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 One Fix for Ailing Movie Theaters? Becoming Nonprofits.

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  •  One Fix for Ailing Movie Theaters? Becoming Nonprofits.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/17/b...nonprofit.html - Also see the comments

    One Fix for Ailing Movie Theaters? Becoming Nonprofits.


    As more local movie houses close, residents in smaller towns are forming nonprofits to buy and operate them.


    Nicki Wilson, president of the Triplex Theater’s board, and Ben Elliott, the creative director, at the Triplex in Great Barrington, Mass.Credit...Bryan Derballa for The New York Times
    By Jim Zarroli

    Feb. 17, 2025Updated 12:57 p.m. ET Nicki Wilson was shocked when her local newspaper reported in March 2023 that the Triplex Theater, an independent four-screen movie house in Great Barrington, Mass., was shutting down after almost three decades in business.

    The Triplex, the only theater in town, was a much-loved fixture, attracting moviegoers from all around the Berkshires, even on winter nights when not much else was open, Ms. Wilson said.

    “I couldn’t imagine living in a town without a movie theater,” she said.

    Ms. Wilson wasn’t the only one who felt this way, and after a communitywide campaign the Triplex reopened in November 2023 in a much different form. No longer is it dependent on ticket and popcorn sales. The Triplex has become a nonprofit organization relying on donations, grants and plenty of volunteer labor. And instead of leaning on the next Hollywood blockbuster, the Triplex focuses on what the community wants to see.

    “In an independent theater, you can show what you want,” said Gail Lansky, vice president of the Triplex’s board. “You can show retrospectives. You can show foreign films. You can do film festivals. Free Saturdays for kids” Image
    In 2023, local residents teamed up to buy the Triplex theater and turn it into a nonprofit organization.Credit...Bryan Derballa for The New York Times
    Certainly not all nonprofit theaters are doing well, but the model has worked, at least so far, in places like the Berkshires, where a devoted and well-heeled clientele is willing and able to support the arts. Two nearby nonprofit movie theaters in New York, the Moviehouse in Millerton and the Crandell Theater in Chatham, have attracted sizable fan bases. Across the country, more than 250 movie theaters are nonprofits, said Bryan Braunlich, executive director of the Cinema Foundation, a movie-industry group that provides research for cinemas.

    “We are definitely seeing a trend of communities rallying around their local theaters,” he said.

    And movie theaters have needed saving. Since 2019, the number of screens operating in the United States has declined 12 percent, to 36,369 as of 2023, said David Hancock, chief analyst in media and entertainment at the research firm Omdia. The popularity of at-home streaming over the past decade was a factor. Before the pandemic, audience numbers were already waning, but Covid nearly dealt the industry a death blow, as consumers got used to staying home and became pickier about what movies they went to a theater to see.

    “People certainly came back, but much more slowly,” said the Triplex’s former owner, Richard Stanley. “Ultimately, I saw the handwriting on the wall and decided I had to close.”

    When a theater shuts down in town, it’s not just a problem for film buffs. Because of their unique architecture, with sloped floors and few windows, they are hard to convert to other purposes and often leave prominent spaces empty.

    Becoming a nonprofit allows theaters to draw on different revenue sources, like film festivals, and the hope is that a theater catering to the people of a town will build a loyal and supportive base.

    This doesn’t happen overnight. That was the case with the Belcourt Theater in Nashville. A community group had raised millions of dollars to operate and renovate the 1925 movie palace, which briefly served as the main stage of the Grand Ole Opry. Image
    Those who rallied around the Triplex are hoping for something similar to what happened at the Belcourt Theater in Nashville, which a community group operates and now has a sizable fan base.Credit...William DeShazer for The New York Times Image
    Becoming a nonprofit allows theaters to draw on different revenue sources. A sign advertises the details of sponsoring a theater seat at the Triplex Cinema.Credit...Bryan Derballa for The New York Times
    “All of us who work in the theater remember the days when we’d show ‘Badlands’ to four people, and now we show ‘Badlands’ to 150 to 200 people,” said the Belcourt’s executive director, Stephanie Silverman, referring to the director Terrence Malick’s debut feature from 1973.

    Those who rallied around the Triplex are hoping for the same. When the theater opened in 1995 on the site of a burned-down lumberyard, nearby shopping centers had sucked the life out of Main Street and Great Barrington was struggling economically, said Mr. Stanley, Triplex’s former owner.

