollywood dreck to suburban teenagers.



Although locally owned Wehrenberg remains the largest theater operator in town, Moseley is the last of the one-man developers. While the chains have often overbuilt and underperformed, Moseley has specialized in reviving old theaters in forsaken locations or starting new ones in venues that were never intended to screen movies.



When ticket prices rose, Moseley invested in dollar-show theaters. When cable and video threatened to end the era of repertory cinema, he bet on the classics and midnight-movie fare. When the studios pitched their products to amorous teens, he invited mothers to bring their bawling babies. When the chains abandoned the metropolitan core for greener pastures, he carved movie theaters into the city's two best hotels, hitting the jackpot with the Chase in the city but rolling snake eyes with the Ritz-Carlton in Clayton.



But the aptly named Moolah may be the riskiest of his gambles. "Opening a single-screener is insanity!" he declares with an impish laugh. Not all the money is Moseley's - the landmark 92-year-old building near Lindell Boulevard and Vandeventer Avenue, originally the Moolah Shrine Temple, is being developed by Amrit and Amy Gill at an estimated cost of $17 million. The building also features 42 apartments, an eight-lane bowling alley and a parking garage. But the centerpiece theater will be leased and run by Moseley, who's betting "a couple hundred G's" that St. Louis University students and patrons of Grand Center will want to take a look.





The lap of luxury





What they'll see is astounding, a theater space that is unlike anything else in town. It starts with the lobby, restored to its Moorish splendor after 20 years of slumber behind locked doors. To the right is the Moolah Lounge, a self-contained bar that Moseley hopes will attract a late-night clientele. Straight ahead is the ticket counter and concession stand, staffed by employees wearing conical red fezzes. And through the massive interior doors is the theater space, which is utterly unique from floor to ceiling. Six stories overhead is a barrel-vaulted ceiling, hung with chandeliers. Underfoot is carpet - rare inside a movie theater - and a flat-surface floor that leads to one of the largest movie screens in town. At 45 feet wide and 20 feet tall, it's not exactly IMAX proportions, but it's wide enough for Cinemascope.



For a deeper immersion into the experience, up-front patrons can sink into one of the 70 chocolate-leather couches and love seats that will be scattered across the floor. Although such unconventional movie viewing has been tried in venues from the elegant indoor/outdoor Foreign Cinema in San Francisco to the funky storefront Ragtag in Columbia, Mo., it's a first for St. Louis. Along with the full bar, the comfy seats promise to create a lively atmosphere. (They can also be rolled away for the live performances and special events that Moseley expects will be a big part of the venue's business.)



For the same ticket price, patrons can opt for four rows of traditional stadium-style seating at the back of the auditorium or an experience that St. Louis moviegoers have not enjoyed for years: a balcony. Looking out over the wide expanse are six rows of upper-level seats, on a balcony that sweeps around three quarters of the room's perimeter.



It's an almost obscenely luxurious space, and it defies the latest trends in theater management. Although screens are getting larger - the biggest one at Wehrenberg's new Galaxy 14 Cine, which opens Wednesday in Chesterfield Valley, is 80 feet wide and five stories tall - almost all the plush new theaters are in suburban multiplex developments with dozens of screens.



Single-screen theaters are rare - the swank-but-aging Hi-Pointe in Dogtown and the restored Lincoln in Belleville are exceptions - and newly built ones are almost unheard of. "I wanted to subdivide the space," Moseley admits, "but it had to be a single screen to qualify for historic tax credits."



Moseley says that he and the developers are not expecting a huge windfall from a theater that can only bet on one movie at a time. "For the Gills, the movie theater will be a loss leader," he says. "But what they want to do is create some action in the neighborhood. They own the apartments in the building, and they renovated the old Coronado Hotel and some other properties nearby, so they want to generate excitement. Besides SLU, you've got the Fox, you've got Powell Hall, you've got the Contemporary Art Museum and all the other things in Grand Center. We want to give those people a reason to stick around instead of driving back to the county. Until recently, there wasn't even a place to get a cup of coffee around here."





