The History of the Lake Theatre
The Lake Theatre is interesting as it was built as one of the
very few privately funded projects in Barberton during the Great
Depression. The Lake Theatre, or simply The Lake as it was
called, was constructed and opened in 1938 in the then new, Art
Moderne style of architecture. The complex was built by downtown
Barberton business men Frank Gaethke and Harold Makinson.
The Lake Theatre building was unique, as it was built not only
as a theatre but also as an entertainment and retail center. In
addition to the theatre the building housed a downstairs bowling
alley and billiard parlor as well as a restaurant, peanut
vendor, and barbershop on the first floor.
The original Lake Theatre marquee was done in gold and blue neon
with over 300 flashing light bulbs lighting up the front of the
theatre. The glass blocks above the marquee were illuminated
from the inside with revolving color wheels giving the exterior
of the theatre a rainbow of continually changing colors. Another
interesting original feature on the inside of the theatre was
the painting of eight large murals each executed by noted
Barberton artist Wilson Heller, who had graduated from the
Cleveland School of Art.
The flashy new Lake Theatre, with its original seating for 1000
persons, premiered by invitation only on May 6, 1938 with the
showing of “Sergeant Murphy” staring Ronald Regan and Mary
Maguire. An entire series of photos of the new theatre was
commissioned by the theatre owners showing every feature of the
new modern theatre on opening night.
From the 1940’s into the 1970’s many boys and girls from
Barberton remember the Lake Theatre fondly, as free Saturday
passes were made available by the theatre’s owners to the
Barberton AAA. These passes which were good at the Park Theatre
or the Lake Theatre were distributed by the Barberton AAA to our
local elementary schools as rewards for participation in the
School Safety Patrol program. Although each free pass was to be
exchanged for a free ticket at the ticket booth, if you were
lucky enough when gaining admission, the ticket seller sometimes
“conveniently forgot” to collect your free pass and you could
reuse the same pass the next week.
The Lake Theatre would remain open and a viable part of downtown
Barberton until April of 1980. The last movie playing on the big
screen was, “And Justice for All” starring Al Pacino, Jack
Warden, and John Forsythe. This would have seemed to have been
the end of the road for the Lake Theatre which would remain
closed for over fourteen years. However in the early 1990’s the
Lake Theatre was restored, modernized and expanded reopening as
the Lake Cinema 8, on May 11, 1994.
Today the Lake Cinema 8 remains a lynchpin of downtown
Barberton’s redevelopment efforts, proving the viability of
adaptive reuse of historic architecture in Barberton.
Information furnished by the Barberton Historical Society