Boise's Haunted Egyptian Theater
In Boise, Idaho the Egyptian Theater is a unique and beautiful landmark, and one with a eerie secret. A former projectionist is said to roam the building, frightening employees and filmgoers alike.
When it opened in 1927 after the discovery of King Tut's tomb it was a beautiful movie palace of Egyptian Revival design, one of the few remaining buildings from this brief architectural period. It is still an operational theater and is beautifully maintained, with its detailing and original pipe organ intact.
The ghost of the Egyptian Theater is suspected to be a man named Joe, a projectionist who worked at the theater from nearly its opening to his death in 1954, when he suffered a heart attack climbing the steps to the projection booth. His spirit is said to stay on, and visitors and employees of the theater report him operating doors and light switches in the empty building, and the occasional disembodied voice and icy touch.
Professional investigators have visited the building multiple times, and one of those visits was recorded for this local news segment.
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