    Main Street is a very different place today, largely because of an influx of tourists and weekenders, and the Triplex “was a very pivotal, really core thing that brought people to town,” said Betsy Andrus, executive director of the Southern Berkshire Chamber of Commerce.

    By 2023, two other multiplexes in the Berkshires, in Lanesborough and North Adams, had already shut down. But Ms. Wilson believed there was hope for the Triplex. She called Mr. Stanley to ask if there was some way to reopen the theater.

    “I asked what we could do, and he said, ‘Well, pay me $1 million and you can buy the theater,’” she said.

    Ms. Wilson didn’t have $1 million to spare, but she did have plenty of friends. In April 2023, she invited her neighbors to her living room to discuss saving the theater. The group, which called itself Save the Triplex, created a GoFundMe page and a website to raise money. The response was overwhelming, said Hannah Wilken, who had spent many weekends at the Triplex with her friends as a teenager and was involved with the fund-raising.

    Even people who hadn’t been to the theater since before Covid felt a visceral connection to the place. “We just started getting inundated with people saying: ‘I want to help. I want to donate. Sign me up,’” Ms. Wilken said.

    The actress Karen Allen, who owns a fiber-arts store in town, turned over memorabilia from “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” which she starred in, for an auction. A major boost came when the photographer Gregory Crewdson donated $225,000, after selling copies of a signed limited edition of his work.

    Within a few months, the group had raised $246,000 — enough to pay the first year’s mortgage. Mr. Stanley liked the idea of keeping the Triplex alive as a nonprofit run by the town’s residents and gave Ms. Wilson’s group a five-year mortgage to buy the theater. Image
    A 35-millimeter print of “Pulp Fiction” ready to be played for the Belcourt’s Restoration Roundup series. Credit...William DeShazer for The New York Times Image Reels of the 1984 film “Night of the Comet” at the Belcourt.Credit...William DeShazer for The New York Times
    The campaign has benefited from the large and devoted Berkshires arts community, which regularly draws celebrities to town. Bill Murray showed up at the Triplex to discuss “The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou,” the Wes Anderson film in which Mr. Murray played the title character, and Joan Baez was there for a showing of a documentary on her life. Arlo Guthrie discussed the 1969 movie “Alice’s Restaurant,” which had been filmed nearby. Not all the events have made money, but enough have done well to keep the Triplex going.

    Movie theaters remain a dicey business, and for the Triplex to survive long term it will need a lot more money. The four screening rooms need major renovations. And although an active board oversees the theater’s operations, it had just two full-time paid employees until this month. (A third full-time employee starts later this month, and the theater also has part-time help including the people who sell tickets and popcorn.) Ms. Wilson, the board’s president, hopes to hire more people, but for now the theater still depends largely on volunteers.

    “The challenges are real,” said Ms. Lansky, the board’s vice president. “Everybody knows that an independent theater cannot rely on tickets and concessions alone.”

    Nonprofit theaters also tend to be a low priority for film distributors, Mr. Hancock of Omdia said. That means they can’t always show the latest Hollywood blockbuster and must find other ways to keep up audience enthusiasm and a continuing commitment from the community members to donate money and volunteer their time, he said.

    “The model can work, but only if the cinema is valued by the local community,” Mr. Hancock added. Image
    For the Triplex to survive long term, it will need keep up the community’s enthusiasm and commitment, much like the Belcourt, pictured, has been doing.Credit...William DeShazer for The New York Times
    Still, those behind the Triplex’s revival believe an audience is out there. Sitting at home and watching movies on Netflix just isn’t the same thing, said Ben Elliott, the creative director at the theater and one of its few paid staff members.

    Mr. Elliott grew up in Great Barrington and regularly visited the Triplex as a child. One of the things he missed during Covid was the sound of conversations in the lobby after a movie ended.

    “Being together in a physical space is something that’s becoming rarer and rarer, and holding on to that, I think, is important for communities across the country,” he said. “It’s also, for us, the most viable way to keep a theater open.”



  • #2
    Interesting article, Harold, and thanks for posting it here. One thing: the link you included takes me to the article OK, but it's behind a paywall. Could you possibly access the comments which are associated with that article, and post them here as well? Thanks!

    Comment


    • #3
      Here are some of the comments. Too many to post here...