A movie family





Coffee, by the way, is another business on which Moseley took a chance. In the 1990s, he owned six Caffe Paradiso shops in the area. But the espresso boom soon petered out. "I was so foolish," he says. "I'd been to Seattle and Vancouver and seen how popular coffee was becoming, so I thought I couldn't go wrong. I ended up losing a lot of money. It turns out I wasn't meant to be in the food business."



On the other hand, the Moseley family has been in the movie business for three generations. His father, the late Harman Sr., sold projection equipment. His brother John operates the discount St. Andrews Theater in St. Charles. And Harman's daughter Julia, 23, will help operate the Moolah, particularly the bar.



At 51, Moseley is a restlessly energetic and mercurial fellow. After graduating from Clayton High School, he left for what he thought would be a six-week European vacation. He ended up living abroad for five years, in Amsterdam, Australia and Southeast Asia.



When he returned to the States in 1977, he entered the family business, managing the Gem Theater in St. John. "We tried everything there - midnight movies, rock-concert films, you name it. During the Christmas season, we showed 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show' for 14 straight nights, and it saved the business."



After that, he bought the Ritz, an adults-only theater on South Grand Boulevard. "That's about the time I married Sara," he says. "In a one-month period, I got married, bought a porn theater and moved to south St. Louis. Her parents weren't too happy."



Neither were the authorities, who arrested Moseley and a ticket-taker for screening a movie called "Sensations." Although the charges were dropped, Moseley agreed to convert the theater into a family-friendly discount house.



When the city of St. Louis bought the property for a parking lot, Moseley made a tidy profit and went into real estate. "I finally learned about business from these real-estate sharks who got up every morning at 5 a.m.," he says. "I hated it."



After a five-year hiatus, he got back into the movie business, buying the Kirkwood Cinema from the AMC chain, leasing the Sunset Hills fourplex and operating the art-house Tivoli for an owner who had no intention of renovating. "The Tivoli was a lot of fun, but the place was a mess," Moseley says.



One year after Moseley hung a "Closed Forever" sign in the window, the Tivoli was renovated and reopened by Blueberry Hill owner Joe Edwards, who later handed the operation to Landmark, the nation's dominant exhibitor of independent and foreign films. Landmark also took over the Hi-Pointe and opened a six-screener in Plaza Frontenac - which spelled doom for Moseley's two-screen art-film operation in Kirkwood. He sold the Kirkwood Cinema to a children's theater troupe in 1999.



Squeezed between Landmark and the mainstream chains, all of which were expanding, Moseley made two bold movies. He took over AMC's ailing Galleria Cinema, where the kiddie flicks and weekly "crybaby matinees" have proved a success, and he opened a five-screen boutique theater in the Chase Park Plaza, serving beer and wine to complement a menu of prestige films. Although a similar venture quickly fizzled at the Ritz-Carlton (because of a management change, Moseley says), the Chase is still thriving after five years. Pending the opening of the Moolah, it is the only movie theater within the city limits of St. Louis.



Although the Moolah will open with the middlebrow "Meet the Fockers," Moseley wants to concentrate on the kind of "quality films" that have crossed over into the mainstream since "The Crying Game" and "The English Patient." But because small distributors have an unofficial rule that they will not give the same movie to two theaters within five miles of each other, he will sometimes have to compete with the Tivoli and Hi-Pointe, the latter of which outbid him for "The Phantom of the Opera."



"The key to this business is the movie on the screen," he says. "I'm a golden-rule kind of guy. If I can show movies that I like in a clean place where people are treated well, I figure that I'll succeed."





