If you were to find yourself at the intersection of Sunnyside Road and France Avenue S. — to grab a burger at the Convention Grill or pick up a slice at Hello Pizza — you might wonder about the building across the street. A simple structure, painted white, with no particular distinguishing style — except for the big square facade.
It looks like it used to be something other than a dry cleaner's shop.
It did. It was the Westgate Theater, a movie house for what was then the streetcar suburb of Morningside.
When it opened in 1935, the modest Westgate merited just a few lines in the Minneapolis Star. "The theater embodies the latest in design, including such features as exterior and interior indistinct lighting" as well as "the latest in cooling and air conditioning."
At least it had a good pedigree: It was designed by the firm of Liebenberg and Kaplan, a Minneapolis architectural firm considered the masters of 1930s style.
Owner Carl Fust, who'd been an insurance agent, and before that a violinist for the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, called the theater his "retirement project." On its debut, he hired a small orchestra, which he conducted.
But his retirement project didn't turn out like he'd imagined.
With its 500 seats, the theater was half the size of the Edina Theater, just six blocks away. The larger theater got the big pictures everyone wanted to see; the Westgate got the leftovers.