By 1982, the theater was acquired by National Amusements, who split the auditorium into two smaller screens.
In 1915, the theater was acquired by the Loew's Theatres.
In 1974, the theatre was acquired by impresario Bernard Delfont, and a new screen installed at a cost of £150,000.
After Ziegfeld's death in 1932, the theater was acquired by the Loews chain, which turned it into a second-run movie house.
The theater was acquired and renovated by the opera company with the help of Boston arts patron Susan Timken.
All theatres in Connecticut were acquired from National Amusements in 2009.
If these theaters were not acquired as part of the project, the owners would - as now - charge what the traffic will bear.
In 1980, the theater was acquired by a church, and stopped showing commercial movies in favor of Christian films.
In the 1930s the theater was acquired by Balaban & Katz and subsequently used as a television studio and movie theater.
In the late 1990s, the theatre was acquired by the cable television channel Nickelodeon.