*** Welcome to piglix ***

Desert Star Theater

Iris Theater, Apartments and Commercial Building
Iris Theatre.JPG
Desert Star Playhouse resides in the historic Iris Theatre
Desert Star Theater is located in Utah
Desert Star Theater
Desert Star Theater is located in the US
Desert Star Theater
Location 4861 South State Street. Murray, Utah
Coordinates 40°39′56″N 111°53′17″W / 40.66556°N 111.88806°W / 40.66556; -111.88806Coordinates: 40°39′56″N 111°53′17″W / 40.66556°N 111.88806°W / 40.66556; -111.88806
Area 1.31 acres (0.53 ha)
Built 1930
Architectural style Art Deco
NRHP Reference # 01000959
Added to NRHP September 7, 2001

Desert Star Theater is a dinner theater establishment in Murray, Utah. It started out as a small theater called the Gem, which showed silent movies with a piano for music. It was later closed down and demolished, but rebuilt and expanded into the Iris Theater by owner Tony Duvall. After his retirement, the Iris changed hands several times before being renamed the Vista.

The National Register of Historic Places, notes Iris Theater, Apartments and Commercial Building, built in 1930, is significant for its role in the urbanization of Murray City. With its combination of entertainment, retail, and residential space, the building represents an elaborate example of the multi-use commercial block common during the early twentieth-century development of the city's commercial business district. The building was owned by the Duvall family who managed the theater while living in the apartments above the storefronts. The Iris building is also significant as the only commercial building in Murray built in the Art Deco style. Though not a particularly ornate example of the style, the building makes a distinctive contribution to the State Street frontage of the Murray Downtown Historic District. The building is in good condition and is a contributing historic resource of the city.

The Iris was considered state-of-the-art at the time. The theater showed both blockbusters (e.g. "Gone with the Wind"), and more obscure fare (e.g. some Thursday nights were reserved for Swedish films shown especially for Swedish immigrants brought to Murray by the smelters). The theater had a stage where local groups could mount theatrical productions. The Iris Theater was a community place. Murray firemen sometimes held conventions there. Many of Murray's youths, including the Duvall children, worked in the theater. During the Great Depression, Tony Duvall would sometimes let children see a movie in exchange for scrap metal, or sometimes simply for free. Tony Duvall, with partner Joe Lawrence, later built the Murray Theater at 4961 South State. In the 1940s, the Iris would close during the summer while movies were shown in the larger (and cooler) Murray Theater.


...
Wikipedia

...