Screen and screen again



Local movie theaters that have been operated by Harman Moseley:



Gem (aka St. John)

Ritz

Granada

St. Andrews

Star (Granite City)

Fine Arts

Kirkwood

Tivoli

Sunset Hills

Chase

Galleria

Screening Room at the Ritz-Carlton

Moolah



Critic Joe Williams

E-mail: joewilliams@post-dispatch.com

Phone: 314-340-8344

Guest
Guest

PostDec 24, 2004#2

I actually went to the Moolah on opening night, and, as far as the facilities go, I was extremely impressed.



When you walk in, you see the concession stand right in front of you. To your right is a rather modest bar setting which got packed after the movie let out. To your left is a nice lounge area filled with brown leather loveseats and sofas.



Downstairs is an eight-lane bowling alley, also with a bar and pool table. The bowling alley itself is divided into sets of two with an image or collage of images from a famous American city (New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and, of course, St. Louis ;) ) right above the pins. This downstairs section also has a darts game, an electronic jukebox and also an arcade bowling game if you want some practice first.



The theater itself is breathtaking. The Post article described the architecture as "Moorish," and it was absolutely splendid, not seen anywhere else in St. Louis. I sat in one of the chocolate leather sofas that are closest to the screen. It was almost too comfortable for a movie, really. Three rows of traditional "stadium" style seating are behind the series of sofas, and, of course, above is the balcony.



The only complaint I could have had was that there was an "electrical problem" which the owner warned us could happen before the movie began, so I ended up seeing only half of the surprisingly funny "Meet the Fockers," but we got free movie passes as compensation.



I would definitely recommend the Moolah to anyone, despite technical problems. Oh yeah...one more caveat. The parking lot is not ready yet. They instructed everyone to continue parking on the street or in the Wash U Medical Building's lot (didn't know where this was) until January 7 when their lot will open right behind (on the north side) of the theater.



Anyway, check it out if you can.



--Matt

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PostJan 03, 2005#3

Rolled up there last night. Didn't get a chance to see the movie theater, which I understand is the piece de resistance, but it is still a pretty cool place. With all the fanfare and media drooling, I was expecting much, much more, but it still is a quality development.



I'd love to see more development of this type in St. Louis, i.e., development that includes retail, entertainment, housing, and office all in one tastefully rehabbed buildings.



I travelled north on Grand to Lindell, and God, I forgot how great Grand is from Lacled to Delmar. The string of SLU bldgs--DuBourg Hall, College Church, and Jesuit Hall--along with the Continental form one of the greatest urban tableaux in the city. Really cool at night. Can't wait for the lot at Lindell and Grand to be developed.



Anyway, what about the Masonic Temple at Spring and Lindell? I've heard that when it was constructed, they spent so much money on the exterior, that they couldn't afford to completey finish the interior. It's such an eccentric and egomaniacal building, that it ranks as one of St. Louis' greats--see "Your Favorite Bldgs." in the Urban Living section. I've heard rumors that the Masons have become interested in the site again after many years of neglect. Anyone have any info?

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PostJan 04, 2005#4

I've been in the Masonic Temple several times - my fraternity's initiation was held there. It's very beautiful on the inside, but it has some crazy features to it - we would often go exploring as there were never any people there when we were there.

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Super ModeratorSuper Moderator
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PostJan 04, 2005#5

How did you get in? And is it true that there is a lot of unfinished space?

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AdministratorAdministrator
10K

PostJan 04, 2005#6

We were let in by one of the Masons, who operated the elevator for us (it's one of the old-style elevators). I didn't see any unfinished space, but then again, there was probably a lot of the temple that I didn't see! I did manage to check out several floors (sometimes supervised, sometimes not), but every floor I saw was finished. There's a lot of space for meetings, stages for speeches/performances, etc.

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PostMar 03, 2005#7

Moolah Temple

By HOLLY SILVA

Special to the Post-Dispatch

03/03/2005



Several years ago a girlfriend wrote a letter saying she'd met the guy who ruined her for other men; this gentleman's particular charms had taken all the enjoyment from the trial and error of dating. The tone of her letter was not blissful in her triumphant find but wistfully resigned. She'd stumbled upon her match, and now the game was over.



