Woods Theatre

54 W. Randolph Street,
Chicago, IL 60601

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Showing 26 - 50 of 122 comments

DavidZornig
DavidZornig on October 3, 2015 at 7:37 pm

6/09/78- 7/20/78 photo added, photo credit Jesse Williams.

DAL
DAL on August 10, 2015 at 7:45 am

If being demolished is considered adaptive use in architectural design, then I guest the people who designed the Woods might smile. The building that stands where the Woods was is new construction.

JudithK
JudithK on August 10, 2015 at 4:24 am

Never visited the Woods Theatre; it is now part of the Goodman Theatre complex, hosting Petterino’s Restaurant and (this is a guess) the offices and common areas of the Goodman. Thus, in a way I finally visited the Woods after all. An unusual and successful example of adaptive use in architectural design and I think the creative people involved in the planning and design of the Woods would be happy with the way things turned out.

neeb
neeb on July 8, 2014 at 6:10 am

http://boingboing.net/2014/07/07/the-end-of-the-chicagos-maje.html

Article about the last night of the Woods. Has a few internal photos.

DavidZornig
DavidZornig on May 23, 2014 at 1:56 pm

The Woods is seen at 4:51 in this Vivian Maier film.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXASDjCwxsE&feature=youtu.be

Tim O'Neill
Tim O'Neill on April 26, 2013 at 11:12 pm

http://youtu.be/DzdnTOgi2-4

DavidZornig
DavidZornig on February 29, 2012 at 3:30 pm

Cool. It appears to Roland Burris & Ald. Fred Roti (gray trench coat)standing to the left in the photo.

DaveTracz
DaveTracz on February 13, 2012 at 1:16 pm

Yes. The facade of the Oliver Typewriter Building still stands, but the windows are blacked out as it is now the back wall of the restored Oriental’s stage. Restoration wasn’t viable unless the stage could be enlarged to accomodate the big touring Broadway productions.

VintageBob
VintageBob on October 8, 2011 at 6:24 pm

Can anyone tell me if they remember a restaurant called the Centennial Restaurant near the Woods Theater? I used to eat there as a kid, and for the life of me I can’t find a single reference to it anywhere. I’m pretty sure it was on Dearborn near the Woods, because I remember eating at the Centennial and looking down the street to see a sign for the movie Penitentiary II (with Mr. T) playing there.I can’t recall if this restaurant was near the Woods or the McVicker, but it was near whichever theater played Penitentiary II. Anyone?

Broan
Broan on July 27, 2011 at 5:31 pm

Here is a 1964 view

Broan
Broan on May 24, 2011 at 8:12 pm

I don’t know that I’ve seen a good view of the whole building before.

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on May 9, 2011 at 4:47 pm

WOW what a great page.Lots of photos and history,I do not know how I have missed this one till now.

RickB
RickB on April 26, 2011 at 4:27 pm

In one place on IMDB it has the release date as January 1962, but if you click the link it has a list including December 20, 1961, Chicago, Illinois. So The Happy Thieves may have been a world premiere engagement at the Woods.

Mark_L
Mark_L on April 26, 2011 at 4:00 pm

Looking closely at the marquee of The Woods, it looks like the theatre was playing THE HAPPY THEIVES with Rita Hayworth and Rex Harrison. IMDB shows a release date of this of December, 1961.

Sure are some BIG cars parked on that street!

Broan
Broan on April 10, 2011 at 10:24 pm

View link A nice view of the dearborn facade

teddy666
teddy666 on March 29, 2011 at 8:31 am

I would love to see the interior of this theater.

JRS40
JRS40 on March 18, 2011 at 10:14 am

That double feature Rich speaks of could have been at the UA Marina Cinemas. They often played double features during their brief 7 year existence. But Tim is correct there is NO WAY that was at the Woods or any other Loop palace. Please see the booking history from the mid 60’s to 1980 for further confirmation.

Tim O'Neill
Tim O'Neill on March 17, 2011 at 10:21 pm

Rich, I think you saw this double feature somewhere else. Believe me……The Woods Theatre NEVER showed an Ingmar Bergman movie in the 1970s. Maybe you saw this double bill at the Esquire or Playboy, but at the Woods………….no way.

Richard3150
Richard3150 on March 13, 2011 at 10:37 am

I saw the one of the oddest double-bills ever at the Woods: CRIES & WHISPERS and THE LAST DETAIL. Both terrific films, but the audience was there for THE LAST DETAIL.
Guess which film was shown first.

CSWalczak
CSWalczak on February 4, 2011 at 2:56 pm

A picture of the theater in 1964 taken from under the marquee of the United Artists diagonally opposite: View link It is interesting, after looking at all the photos that have been posted, how many stores and restaurants occupied that corner space.

GButters
GButters on January 10, 2011 at 4:57 pm

Hi!

