Former Capitol Theater

The Capitol Theater, at 350 (354) Main Street in Middletown, was opened in 1926 by two Italian-immigrant brothers, Alessandro and Salvatore Sareceno. The theater originally presented vaudeville and silent films, later becoming a movie theater. By the early 1930s, the theatre was being run by Salvatore Adorno, also an Italian immigrant, who had built the Grand Theater (later called the Palace Theater), located next door on Main Street, in 1915 and was leasing both the nearby Capitol and Middlesex theaters. The Capitol closed in 1975 and the lobby was converted to become a liquor store. The Palace Theater was demolished in 1980 to be replaced by the Middletown Transit Authority bus station. The 1892 Middlesex Theater was demolished in 1984, but the lobby was saved and is now home to the Tuscany Grill restaurant. Over the years the Capitol Theater became dilapidated. Its interior ornamentation had been removed and holes in the roof left the interior exposed to the elements. Trees were also growing on the roof! The building was declared unsafe by the city in 2009 and was finally demolished late in 2011. Today only the former lobby facing Main Street remains.

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Capitol Theater, Middletown (1926)

3 thoughts on “Capitol Theater, Middletown (1926)

  • July 30, 2013 at 4:32 pm
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    could be a theater

  • July 29, 2015 at 10:16 pm
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    My grandfather Francis Coiro, a skilled painter and interior designer of the 1930’s, decorated this theater, commissioned by Loomis J. Thompson to work on the plaster relief.

  • October 4, 2017 at 6:23 pm
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    From the 1950’s -1970’s the Capitol Theater was owned and run by Nicholas A. Saraceno, son of Alexander (Alessandro) Saraceno.

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