And if you don’t mind a drive of a couple hours, there’s the Oriental in Milwaukee, which I think is the only regularly-operating movie theater in the area that has a balcony.
The DuPage may have been Lombard’s only movie palace, but Lombard is pretty small. If you look at DuPage County as a whole, they have the Tivoli, York, Wheaton Grand, Paramount (Rapp & Rapp), Glen, and Bensenville; the Arcada and Catlow are both just over the county line, too. Lombard may have taken a huge step backwards, but there is no cultural starvation in the immediate vicinity.
Obama left it totally up to locals because the locals were the only ones with jurisdiction over the property. Even the Village President, who was supportive of the theater, was powerless against the trustees. Let’s hope he never runs for president, lest this skeleton come out of his closet as well.
As far as the DuPage being a Rapp & Rapp, they are probably the most well-represented architects among preserved theaters. There are 45 functioning Rapp & Rapp theaters across the country. Compare this to only three of W.W. Ahlschlager’s that are even standing – one is a church, and the other two have been mostly gutted. What’s more, the Gateway is very similar to the DuPage, but it has a balcony, is mostly intact, and is still functioning.
Back on the subject of Presidential candidates, Mitt Romney did nothing to save the Gayety, either.
Er… Barack Obama is a U.S. Senator. He has a vote in a General Assembly in Washington, D.C. He does not hold any jurisdiction over a local suburban pissing contest.
Sure, but eventually, it didn’t serve enough neighborhood folks to continue operating.
The buses wouldn’t help much, either. Let’s say 2,000 people came to an event on a Saturday evening. Half of them paired up in cars – that’s 500 cars, which would be difficult but possible to accommodate between the Mutual Bank parking lot and on-street parking around the neighborhood. The other 1,000 people have their choice of four buses that run every twenty minutes. Assuming everyone goes in each direction equally, it would take over an hour before everyone gets on a bus.
Of course, there is no shortage of cabs in the neighborhood (even though they usually have their “Off Duty” lights on today), but having that many people hail cabs at the same time comes with its own set of problems.
This is the first I’ve heard of the “structurally unsound” label. I do know that Patel initially did want to save the theater, but the cost of mechanical upgrades was prohibitive. The interior, except for the downstairs auditorium, was consmetically in good condition a year ago, though much of the ornamentation had already been removed years before.
Not only is it easier to fill a smaller venue like the Tivoli or Portage, but you need a place for them to put their cars, too. A 2,000 seat neighborhood house is an anachronism; if a theater is large, it has to be a regional destination. The Tivoli has on-site parking, and the Portage has a municipal lot half a block away. The Nortown is in the middle of arguably the worst parking mess in the City outside of Downtown. Two small screens serving the local populace will work a lot better there.
The neighboring Selwyn and Harris theaters were indeed built; they’re listed here under their later names of Cinestage and Michael Todd. Their façcades are still standing; the site has been home to the Goodman Theatre since 2000.
Some of the terra cotta pieces were falling to the street a few years ago. The City of Chicago pitched in and removed pieces to repair and store them; they will be reinstalled. See posts above from around October 2005.
The Villa is featured in the documentary Preserve Me a Seat by Apartment 101 Films. The new floor is just wood platforms; the original auditorium floor is completely intact. Dr. Adib said in the film that he wanted to leave as much as possible intact so it would be possible to convert it back to a theater someday. If he did not buy the building, it would have been demolished.
According to the film, the sign did not work and was damaged when Adib moved it. The estimated cost to repair the sign was $70,000.
It’s a shame that the owners thought the porn niche was strong enough that they could jack up the price so much. I guess they thought that none of their audience would be content just watching at home. I still think they’ll do better with Bollywood at any price than they did with porn at $9.
I’m not sure what you mean by “The Fair is nowhere.” The Fair will actually still be there. I’m not interested in the management’s well being, either, but theaters are businesses, not social service organizations. It’s a shame that you would rather see the building torn down than stop showing porn and kung fu.
pmullins, I have nothing against the Fair’s current patrons or porn itself, and from the thread and articles I’ve read, I was under the impression that patronage was pretty sparse. Porn kept a lot of our theaters going because there was no demand for anything else. Now it’s a dwindling niche market. I’m happy that the management is keeping the theater going and adjusting to the demand rather than eeking it out with porn for a couple more years and then selling out to a developer.
