From Citizendium The Runnymede Theatre is a historic building located in Bloor West Village, an affluent west end Toronto, Ontario neighbourhood.[1] The building has operated as a vaudeville theatre, a movie theatre, a bingo hall, and a Chapters bookstore. The building is now a Shoppers Drug Mart.[2][3][4]
Commonly known as the "Runny", the Runnymede was built by the Capitol (later Famous Players) as an atmospheric vaudeville theatre, the first of this type in Toronto.[1] It officially opened in June 1927. The building was designed by Alfred Chapman, father of Chris Chapman, an accomplished Toronto filmmaker. Known for its music and stage shows, the large 1400-seat theatre, branded "Canada's Theatre Beautiful", quickly became popular and brought prestige to the west end of the city.[5] As an atmospheric theatre, the interior of the Runnymede was designed to transport its guests to an exotic place. The painted blue sky ceiling was adorned with clouds, where a complex lighting system projected an array of stars and airplanes.
The walls were decorated with a mural, which produced an illusion of being in a courtyard.[6] The building discontinued to be used for plays and live entertainment with the gradual death of vaudeville, and was subsequently converted to a movie theatre in the late 1930s. In the early 1970s, the building became a bingo hall in order to capitalize on bingo's popularity. In 1980, the building reopened as a movie theatre again, featuring two screens.

In 1990, the building was designated as a heritage property under the Ontario Heritage Act.[8] The movie theatre closed in February 1999 and You've Got Mail was the last film that was shown.[8] Later that year, the building reopened as a Chapters bookstore, which closed in February 2014. In April 2015, the building reopened as a Shoppers Drug Mart.[2][3][4]
Due to the heritage designation Chapters, Shoppers, and the building's owners were required to preserve the building's unique details.[8][9] Observers agree they did a good job.
When Chapters turned the theatre into a retail space admirers of the architecture were concerned its beautiful interior would be forgotten.[7] In fact efforts were made to preserve the sky-blue domed ceiling, the intricate wall decorations, the theatre's box office and historic projector. According to Blog TO, first time visitors are routinely stunned by the beautiful interior, and then shocked to find Shoppers employees vigourously enforcing a policy barring photographs.
Categories: [Former cinemas in Toronto] [Theatres in Toronto] [Atmospheric theatres] [Chapman and Oxley buildings] [Suggestion Bot Tag]