I’m a film historian working on a book on movie theaters in the Chicago Loop in the 1970’s. I would love to interview individuals who attended the Woods Theater at that time. To reach me, email me at

thanks,

DavidZornig
DavidZornig on August 13, 2010 at 9:18 pm

By the way, the film on the Woods marquee in “Mickey One” was “The Cardinal”. Which is the first film on JRS40’s 05/04/07 list of movies.
“Mickey One” itself would later play at the Woods as well when it was first released. Starting 10/27/65, according to the same list above.
Another notable Chicago site in the film was the old Gate Of Horn nightclub on the S/E corner Dearborn & Chicago Ave. Which doubled as a place called Xanadu in the film.
A club where Lenny Bruce had played and I believe was later arrested in.

DavidZornig
DavidZornig on August 9, 2010 at 3:32 pm

Just watched the 1965 Warren Beatty film “Mickey One” on TCM.
Filmed in Chicago, it showcased the seedy side of a nightclub comedian on the run from the mob.
The underside of Woods Theatre marquee & the Woods Building had a brief appearance. Also an interior shot looking outward from the Woods Building lobby. The plywood walls from the construction of the Daley Center across the street can be seen in the background.

LouisRugani
LouisRugani on July 29, 2010 at 8:28 am

Now Not Showing

When The Last Loop Movie Theater Closed In January, A Cultural Dinosaur Had Finally Breathed Its Last
(Chicago Tribune Magazine, July 2, 1989)

Essay by Paul Gapp, the Tribune`s architecture critic.

In Chicago and across America, downtown movie palaces were the dinosaurs of 20th Century architecture. They burst onto the urban scene in baroque splendor, multiplied, then sank into decay and died. Today, the relatively few that survive are gawked at like so many reconstructed brontosauri.

Still, the short history of their heyday does not diminish their importance as nostalgia-heavy icons and reminders of other losses. As the movie palaces declined and disappeared, so did such things as our old sense of wonder and innocence and our middle-class formality.

Chicagoans saw their first one-reel films around the turn of the century in storefronts, rented halls and even mortuaries that were pressed into temporary service by itinerant projectionists. The magic of moving pictures at first made audiences insensible to their surroundings.

Yet the flickering black-and-white images had finite allure. For more than 20 years they were silent, after all, and theater owners gradually employed piano players, organists and live stage shows to enhance the mute acting of Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and Mary Pickford.

Out of this need for embellishing the silent film grew the elaborately scaled and spectacularly ornamented movie palace. True, there had been fancy opera houses and legitimate theaters long before 1900, but nothing like the architectural extravaganzas so calculatedly aimed at mass audiences. Splashy theater design was almost as important to the box office as the artistic product on the screen.

In Chicago`s Loop, sound films were still nine years distant when the State-Lake and the Woods Theaters were built in 1917. Silent screens remained the rule when the Roosevelt and the Chicago opened in 1921. The first scratchy sound was just coming into use when the Oriental, United Artists and the Palace (a part of the Bismarck Hotel) were built in 1926.

These thousands of downtown Chicago movie-house seats were practically sold out on many weekend nights in pre-World War II days, and theaters were almost as full the rest of the week. Summertime crowds often came for the air- conditioning as much as anything else, since few other buildings were cooled.

Practically everyone, including people of the most modest means, dressed up for the downtown movie excursions-men in suits and ties, women in dresses and youngsters in their Sunday best. Their decorum as well as their costume was formal by today`s standards, yet it somehow fit the luxuriousness of movie-palace surroundings. The big theater was a place of escape for the common citizen. Everyone could feel like a big shot in so sumptuous a setting, as unbelievable as that may seem to the younger of us today. And during the grim Depression of the 1930s, what better way to forget reality for a few hours?

The decline of the downtown movie houses, beginning in the 1960s, was a sordidly messy business in Chicago and practically every other big city. Kung- fu and other low-budget, low-IQ fare was the rule. In lobbies originally intended to resemble Versailles or the Paris Opera, hot dogs rotated on spits and patrons played at pinball machines or video games. The jokes about sticky floors were all true, and rats as well as plainclothes security personnel roamed the aisles.

Virtually every downtown Chicago movie palace was officially doomed to demolition by the North Loop urban-renewal plan concocted in the 1970s, but economics and real estate developers beat the city to the punch. The theaters closed before the city could tear them down, and in January of this year the last screen went dark when the Woods closed its doors. That left only the restored but financially shaky Chicago Theatre, which in any case is now a venue for stage shows, not cinema.

Today, people dressed in the surreally chic, factory-faded sport clothes of the 1980s pay upwards of $10 to sit in a tiny contemporary movie theater while devouring bulimia-size containers of popcorn and soft drinks and watching screen fare heavy on dismemberment and sexual coupling. Where architectural splendor once compensated for the silence of films, food now fills the vacuum created by the sterility of theaters. The downtown dinosaurs are dead, and those who personally remember the glory days of picture palaces are fading away as well.

DavidZornig
DavidZornig on April 22, 2010 at 5:41 am

Thanks for posting that. In the Flicker comments section someone confirmed the name of the bar next door was “Bar RR Ranch”. That’s where Channel 7’s Joel Daly/Sundowners played regularly.