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File #: RS2025-1289   
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 5/27/2025 In control: Metropolitan Council
On agenda: 6/3/2025 Final action: 6/4/2025
Title: A resolution recognizing the 100th anniversary of the Belcourt Theatre.
Sponsors: Tom Cash, Joy Styles, Burkley Allen, Quin Evans-Segall, Sandy Ewing, David Benton, Terry Vo, Zulfat Suara, Kyonzte Toombs, Emily Benedict, Russ Bradford, Clay Capp, Tasha Ellis, Jeff Eslick, Erin Evans, Jennifer Gamble, Jeff Gregg, Deonte Harrell, Olivia Hill, Joy Smith Kimbrough, Jacob Kupin, Antoinette Lee, Bob Nash, Sean Parker, Delishia Porterfield, Jeff Preptit, John Rutherford, Sandra Sepulveda, Brandon Taylor, Jennifer Webb, Sheri Weiner, Ginny Welsch
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A resolution recognizing the 100th anniversary of the Belcourt Theatre.
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WHEREAS, the Belcourt Theatre is celebrating its 100th anniversary with Belcourt 100, a yearlong campaign to recognize the history and legacy of the neighborhood theatre; and
WHEREAS, the support of the Belcourt's staff, members and audience have helped to create a vibrant venue that has endured through many forms as a cultural fixture; and
WHEREAS, the Belcourt was first opened as the Hillsboro by M.A. Lightman on May 18, 1925, as a 1,100-seat theatre that was home for films, vaudeville, community theatre, and concerts; and
WHEREAS, the first theatrical play was staged at the venue in April 1926 by the Nashville Little Theatre Guild. The theatre closed for films in 1927 but remained open as a community theatre stage until 1965; and
WHEREAS, the theatre first housed the Grand Ole Opry between 1935 and 1936, when the longstanding radio program introduced key structural changes that transformed the show and shaped its legacy. DeFord Bailey, the first African-American artist featured on the program, also performed at the venue; and
WHEREAS, the theatre reestablished itself as the Belcourt Cinema in 1962, becoming an art movie house that specialized in independent, foreign, and repertory films; and
WHEREAS, the property's new owner, Fred Massey, added a second screen onto the original theatre, making the Belcourt the first dual-screen "twin theatre" in Nashville and the state; and
WHEREAS, the Belcourt Cinema continued to show films until 1997, when it temporarily closed amid fears of demolition; and
WHEREAS, the non-profit group BelcourtYes! first formed and signed a lease to try to save the theatre; and
WHEREAS, the Belcourt reopened after 17 months of renovations and planning for films, live concerts, plays, community events, and rentals. The Belcourt non-profit raised enough money to purchase the building itself in 2007; and
WHEREAS, the Belcourt underwent a major capital campai...

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