
Here are the phone numbers to our locations. Unfortunately, we cannot process refunds through email. Private Showtimes are only eligible for refunds up until 7 days prior to event date. As Lippert had Overpeck work on three projects in a short period, it’s possible that he also designed others of the theaters Lippert was building during the brief time when Overpeck had an individual practice- from about 1958 to 1961, as near as I’ve been able to determine.We have a refund policy that allows you to receive a refund up to 30 minutes before showtime! Please call the theatre directly to receive a refund over the phone, stop into the theatre box office, or for online ticket purchases you can also visit our refund page. On page 14 of the same issue of Boxoffice linked above is an article about Robert Lippert’s twin Riviera and Capri Theatres in Los Angeles, and that project was attributed to architect John P. The only major difference I can see between the Buena Park as pictured in this Boxoffice feature from 1959 and this 1984 photo of the Corbin is that the Corbin had a traditional marquee, probably added later as it is mounted on columns rather than on the building itself. Presumably it too was designed by Overpeck.

In 1969 he associated with a major architectural firm to develop Marina City and the Marina City Club”The “identical” theater opened by Lippert the same year as the Buena Park was apparently the Corbin Theatre in Tarzana. Partnership with Bob Kite, their firm designed the John Thomas Dye School after the Bel-Air fire.

With a 90-foot widescreen, Studio Park’s 'Theater One' seats 300 guests and boasts the largest screen in West Michigan. Two years later he opened his own office in Pacific Palisades, designing custom residences. Studio Park brings movies back to downtown with nine screens indoors - complete with heated, reclining seats - and a tenth screen located outside. He has been a member of the Architectural Review Board of the Bel Air Association, and a document published by the association indicates why the confusion arose:“Warren Frazier Overpeck- Bill, as he is called by his friends, graduated from the USC School of Architecture.

I’ve found a couple of references to “William” Overpeck on the Internet, but the architect’s actual first name was Warren.
