Edwards family giving up theater ownership
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- It’s unlikely that much will change for the city’s
economy and its moviegoers after financially ailing Edwards Theaters
Circuit, Inc. announced this week that Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz
will make a “significant investment” in the Newport Beach-based company.
But the city’s business leaders said Thursday that they were saddened
by what seems to be the loss of local ownership to an outside player.
For the past 70 years, the company has been owned by the Edwards
family, with Newport Beach resident W. James Edwards III currently in
charge as chief executive officer.
“It’s a sorry state of affairs that the industry has changed about
[the family] and they are not able to salvage their business,” said
Richard Luehrs, the president and chief executive officer of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. “Philip Anschutz has no relationship
here. He doesn’t live here. He doesn’t know the people.”
Luehrs said he didn’t know what exactly would happen to the company,
and no specifics of the deal with Anschutz and a Los Angeles-based
capital management company have been released.
“The bottom line is that I don’t know what the outcome will be,” he
said, adding that he hoped Edwards and his wife, Patti, would continue
their roles as prominent members of the city’s philanthropic community.
The Edwards family is declining to comment on the proceedings for the
time being, a company spokeswoman said. Details of the Anschutz deal are
expected to become public later this month.
City officials said a possible change in ownership would have limited
consequences for Newport Beach, since tax revenue from the theaters is
limited to concessions sales and business license fees are not
significant.
Gregg Schwenk, the executive director of the Newport Beach Film
Festival, said he hoped the newcomer would be receptive to ideas for the
event, held mainly at the company’s Big Edwards theater at Fashion
Island.
He added that he looked forward to a “mutually beneficial relationship
for many years to come.”
At the time of the bankruptcy filing, company officials said a public
demand for state-of-the-art stadium megaplexes and a drop in attendance
at older theaters had brought the company on the brink of financial ruin.
On Thursday, the company’s Web site announced the recent grand opening
of a 20-screen theater in South Gate, featuring “All High Back Luv-Seats
with Lift Up Armrests and Cup Holders, . . .[an] Oversized Snack Bar for
Your Convenience . . . [and] All Giant Wall-to-wall Screens -- State of
the Art Everything.”
While the company still operates 59 theaters in Southern California,
Idaho and Texas, about 15 have been closed since the bankruptcy filing.
Both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa have three movie theaters run by the
company.
Last year, the company closed its old theater on Adams Avenue near
Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa.
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