And so it is with me and the Moolah Temple. I've discovered the perfect environs in which to drink a cosmopolitan, and all venues henceforth will be measured against it - to their detriment.



The temple, once home to the Shriners, is a massive, festive-looking building that sat empty for decades at the corner of Vandeventer Avenue and Lindell Boulevard, near St. Louis University. It has been painstakingly transformed into a luxe movie theater, bar and lounge; a slick basement bowling alley run by Saratoga Lanes' Jim Barton; and upscale apartments.



Walking up the grand outdoor stairway and stepping into the small lobby leaves you wanting. The Moolah looks only like a nicely renovated spot to buy popcorn - nothing special. But look up: each light fixture is a gigantic, inverted fez. Very funny. Very cool.



Now, look left: a dimly lit lounge full of comfortable brown leather sofas and small tables arranged in a half-dozen cozy arrangements. One imagines cigars and vest-pocket watches, but in actuality, there are ... martinis!



Look right and a full bar beckons, decked out with the deft staff, varied stock and high-end decor of any such freestanding establishment.



More than 30 eclectic beer choices are divided into the affordable $3 and $4 categories of domestic, foreign and independent films. There is one high-budget film/beer (chimay red for $8) as well as two (Schlafly) rough drafts for $4.



The wine choices currently number 50, with a focus on small producers and a sommelier who would like to see that list double to 100. A third of the list is available by the glass (short clips) with prices ranging from $5.50 to $10. Half the list is available in splits, half bottles or carafes (full features) with prices from $7.25-$42. Bottles range from $22 to a high of $75 for a Vueve Cliquot Yellow Label sparkling. Seven movie-theme martinis (the "Pretty in Pink" cosmopolitan; gin with a splash of vermouth and olives is "The Way We Were") complete the offerings.



But you came to see a movie, didn't you? And who wants to rush through a martini in order to get a good seat? But, wait, are those people sneaking their cosmos into the theater? And that's when the enjoyment of the Moolah Temple hinted at ruining me: When the bartender handed me a "Speed" martini (vanilla vodka and espresso) in a durable, stout glass and said, "Yes, ma'am, you can take that anywhere in the building."



And so I joined the snake of couples balancing splits of wine and walked into the theater. Which is not just any old theater but an enormous screen with every kind of seating you can think of or desire - 500 seats, to be exact. Stadium seating, yes; but also an old-fashioned balcony. And several of those big brown leather couches and love seats scattered down on the floor with end tables. And so there it is: the perfect, ruinous way to drink a cosmo. Box-office hit movie flickering on giant screen in endlessly comfortable seating. I'm done for.



If you don't want to leave when the movie ends (and you won't), you can sneak down to the perfectly designed bowling alley, which offers a more limited bar selection and a small grill menu. You can watch along the sidelines as families and dates twirl candy-colored bowling balls down the alleys.



You may run into friends of friends, who tell you of the Movie Manor Motel in Colorado, an old drive-in theater transformed with a horseshoe of rooms for rent, each one with a picture window facing the screen and an indoor speaker system. And so there is hope that a more perfect venue for a shared bottle of wine might yet exist.





Moolah Temple



Address: 3821 Lindell Blvd.



Phone: 314-446-6807 (bar), 314-446-6866 (bowling lanes)



Hours: Bar opens an hour before first show Monday-Thursday, 3 p.m. Friday and 12:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; bar closes an hour after last show; bowling lane hours are 11 a.m.-1 a.m. every day except Sunday, when it closes at midnight



Credit cards: All major cards accepted



Smoking: Smoking allowed throughout bowling alley; allowed at bar only in inclement weather; no smoking in theater or lounge



Wheelchair access: Street level access with elevator to upper floors



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