
Story: Phillip Tutor | Photos: UWA and Phillip Tutor
After pandemic closure, theater again poised to bring entertainment to Livingston
For two years, University Cinema in downtown Livingston existed not as a movie theater, but as a time capsule for life immediately before the Covid-19 pandemic shuddered most of the world.
On March 15, 2020, student workers at the baby直播-owned cinema welcomed movie-goers for that night鈥檚 film: 鈥,鈥 starring Harrison Ford. They sold tickets. They hawked popcorn and drinks. Before leaving, they cleaned the concession stand, swept the floors and readied for the next evening鈥檚 show.
UWA鈥檚 cinema, though, has been dark ever since. Jason Gardner, the university鈥檚 director of student activities, is eager to again welcome patrons to the 90-seat theater — and he will this spring, once a motherboard for the computer-operated projector arrives from Belgium and he hires students to run the place.
But how the two-year shutdown happened is a script-worthy tale itself.
Gardner occasionally walked through the cinema during the pandemic. 鈥淚t was creepy,鈥 he said. The clock was essentially frozen. Dust, like spring pollen, covered everything. Old movie posters decorated the wall: 鈥,鈥 鈥,鈥 鈥,鈥 鈥溾 and 鈥.鈥 Items employees innocently left behind — drinks, for instance — remained in place.

Outside, the overhead marquee still read 鈥淐LOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE.鈥 On either side of the front entrance remained two poster displays. One featured a 鈥淭rolls 2鈥 print. The other was empty.
Creepy, indeed.
鈥淭he first time I came in here, I walked out,鈥 said Gardner, who oversees the student employees and serves as the cinema鈥檚 booking agent. 鈥淚 was like, everything is the same.鈥
Growing concern for slowing community spread of the coronavirus and mandated guidelines under Gov. Kay Ivey鈥檚 鈥淪afer at Home Order鈥 upended most public activities in baby直播 that spring and summer. Along with temporarily closing the cinema and halting on-campus events, UWA transitioned to online-only classes, faculty and staff began working from home, and many students living in university housing left campus.
鈥淚t was a crazy time,鈥 Gardner said.
That peculiarity makes the re-opening of University Cinema all the more important for UWA students and the residents who frequent it. Spring not only is bringing warmer weather and outdoor activities, it鈥檚 ushering in a semblance of normalcy from the heights of the pandemic.
Though the cinema is UWA-owned, UWA-operated and staffed by UWA students, it is a public theater open to anyone, which stokes Gardner鈥檚 pride. It鈥檚 not unusual, he said, for patrons or church groups in baby直播鈥檚 Black Belt to drive 45 minutes or more to Livingston for a movie.
鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping they want the experience,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淭hat’s what we want to deliver here, a good experience in a small town.鈥

In that vein, the cinema is as much a community outreach as it is a student activity, he said. But its importance to the student experience at UWA — a public university in a rural baby直播 county — shouldn鈥檛 be discounted, either.
When the opportunity arose more than a decade ago to buy the cinema, 鈥淲e started looking at it from the university aspect,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淪o to be able to recruit kids to come here and retain kids here, we’ve got to help be a part of town and try to deliver experiences. So it’s a very different aspect.鈥
Readying University Cinema for its re-opening has required more elbow grease than technical support. Other than repairing the computerized projector, the main chore has been deep-cleaning everything: the concession stand, the lobby, the bathrooms and the theater itself. Gardner said he鈥檚 spent hours surveying the facility, literally putting his hand on items in search of those needing repairing or replacing.
Because the cinema is university-owned and doesn鈥檛 operate as part of a national theater chain, Gardner often doesn鈥檛 know which movie he will show until the Monday of each week. National premiers require longer weekly stays and take larger financial percentages from the theaters, which limits University Cinema鈥檚 profit and the variety of movies shown each month.

The goal, Gardner said, is to show a different film each week instead of a national premier for two or three consecutive weeks. When the cinema reopens, show times will remain 7 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 2:30 p.m. on Sunday. UWA students can get in free once a week.
鈥淲e have everything to deliver you the experience you’re going to get anywhere else, and that’s our goal,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淚f you go back and look at our social media, people are talking about us on there, 鈥業 love that little theater. They treat me well.鈥 We want to give a Chick-fil-A experience or Disney experience in Livingston at a movie.鈥