Who Was the First Person to Make a Movie Theater?

Movie Theater|Theater

Movie theaters have been around for over a century, and the person responsible for their inception was French inventor, Louis Lumière. Born in 1862 in Besançon, France, Lumière was the son of Antoine Lumière and Jeanne Joséphine Costille. His father owned a photography business and his mother was a painter.

In 1895, Louis and his brother Auguste invented the Cinématographe, an apparatus that could both photograph and project motion pictures. That same year they shot their first film, La Sortie de l’Usine Lumière à Lyon (Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory). The film was only 46 seconds long but it changed the world of entertainment forever.

The Cinématographe used a combination of lenses to record images on film stock, then through a system of sprockets the film could be rewound and projected onto a screen. This allowed them to create short films that were entertaining as well as educational. After demonstrating their invention in Paris at the Société d’Encouragement pour l’Industrie Nationale on December 28th 1895, they began to travel around Europe showing their films as well as offering cameras for sale.

The brothers opened their first movie theater in December 1896 in Paris. It was called the Grand Café and it quickly became popular with moviegoers who could watch up to 10 films per night.

This was followed by theaters in other countries such as Italy, Germany, England and Spain. By 1901 there were over 2000 movie theaters worldwide.

Conclusion:

Louis Lumière is widely considered to be the first person to make a movie theater. His invention of the Cinématographe changed entertainment forever by allowing people to watch moving pictures on a big screen. The brothers opened their first theater in 1896 and within 5 years there were already over 2000 movie theaters worldwide.