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The Main Media Inc. 2026

✦ Built By Field Office
    The Main

    Montreal's Cultural Directory

    Help us improve! Share your thoughts on how we can make your experience better.

    Leave feedback

    For partnerships and collaborations:

    partnerships@themain.com

    Content

    • Articles
    • Food & Drink
    • Arts & Culture
    • History Lesson
    • Bulletin
    • Events

    Guides

    • All Guides
    • Best Restaurants
    • Best Cafés
    • Best Bars
    • Best Brunch
    • Best Bakeries

    Explore Montreal

    • Browse Directory
    • Restaurants
    • Bars
    • Cafés
    • Bookstores

    About

    • About us
    • Subscribe
    • Shop
    • Advertise
    • Pitch us
    • RSS Feed

    Legal

    • Terms of service
    • Membership Terms
    • Privacy Policy
    Follow us
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    The Main Media Inc. 2026

    ✦ Built By Field Office
      --°C|Tuesday, March 24, 2026|
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      --°C|Tuesday, March 24, 2026|
      Subscribe today to get 3 free articles per month.ROYALMOUNT Wants to Be Your Dining Destination for a Whole MonthGet 50% off your first 5 rides with Lyft
      InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin
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      Magazine
      Categories
      • Arts & Culture

        Creativity, heritage, and expression.

      • Beyond Montreal

        Travel, adventure, and global perspectives.

      • Design

        The best of Montreal design.

      • Food & Drink

        La bonne bouffe.

      • History

        Stories, lessons, and context.

      • Newsletter

        Our weekly newsletter.

      • See all original stories
      Explore Montreal
      Popular Guides
      • The Best Restaurants in Montreal
      • Best new Restaurants
      • Best Cafés
      • Unique Boutiques
      • Romantic Restaurants
      • Best Bookstores
      • See all Guides
      Neighbourhood
      • Downtown
      • Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
      • Mile End
      • Mile-Ex
      • Saint-Henri
      • See All
      Business Type
      • Restaurant
      • Café
      • Boutique / Store
      • Bar
      • Bakery
      • See All
      Near the Metro
      • Peel
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      More History Lesson

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      The shamrock has been on Montreal's coat of arms since 1832, and the pub culture that followed has been here just as long.

      What Happened to Montreal's Red Light District?
      History Lesson
      J.P. Karwacki

      What Happened to Montreal's Red Light District?

      Jazz legends, burlesque queens, and organized crime made it one of the most alive corners in North America. Then Montreal decided it had a reputation to protect.

      The House That Haitian Montreal Built
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      The Main

      The House That Haitian Montreal Built

      The story of La Maison d'Haïti: Its welcome and advocacy for Montreal's growing Haitian community since 1972.

      The Woman Who Taught a City How to Play the Piano
      History Lesson
      J.P. Karwacki

      The Woman Who Taught a City How to Play the Piano

      In so many ways, Montreal jazz exists because Daisy Peterson Sweeney both masters and generations of kids in Little Burgundy.

      How a Railway Porter Built Montreal's Most Storied Jazz Club
      History Lesson
      J.P. Karwacki

      How a Railway Porter Built Montreal's Most Storied Jazz Club

      The story of Rufus Rockhead, the Jamaican-born railway porter who built Montreal's most legendary jazz club—and spent decades defending it.

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      For over 60 years, the fully functional home of two circus veterans became a Montreal tourist attraction where everything was scaled down to their three-foot-tall size.

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      Montreal's decades-long Polynesian fantasy and volcano cocktail experiment
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      Montreal's Decades-long Polynesian Fantasy and Volcano Cocktail Experiment

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      A Butcher's Gamble, a Forgotten Tavern, and How the Mile End Earned Its Name

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      NDG's Empress Theatre Survived a Century of Change. Can it Survive Neglect?

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      By Kaitlyn DiBartolo

      November 7, 2025 · 5 min read

      NDG's Empress Theatre survived a century of change. Can it survive neglect?
      The Empress Theatre's Egyptian Revival facade on Sherbrooke Street, where two carved sphinxes have watched over Montreal since 1927. The building has been empty since a fire in 1992. | Photograph: D. Benjamin Miller

      Discover the places mentioned in this story

      Empress Theater

      Saunter down Sherbrooke Street and it will stop you in your tracks: the Empress Theatre, the only known remaining Egyptian Revival movie palace in Canada. 

      Built in 1927 and opened shortly thereafter (circa 1928), the historical building stoically looms above passersby who look up from the perpetual city bustle to the eyes of its two stone carved sphynxes, who observe the city from their perches atop its columns.

      The Empress Theatre was designed by Quebecois architect Joseph-Alcide Chaussé with interiors by the Maltese-born Montreal artist Emmanuel Briffa, who also designed Montreal’s beloved Rialto Theatre on Parc among the many others. 

      In the beginning, the Empress Theatre was a glamorous movie palace that reflected the golden age of cinema, an era that Montreal particularly had a stake in. It was a mainstay of its time for Sherbrooke Street, one of the main arteries that runs through Montreal that has historically kept the city’s artistic blood coursing. Throughout time, it joined a litany of museums, art galleries, and music venues that served Montrealers.

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      History Lesson

      NDG's Empress Theatre Survived a Century of Change. Can it Survive Neglect?

      Montreal's last (and Canada's only) Egyptian Revival movie palace reinvented itself for decades. Now it's been empty for 33 years.

      By Kaitlyn DiBartolo

      November 7, 2025 · 5 min read

      NDG's Empress Theatre survived a century of change. Can it survive neglect?
      The Empress Theatre's Egyptian Revival facade on Sherbrooke Street, where two carved sphinxes have watched over Montreal since 1927. The building has been empty since a fire in 1992. | Photograph: D. Benjamin Miller

      Discover the places mentioned in this story

      Empress Theater

      Saunter down Sherbrooke Street and it will stop you in your tracks: the Empress Theatre, the only known remaining Egyptian Revival movie palace in Canada. 

      Built in 1927 and opened shortly thereafter (circa 1928), the historical building stoically looms above passersby who look up from the perpetual city bustle to the eyes of its two stone carved sphynxes, who observe the city from their perches atop its columns.

      The Empress Theatre was designed by Quebecois architect Joseph-Alcide Chaussé with interiors by the Maltese-born Montreal artist Emmanuel Briffa, who also designed Montreal’s beloved Rialto Theatre on Parc among the many others. 

      In the beginning, the Empress Theatre was a glamorous movie palace that reflected the golden age of cinema, an era that Montreal particularly had a stake in. It was a mainstay of its time for Sherbrooke Street, one of the main arteries that runs through Montreal that has historically kept the city’s artistic blood coursing. Throughout time, it joined a litany of museums, art galleries, and music venues that served Montrealers.

      Free account required

      For readers who care about Montreal

      Create a free account to read this story and access 3 articles per month, plus our weekly Bulletin.

      Independent. Local. Reader-supported.

      or

      Already a member? Sign in

      Advertisement

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      Follow on Google
      Everyone dunks on Griffintown. Here's what they're missing.

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      Everyone Dunks on Griffintown. Here's What They're Missing.

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