Cleopatra, starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, was the last picture to be shown at the Latchis Theatre before a devastating early morning fire gutted the building on March 25, 1965. It was already tough days for movie theatres competing against the popularity of television but a second fire in 14 years spelled the end for Milford's only movie house. "Guess that picture was just too hot" was the common quip around town but owner John Latchis, awoken at 3AM at his house in Brattleboro, Vermont, did not see the humor. A 1951 fire had laid waste to the cinema but after asking readers of the Cabinet, "I'd like to know whether we can expect any support from the townspeople, whether they are sincerely interested in having a theatre here?” he apparently had heard enough of a response to convince him to reconstruct — adding lots of (but apparently not enough) fireproofing to boot. The theatre was never a big money-maker as it competed with the likes of Howdy Doody and Mr. Ed.
In 1937, however, the Latchis opened with great fanfare as a modern replacement ("the last word in design and equipment") for the aging Strand Theatre on Middle Street. The new cinema boasted 594 seats, two rows, three sections and a steep tilt to the floor, along with state-of-the-art RCA sound equipment. Peter Latchis had bought land on the Oval in the 1920s and after delays due to the Great Depression, tore down the dilapidated Wallace house and negotiated an exclusive license for a movie house in town. When the theatre finally opened on September 29, 1937, it was quite the spectacle. The high school orchestra and drum corps joined girl scout ushers and town selectmen to welcome in the new theater — and thirty cents got you a seat to see the Oscar-winner Broadway Melody.
Above Right: Milford's Latchis Theatre circa 1950. (Courtesy MHS)
Above Left: A view of the southside of Union Square anchored by the Latchis. (Courtesy MHS)
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