place

Ouimetoscope

1906 establishments in Quebec1924 disestablishments in QuebecFormer cinemas in MontrealFormer theatres in CanadaHistory of Montreal
Repertory cinemasTheatres completed in 1906Ville-Marie, Montreal
Ouimetoscope presse
Ouimetoscope presse

The Ouimetoscope was the first Canadian theatre dedicated exclusively to showing movies.Inaugurated on 1 January 1906 at the corner of Saint Catherine and Montcalm Streets, in Montreal, Canada from a converted cabaret with 500 seats and a small screen, it was demolished to be replaced with a luxurious 1,200 seat movie palace that featured air conditioning.For eighteen years, the Ouimetoscope was the venue for French and American cinema supplemented with local production, accompanied by live musicians.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ouimetoscope (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ouimetoscope
Rue Montcalm, Montreal Ville-Marie

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: OuimetoscopeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.518333333333 ° E -73.556111111111 °
placeShow on map

Address

Rue Montcalm 1325
H2L 2H2 Montreal, Ville-Marie
Quebec, Canada
mapOpen on Google Maps

Ouimetoscope presse
Ouimetoscope presse
Share experience

Nearby Places

Librairie L'Androgyne

Librairie L'Androgyne was an LGBT-oriented bookstore in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, active from 1973 to 2002.Founded in 1973 by a collective headed by Will Aitken, Bruce Garside, Barbara Scales and John Southin, the store was originally located on Crescent Street at a time when the city's gay village was still centred on the nearby Stanley Street. The store specialized in LGBT literature, feminist literature, and non-sexist children's books, stocking titles in both English and French. Being one of the very few places outside of bars where queer people could congregate, L'Angrogyne became a centre of cultural and political activity. Displaying posters for events, selling tickets for concerts and hosting meetings were only some of the activities undertaken especially when it became a volunteer collective operation in the coming years. We saw one another in daylight in a place dedicated to openness and community. Everyone including researchers came by since the book collection was open to the public and in many ways unparalleled. By 1976 the store was entirely operated by a group of volunteers none of whom owned it or received any compensation. While the composition of the group was in constant flux, a core group of individuals kept it open. (Mark, Ross, Suzanne, Philip, Beth, Laura, Lawrence and a few more). For most of its history, it was one of just four LGBT-oriented bookstores in Canada, alongside Glad Day Bookshop in Toronto, Little Sister's in Vancouver and After Stonewall in Ottawa.In 1982, the store moved to a small upstairs location on Saint Laurent Boulevard. The store was acquired the following year by two of the volunteers, Philip Rappaport and Lawrence Boyle. In 1986 Boyle took sole possession of the store, moving it to the larger ground floor location where it became best known. In the 1980s, the store, like Glad Day and Little Sister's, ran into issues with Canada Customs frequently delaying or blocking shipments of books to the store.Boyle sold the store to France Désilets in 1995; Désilets, in turn, sold the store to Bernard Rousseau, the owner of the Priape chain, in 2001, although she stayed on as the store's manager. In the same year, the store moved to its final location, on Amherst Street (now named Rue Atateken) in the relocated Gay Village. Due to the early 21st-century decline of LGBT-oriented independent bookstores across North America, however, the store closed by 2002; unlike Glad Day, which survived in this era by adding sex-related merchandise, such as gay and lesbian pornography, to its catalogue, Rousseau opted not to do so as he would mainly have been cannibalizing his own sales at Priape.in Montreal, there is a successor bookstore, L’Euguelionne, which acknowledges Librairie Androgyne as its predecessor.