Historic Warner Brothers Pictures Building, Cincinnati, Ohio

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • www.HistoryInYourOwnBackyard.com
    info@HistoryInYourOwnBackyard.com
    812-623-5727
    For anyone who has traveled through the Over The Rhine neighborhood of Cincinnati, the iconic Warner Brothers Pictures building at West Liberty & Central Parkway has probably always caught your eye and your imagination as to what went on in that building. Fortunately we had the opportunity to sit down and interview the property owner, Peg Wyant who has restored this and other historic building in Cincinnati. Here's her story about this unique building.
    GPS Location: 39º06'48.2"N 84º31'15.1"W

Комментарии • 76

  • @MadcapSkippy
    @MadcapSkippy Год назад +23

    My great grandmother worked there for many years as a film cutter. I remember her telling us how grateful she was to work there as she was widowed during the Depression. Before getting a job at Warner she had been doing much more physically demanding jobs scrubbing floors and the like. The Warner Brothers building has always been one that brought back fond memories whenever I would pass by. So beyond my general appreciation for those preserving historical buildings, thank you for saving this one particularly.

  • @bananabob2185
    @bananabob2185 Год назад +13

    Thank you Peg for preserving Cincinnati!

  • @patrickdreyer1336
    @patrickdreyer1336 4 месяца назад +4

    My dad worked in that building in the 80s for a company called Holiday Amusement. They owned around 17 to 20 movie theaters and drive-ins in the Cincinnati/ Northern Kentucky area. Whenever I went to work with him, I would always go to the basement because it was packed with candies for the concession stands. He said the building (and the company) was owned by a guy named Ben Cohen and the upstairs was rented out to a local labor union during that time. The faux rock walls were actually in Ben’s office. Hopefully that fills in a little more history of the building.

  • @Jonjanet51
    @Jonjanet51 Год назад +9

    I'm absolutely in love with everything that Peg Wyant has done with her renovation and saving the historical buildings. Really enjoy your interviews with her.
    This was a great one. I've always been curious about the WB building.

  • @thomasjohnston6956
    @thomasjohnston6956 Год назад +9

    I’m now fascinated by Cincinnati. The river, the Roebling bridge, German heritage, the abandoned subway, and now the Over the Rhine neighborhood all make me want to visit. Ditto Syracuse, NY

    • @kevind8752
      @kevind8752 Год назад +2

      Come check us out. Lots to offer. Sports teams, world renowned zoo, numerous craft breweries, arts, over the rhine district, the Banks district on the river, wright-Patterson Air Force museum an hour north, kings island amusement park, etc

    • @historyinyourownbackyard2363
      @historyinyourownbackyard2363  Год назад +2

      Send me an email (info@HistoryInYourOwnBackyard.com) and I'll send you a list of the best sites to visit that most people in Cincinnati don't even know exist.

    • @tammyjantzen9004
      @tammyjantzen9004 Год назад +1

      Worked there for a few years. Wonderful people. Awesome city! Lots to offer!

    • @austinbevis4266
      @austinbevis4266 Год назад

      Having worked in this very building, it’s really not all that. Too hot in the summer and ice cold in the winter. Also super bland inside and the toilets rarely flushed and the faucets frequently had no water

    • @tammyjantzen9004
      @tammyjantzen9004 Год назад

      ​The innards didn't look too inviting. But I do love the art deco tiles behind the interviewers. ​@@austinbevis4266

  • @tammyjantzen9004
    @tammyjantzen9004 Год назад +4

    So glad to hear that you're working to save the beautiful buildings in Over-the-Rhine! Thank you!!

  • @rock2blues59
    @rock2blues59 Год назад +9

    Across the street from the Warner Bros. Building is Sam Adam's brewery formerly Shoenling brewery home of the "Little Kings" cream ale and on the corner across from that was Burger Brewery.

    • @austinbevis4266
      @austinbevis4266 Год назад +3

      That Warner bros building is an office for the controller of Sam adams. I would know, I worked in there last year and he was my boss lol. There’s a few other important brewery office staff in there as well

  • @ynot0714
    @ynot0714 Год назад +5

    As a student at UC in the early 80's, i went there once to pick up a reel film for an event we were having in the TUC building on campus. Thats all i remember! Lol! I look at the building whenever i go by it and think of that! Nice interview!

  • @troyshort5916
    @troyshort5916 4 месяца назад

    I remember going there with my brother Corey and my cousins to be on The Uncle Al Show. Great memories!

  • @ruthwoytsek7750
    @ruthwoytsek7750 9 месяцев назад +3

    I lived down the road years ago and never even realized this existed! Thank you!

  • @lesadurbin9290
    @lesadurbin9290 Год назад +2

    Can you do Perintown in Clermont County, Ohio? I have ancestors buried there that died in early 1800s. I love watching your videos.

  • @paulfischeruncleyips
    @paulfischeruncleyips 3 месяца назад +1

    I always wondered about this building when driving by on Central Parkway.

  • @lmoakes40
    @lmoakes40 Год назад +3

    We stay in OTR when we visit Cincinnati and drive by the Warner Bros. building a lot. Thanks for this video. We always wondered about it. OTR is an amazing place to stay. We highly recommend it!

  • @jackwalsh1468
    @jackwalsh1468 Год назад +3

    Chrissy, another great episode of Cincinnati history.. Enjoyable and informative. Cheers, Mate.

  • @tinas2782
    @tinas2782 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for sharing; I've often been curious; as a Cincinnatian. In 1990's, the county owned or leased some of the nearby buildings on Central Parkway; I worked for one of the departments that stored boxes of records, and recall seeing the vaults where film had been stored. Those buildings have been repurposed/developed into apartments now.