      Lou
      Blue State2h ago
      Huntington Cinema Arts on Long Island. Operating since ‘73. Ahead of its time.
      RecommendShare
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      Richard commented 2 hours ago

      Richard
      Lost Angeles2h ago
      Can we fix the ailing White House this way too?
      2 RecommendShare
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      Paul King commented 2 hours ago
      P
      Paul King
      USA2h ago
      First, let's turn the streaming narrative on its head. This stunning article appeared in The Times late 2024. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/17/b...e=articleShare It shows that the major movie studios have come to realize that a film's strong release and run in theaters is key to a successful streaming release. The article makes a good case for live theater cinema integral to overall success of a film. Counter to what we've been told about streaming. We are a group of citizens in Santa Rosa, CA who have been working for months to "Save The Summerfield" Theater, a beloved neighborhood venue for 60 years. The usual story: it thrived pre-pandemic (busy, with shows occasionally sold out) and has been less attended recently. It now faces closure within weeks due to finances. We are a dedicated group of patrons and supporters exploring various avenues to maintain this cinema gem. Thank you for this article, and the comments filled with so many inspiring success stories. We invite you to reach out with ideas and support. savesummerfield@gmail.com Thank you!
      1 RecommendShare
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      Robert commented 2 hours ago
      R
      Robert
      San Antonio, Texas2h ago
      Great, another non-profit that no longer pays property taxes. So now a "non-profit" owns property that increases in value, yet its property tax burden shifts to other property owners, some of whom are low income renters whose rent increases and subsidizes an "art house." This is yet another reason MAGA has taken over. These non-profits are sucking on the public teat without paying their fair share of taxes to support fire, EMS, police, and infrastructure.
      RecommendShare
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      Robert L commented 2 hours ago
      R
      Robert L
      Los Feliz, CA2h ago
      The problem with the movies is content. Great films make money, but unfortunately the wackos who invest in films are fruits and nuts.
      RecommendShare
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      John P commented 2 hours ago

      John P
      Los Angeles2h ago
      This is the way!
      RecommendShare
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      Wayne Doleski commented 2 hours ago
      W
      Wayne Doleski
      Madison, WI2h ago
      I love people who complain about everything! What if the people behind me talk? How about garbage that no one has picked up? What if the movie is no good? Welcome to LIFE people! Can you even leave the house or are you afraid of everything not being how you like it?
      1 RecommendShare
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      Hector the Great commented 2 hours ago
      H
      Hector the Great
      NYC2h ago
      Our hometown New Plaza Cinema oddly is off the radar of NYT. Successor to the Lincoln Plaza Cinema, it is a gem that film lovers should be aware of. https://newplazacinema.org/about-us/
      RecommendShare
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      R commented 2 hours ago
      R
      R
      NY2h ago
      Always good to have a space to discuss the movie after.
      RecommendShare
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      Adam commented 2 hours ago
      A
      Adam
      Philadelphia2h ago
      This article inexplicably leaves out the wonderful Hull's Drive-In Theater in my beloved former home of Lexington, Virginia. I had some passing involvement with this at the time, but did not realize we were the first such theater to adopt this model: https://www.hullsdrivein.com
      RecommendShare
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      KP commented 2 hours ago
      K
      KP
      San Francisco2h ago
      Here in SF we are lucky to have The Roxie and three cinemas which are linked together as a NP: The Vogue, The Balboa and the 4 Star. https://www.cinemasf.com. Support local cinema, we saw Pretty in Pink for Valentines Day at the Vogue...
      RecommendShare
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      Nora Gee commented 2 hours ago
      N
      Nora Gee
      Jersey Shore2h ago
      The Showroom Cinema is the home of the Asbury Park Movie Club. Movie club saved me from the worst of covid in so many ways. Originally we screened every best picture/academy award film starting before the “talkies”. Mission accomplished. Now we are screening the American Film Institute top 100 American movies (many superior movies to Oscar favorites). last week was “Goodfellas”. Priceless friendships have occurred. The Showroom is the jewel of Cookman Avenue. Come on out, people, and sit in the dark with us ?
      RecommendShare
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      Chicago Opinion commented 2 hours ago
      C
      Chicago Opinion
      Chicago, Illinois2h ago
      Here is the fallacy about turning a for profit entity to a not for profit entity----you still need money! And you need to generate a surplus of revenue over expenses to pay for the replacement of assets consumed. If you think a for profit has competition, wait till you start hustling for donations and have to compete with other charities helping sick kids or people that need food. There may be a good reason why you are going out of business. Turning it into not for profit will not change the business offerings
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