With construction contractors still running around getting the place ready for the opening-night screening, Diamond Lake neighborhood resident Chris Woodward was able to ramble into the newly renovated Parkway Theater unnoticed. He gave himself away, though, when he let out a "Wow!"
"My wife and I used to get a babysitter and walk up here to see whatever movie," remembered Woodward, whose kids are now middle-aged adults. "It hasn't looked this nice in a long time."
In a relatively short time — about three months of planning and three more of construction — the Parkway Theater has been given a much-needed face-lift and some cool new features in an effort to make it a vibrant neighborhood theater again starting this weekend.
This time around, though, movies are just a part of the mix of babysitter-worthy programming.
"It's all a little selfish: We're offering the things here that I would want to walk up and enjoy on any given night, starting with a good margarita and ending with a great movie or live music," said Ward Johnson, one of the two new co-owners, who also lives just a few blocks away.
At the intersection of 48th Street and Chicago Avenue in the "true south" part of south Minneapolis, the Parkway sits next to what used to be Pepitos restaurant and is now the home to an offshoot of another long-beloved Mexican eatery, El Burrito Mercado from St. Paul's West Side — hence the margaritas in Johnson's ideal scenario.
Pepitos and the Parkway ran concurrently for many decades, but owner Joe Minjares — who opened the restaurant with his family in 1971 — fell ill in recent years. Both businesses suffered as a result, and the property had to be sold last year.
Before that, the Parkway had shown movies daily for decades going back to its opening in 1931. It became more of a multifaceted, sporadically used 350-person-capacity performance and screening space in the 2000s. But the venue limped along of late amid disrepair and a sagging budget.