How is Bollywood a bad thing? Their current business plan of porn, camp, and third-run mainstream films doesn’t seem like it’s drawing many customers, while the nearby Eagle, at least when I passed by the place regularly a few years ago, is packed.
The Pickwick will be hosting a benefit for the Des Plaines Theater Preservation Society on Thursday, April 12 at 8:00 P.M. Acclaimed theatre organist Jay Warren will accompany The Pawn Shop starring Charlie Chaplin (1916), Never Weaken starring Harold Lloyd (1921), and Sherlock Jr. starring Buster Keaton (1924). Visit www.dptheatre.org for more information.
There will be a benefit for the Des Plaines Theater at the Pickwick on Thursday, April 12 at 8:00 P.M. Acclaimed theatre organist Jay Warren will accompany The Pawn Shop starring Charlie Chaplin (1916), Never Weaken starring Harold Lloyd (1921), and Sherlock Jr. starring Buster Keaton (1924). Visit www.dptheatre.org for more information.
The theatre description should be updated; the Gateway hasn’t been the home of the Silent Film Society of Chicago since the Portage reopened last year.
Sadly, Sportif, the jewel box bicycle shop across from the Gateway that Paul Fortini mentioned a year ago, has been a vacant lot for a few months.
Uptown: Portrait of a Palace will be shown on Friday, September 14 at the Portage Theater as part of the “Preserving Palaces” documentary film festival, along with Preserve Me a Seat (chronicling efforts to save the Indian Hills in Omaha, Gayety/Publix in Boston, DuPage in Lombard, and Villa in Salt Lake City). The festival continues Saturday, September 15 with The Wizard of Austin Boulevard, Loew’s Paradise Theatre, and Memoirs of a Movie Palace. A theatre preservation discussion panel will follow the films on Saturday night. For complete information, visit www.portagetheater.org.
Groundbreaking for renovations, October 10, 2001
Providence Journal editorial on the closing of the Revival House
And if you don’t mind a drive of a couple hours, there’s the Oriental in Milwaukee, which I think is the only regularly-operating movie theater in the area that has a balcony.
See BWChicago’s post right above yours. It was the same photo.
The DuPage may have been Lombard’s only movie palace, but Lombard is pretty small. If you look at DuPage County as a whole, they have the Tivoli, York, Wheaton Grand, Paramount (Rapp & Rapp), Glen, and Bensenville; the Arcada and Catlow are both just over the county line, too. Lombard may have taken a huge step backwards, but there is no cultural starvation in the immediate vicinity.
Obama left it totally up to locals because the locals were the only ones with jurisdiction over the property. Even the Village President, who was supportive of the theater, was powerless against the trustees. Let’s hope he never runs for president, lest this skeleton come out of his closet as well.
As far as the DuPage being a Rapp & Rapp, they are probably the most well-represented architects among preserved theaters. There are 45 functioning Rapp & Rapp theaters across the country. Compare this to only three of W.W. Ahlschlager’s that are even standing – one is a church, and the other two have been mostly gutted. What’s more, the Gateway is very similar to the DuPage, but it has a balcony, is mostly intact, and is still functioning.
Back on the subject of Presidential candidates, Mitt Romney did nothing to save the Gayety, either.
Er… Barack Obama is a U.S. Senator. He has a vote in a General Assembly in Washington, D.C. He does not hold any jurisdiction over a local suburban pissing contest.
That said, what did Senator Clinton or Mayors Giuliani and Bloomberg do to stop the demolition of the Regency, Marboro (a Charles Sandblom), Commodore, Beekman, or the 90-year-old and still-functioning Variety, or the total gutting of the Kingsway, Forest Hills, Kenmore, Crossbay (another Sandblom), or Loew’s Astor Plaza?
Sure, but eventually, it didn’t serve enough neighborhood folks to continue operating.
The buses wouldn’t help much, either. Let’s say 2,000 people came to an event on a Saturday evening. Half of them paired up in cars – that’s 500 cars, which would be difficult but possible to accommodate between the Mutual Bank parking lot and on-street parking around the neighborhood. The other 1,000 people have their choice of four buses that run every twenty minutes. Assuming everyone goes in each direction equally, it would take over an hour before everyone gets on a bus.