    • @historyinyourownbackyard2363
      @historyinyourownbackyard2363  9 месяцев назад +1

      I only had a chance to see the building from the outside where the apartments are now located.

    • @tinas2782
      @tinas2782 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@historyinyourownbackyard2363 Film Center Apartments is one of them. It's not my cup of tea; too sterile & office like for a home. Some like it though. It was very plain when I was there; no fancy architecture inside
      that I recall.

    • @historyinyourownbackyard2363
      @historyinyourownbackyard2363  9 месяцев назад

      @@tinas2782 OK, thanks!

  • @musclecarmitch908
    @musclecarmitch908 Год назад +3

    Awesome place! Awesome history!👍

  • @PhilipGermani
    @PhilipGermani 5 месяцев назад +1

    Fascinating. I really enjoy your videos!

  • @rock2blues59
    @rock2blues59 Год назад +6

    Like MadcapSkippy commented also my aunt worked there. When the film came back from showing at the local theaters they would put on white cotton gloves and check for cracks or tears, repair and re-tension the films before sending to the next theater.

  • @johnswigler6512
    @johnswigler6512 Год назад +3

    Great interview 🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @Marvin.45
    @Marvin.45 10 месяцев назад +2

    Great video! I enjoy these, thank you.

  • @T-41
    @T-41 Год назад +5

    Perhaps Cincinnati being a major railroad hub in the years before the war played a part in locating the distribution center at that location.

  • @Rudolph_Manor
    @Rudolph_Manor Год назад +2

    Film Cincinnati Is Right Next To That Building. 💯

  • @Kenba40
    @Kenba40 8 месяцев назад +3

    Your guest was very interesting. Would love to sit and talk. When I was in high school I helped a friend’s older brother unload film/TV show trucks late evenings like 6 to 10 PM into a warehouse. Not sure of location but maybe warehouse in Clifton area?

  • @seanshafer2253
    @seanshafer2253 8 месяцев назад +1

    I worked at the Strietman Building for 7 years developing a MRP system and running a window coverings company , wasn’t so nice back then

  • @rjmcallister1888-l3p
    @rjmcallister1888-l3p 3 месяца назад +1

    Also noted: all four Warner Brothers and their family had emigrated to nearby Youngstown and showed movies there and elsewhere in the area before heading for Hollywood. They did return occasionally and built a 2,500-seat theatre there. With Cincinnati being a major transportation hub then, it would be logical for them to repair and exchange movies there, rather than shipping them back out to California. Paramount and others did the same. After the 1948 Paramount decree, separating the studios from their theatres, such places were no longer needed and likely closed then or shortly after.

  • @cobaltmidnightoilamp6748
    @cobaltmidnightoilamp6748 Год назад +5

    My late-stepmother worked there as a typist.

  • @ScottFidler
    @ScottFidler Год назад +3

    Disappointed there wasn’t more of a tour of the building.

  • @miamiboyschoir
    @miamiboyschoir 9 месяцев назад +1

    Can you do the Paramount Studios building on Queen City or Harrison ave (I can’t remember which one it’s on).

  • @johnhinton8427
    @johnhinton8427 6 месяцев назад +1

    Union Terminal which was the major hub for train traffic

  • @austinbevis4266
    @austinbevis4266 Год назад +1

    Omg I literally worked in there. I was an inventory control specialist for Boston beer/samuel adams

  • @thomasjohnston6956
    @thomasjohnston6956 Год назад +3

    The Letterboxing hobby taught me there is something interesting everywhere if you just pause and look.

    • @historyinyourownbackyard2363
      @historyinyourownbackyard2363  Год назад +1

      Exactly! You can never get bored on planet Earth. There's so much to explore no matter where you are.

  • @IamRemoWilliams
    @IamRemoWilliams 5 месяцев назад

    There was everything in cincinnati at one time it was the most diversified city in the country a powerhouse.

  • @MrJonathandcrow
    @MrJonathandcrow Год назад +4

    Those Firebrick We didn't know Film was so flammable and unstable , That's jumping off point for All theaters in Midwest for film distribution

    • @joephysics5469
      @joephysics5469 Год назад +3

      Celluloid films burned in a flash compared to the film that started to be used in the 1950's.

  • @davidhicks7047
    @davidhicks7047 Год назад

    I'm from Cincinnati, OH

  • @joeanderson9852
    @joeanderson9852 Год назад +1

  • @davidskiff3083
    @davidskiff3083 5 месяцев назад

    Um, I think part of the draw was due to a now forgotten giant of the entertainment industry, Powell Crosby Jr., a radio and tv pioneer with a national presence in the 30's - 50's.

  • @aaronschulte3207
    @aaronschulte3207 Год назад +2

    Did Doris Day ever grace that building ? ❤❤

    • @historyinyourownbackyard2363
      @historyinyourownbackyard2363  Год назад

      Good question! I personally don't know.

    • @christopherwoycke1959
      @christopherwoycke1959 Год назад

      I seriously doubt any actor / actress would have been to this building. It was a distribution center / warehouse for film.....not a studio.

  • @theawesomest5847
    @theawesomest5847 6 месяцев назад +1

    I love the enthusiasm about Cincinnati, I just wish you had more accurate information. There were far too many false statements to even start to correct.

    • @historyinyourownbackyard2363
      @historyinyourownbackyard2363  6 месяцев назад

      If you would like to sit down for an interview and give your side of the story, feel free to give me a call at 812-623-5727.

  • @Ramcharger85
    @Ramcharger85 Год назад