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History
and Restoration of the Lyric/Town Theatre/
and now the
Endicott Performing Arts Center

The Lyric Theatre was constructed in 1917 on the corner of Washington Avenue and
Monroe
Street in downtown Endicott by Benjamin Dittrich. Initially, the showplace/theater
was named "The Lyric Theatre" and catered to vaudeville acts.
With the advent of silent movies, the theater began to offer this form of entertainment as
well.
Movies with sound eventually replaced vaudeville acts, and the theater became
strictly a movie house.
Special events were periodically held at the theater, including movie premiers with
visiting celebrities such as Irene Dunne, beauty pageants, concerts, and the like.

There is even a legend associated with the theater, that the ghost of a pregnant woman
haunts its many rooms and hallways!
The Carrol's Corporation purchased the theater from the Ditttrich Family, and in 1993 it
closed for business due to competition from local mall movie theaters.
During the time that the theater was closed, from 1993 to 1998, the heating system broke
down, the roof leaked, pipes burst, and the theater fell into terrible disrepair.
The theater remained unused from 1993 to 1998, when it was purchased by a trio of Endicott
natives dedicated to it regaining its former glory: Bob Corwin, Pat Daglio, and her
husband Steve Daglio. Shortly thereafter, Pat Foti, Lou Ligouri, and Sue Dunlap joined the
team.
Pat Foti & Lou Ligouri headed up the theater restoration project and with the help of many dedicated volunteer have brought the
"new" EPAC Theater back to its former glory.
Here are
some pics of the restoration !
And the rest is history!
--Source: Lou Ligouri
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