Of course, there is no shortage of cabs in the neighborhood (even though they usually have their “Off Duty” lights on today), but having that many people hail cabs at the same time comes with its own set of problems.
This is the first I’ve heard of the “structurally unsound” label. I do know that Patel initially did want to save the theater, but the cost of mechanical upgrades was prohibitive. The interior, except for the downstairs auditorium, was consmetically in good condition a year ago, though much of the ornamentation had already been removed years before.
Not only is it easier to fill a smaller venue like the Tivoli or Portage, but you need a place for them to put their cars, too. A 2,000 seat neighborhood house is an anachronism; if a theater is large, it has to be a regional destination. The Tivoli has on-site parking, and the Portage has a municipal lot half a block away. The Nortown is in the middle of arguably the worst parking mess in the City outside of Downtown. Two small screens serving the local populace will work a lot better there.
The building now houses Saratoga Printing.
The neighboring Selwyn and Harris theaters were indeed built; they’re listed here under their later names of Cinestage and Michael Todd. Their façcades are still standing; the site has been home to the Goodman Theatre since 2000.
Midway Theater – please e-mail me at Thanks.
Yes, but they are actively raising funds to build a new facility on Leggs Hill Road.
Some of the terra cotta pieces were falling to the street a few years ago. The City of Chicago pitched in and removed pieces to repair and store them; they will be reinstalled. See posts above from around October 2005.
The Villa is featured in the documentary Preserve Me a Seat by Apartment 101 Films. The new floor is just wood platforms; the original auditorium floor is completely intact. Dr. Adib said in the film that he wanted to leave as much as possible intact so it would be possible to convert it back to a theater someday. If he did not buy the building, it would have been demolished.
According to the film, the sign did not work and was damaged when Adib moved it. The estimated cost to repair the sign was $70,000.
It’s a shame that the owners thought the porn niche was strong enough that they could jack up the price so much. I guess they thought that none of their audience would be content just watching at home. I still think they’ll do better with Bollywood at any price than they did with porn at $9.
I’m not sure what you mean by “The Fair is nowhere.” The Fair will actually still be there. I’m not interested in the management’s well being, either, but theaters are businesses, not social service organizations. It’s a shame that you would rather see the building torn down than stop showing porn and kung fu.
pmullins, I have nothing against the Fair’s current patrons or porn itself, and from the thread and articles I’ve read, I was under the impression that patronage was pretty sparse. Porn kept a lot of our theaters going because there was no demand for anything else. Now it’s a dwindling niche market. I’m happy that the management is keeping the theater going and adjusting to the demand rather than eeking it out with porn for a couple more years and then selling out to a developer.
How is Bollywood a bad thing? Their current business plan of porn, camp, and third-run mainstream films doesn’t seem like it’s drawing many customers, while the nearby Eagle, at least when I passed by the place regularly a few years ago, is packed.
The Pickwick will be hosting a benefit for the Des Plaines Theater Preservation Society on Thursday, April 12 at 8:00 P.M. Acclaimed theatre organist Jay Warren will accompany The Pawn Shop starring Charlie Chaplin (1916), Never Weaken starring Harold Lloyd (1921), and Sherlock Jr. starring Buster Keaton (1924). Visit www.dptheatre.org for more information.
There will be a benefit for the Des Plaines Theater at the Pickwick on Thursday, April 12 at 8:00 P.M. Acclaimed theatre organist Jay Warren will accompany The Pawn Shop starring Charlie Chaplin (1916), Never Weaken starring Harold Lloyd (1921), and Sherlock Jr. starring Buster Keaton (1924). Visit www.dptheatre.org for more information.
The Cingular Wireless banner is gone. The marquee still says PATIO RENOVATING.
Geo, for a more recent peek inside the Uptown, watch the trailer for last year’s Uptown: Portrait of a Palace – View link
This theater is featured on the cover of this month’s Bus Ride magazine, as part of an article on Wade Tours.
Current photos of the Apollo
The theatre description should be updated; the Gateway hasn’t been the home of the Silent Film Society of Chicago since the Portage reopened last year.
Sadly, Sportif, the jewel box bicycle shop across from the Gateway that Paul Fortini mentioned a year ago, has been a vacant lot for a few months.