The not-for-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts (UTCA) announces ‘Bring Back the Brilliance,’ a gala benefit, Friday, March 21, at 7 pm at Northwestern School of Law, Thorne Auditorium, located at 375 E. Chicago Avenue. Tickets for the evening are $75 per person or $125 per couple. For reservations call 773-561-5700. Proceeds from the event, which will include a vintage fashion show, live swing music, light fare and cash bar, will support programming and operational expenses for the UTCA during the year.
The evening will commence with a reception in the lobby with hors d'oeuvres and live swing music provided by Speakeasy Entertainment. The main attraction will be an elaborately staged vintage fashion show assembled by producer, director, and award-winning designer William T. Buster. Showcasing spectacular American fashions from 1925 to 1963, the garments recall the glamorous styles of Hollywood’s Golden Age, paying tribute to the great history of the legendary Uptown Theatre. The collection consists of evening wear, daywear, outerwear, hats, furs, jewelry, lingerie, and bridal fashions. Following the fashion show there will be dancing in the lobby, with Speakeasy Entertainment playing a variety of classic big-band and disco favorites from the heyday of the Uptown Theatre.
Businesses or individuals that are interested in sponsorship opportunities for this high-visibility gala event should contact the UTCA at (773) 561-5700.
Often cited as a pivotal piece in the redevelopment of the Uptown neighborhood, the Uptown Theatre is the country’s largest freestanding theatre building in terms of square footage. Built in 1925 and designed by famed Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp, the Uptown Theatre was the crown jewels of the national Balaban & Katz movie palace empire. Shuttered since 1981, the Uptown has been listed as one of ‘America’s Most Endangered Historic Places’ by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is also on the National Register of Historic Places, the Illinois Historic Structures Survey, and is protected as a Chicago Landmark.
For the person who has everything, here’s a unique holiday gift idea! Help celebrate the diversity and vitality of the arts by endowing a seat in the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts.
For as little as $500, you can dedicate a new seat in the renovated theatre to yourself, a loved one, favorite artist, or arts champion. Seat endowments are available in all theatre sections:
Orchestra: $2,500
Mezzanine: $500
With your tax-deductible donation, a plaque measuring 2.5" high by 4.5" wide, with a two-line 48-character dedication, will be affixed to the arm of the seat. Additional space for a 25-character line acknowledging your donation will also be included on the plaque.
To reserve your seat now, click here: View link
Or, call 773-561-5700.
(Continued)
Often cited as a pivotal piece in the redevelopment of the Uptown neighborhood, the Uptown Theatre is the country’s largest freestanding theatre building in terms of square footage. Built in 1925 and designed by famed Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp, the Uptown Theatre was one of the crown jewels of the national Balaban & Katz movie palace empire. Shuttered since 1981, the Uptown has been listed as one of “America’s Most Endangered Historic Places” by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is also on the National Register of Historic Places and the Illinois Historic Structures Survey and is protected as a Chicago Landmark.
Group refuses to take final bow on Uptown Theatre Restoration
CHICAGO (October 3, 2002) – An agreement signed Tuesday between the not-for-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts and Cercore Properties Corp. extends through October 21 the contract allowing the group to purchase and restore the historic Uptown Theatre. The purchase option was to have expired tomorrow.
“We still believe that we’ll be able to save this magnificent gem,” said Mark Zipperer, chief executive officer of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, noting that although the group remains $1.5 million short of the total funds needed to purchase and winterize the landmark theatre, support for the campaign is escalating. “The same economic conditions that have created a tough fundraising environment make restoration of the Uptown a fiscally sound project, given the immediate jobs the project would create and its long-term economic impact on the blighted Uptown neighborhood.”
Even within the last week, momentum towards the purchase continues to build as corporations and individual donors make monetary commitments on a daily basis. And high-profile supporters, including Chicago Alderperson Mary Ann Smith (48th Ward), Illinois Rep. Rod Blagojevich (5th District), and former U.S. Sen. Paul Simon have endorsed the organization’s plan for revitalizing the aging movie palace.
“If we’re going to fulfill our obligation of restoring this historic landmark for future generations to enjoy, there’s no better time than now,” said Zipperer, who, in a relatively unprecedented move, has guaranteed that all contributions will be held in a special, secured account and returned to donors in what he calls “the unlikely scenario” that the group’s bid to purchase the theatre fails.
“Restoration costs have doubled within the last 10 years, and experts have estimated that another five to seven years of neglect will render the Uptown Theatre irreparable,” Zipperer clarified. “After a recent incident when a chunk of falling plaster prompted a city building inspector to cancel all future fundraising tours of the theatre, I’m left wondering if we even have that long.”
“This really is the Theatre’s eleventh hour, and I’d like to make one final plea to everyone, whether you’re the administrator of a major philanthropic trust, a corporate leader or a neighborhood resident with fond memories of Saturday afternoons spent watching quarter movies at the Uptown, to do what you can,” Zipperer said. “If 150,000 Chicagoans each donated $10, we could close on the building tomorrow.”
A letter from Mark Zipperer, CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts:
******* Dear Uptown Theatre Supporters and Friends:
As you are likely aware, today marks the expiration of the agreement we entered into for the, to purchase of the historic Uptown Theatre. In the purchase agreement, our not-for-profit organization, the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts (UTCA), agreed to pay the current owner of the Theatre $2.5 million dollars. We made a down payment of $250K and agreed to purchase the property in 120 days. Yesterday, on behalf of the UTCA, I signed an agreement with the owner of the theatre to extend our deadline to October 21. As the attached press release indicates, we still do not have the funds to complete the purchase. Our staff, board, volunteers, supporters, and community leaders remain hopeful that we can make this happen in the not-to distant future.
I ask you not to lose faith in our endeavor. We’ve accomplished much in a short period of time. 48th Ward Alderman Mary Ann Smith has endorsed our project. We have received tremendous media attention including in-depth coverage from CNN. Theatre experts, political officials, and business advisors alike have reviewed our business plan. We’ve received high praise for our vision and sound financial forecasting. Thus, the foundation for a successful future has been built.
We are committed to this cause and will continue on. In order to move forward, we need the financial support of individuals, corporations and others to complete the purchase. Our plans to secure funding for the restoration include special benefit concerts, our “name-a-seat” campaign, as well as benefiting from area tax financing as well as historic tax credits. Once we conclude the purchase of the Theatre, we will move forward with the restoration planning phase. We plan to kick-off the restoration in early 2003, which will result in more than 100 jobs for the restoration team, our operational staff, and surrounding supporting businesses.
If you can contribute monetarily, the time is NOW. If you work at a company in which you have the ability to influence your company leaders to make a donation or loan to us, please have those conversations NOW. If you know someone who has the financial ability to help us complete this purchase, please call on that person NOW. With your help, we can make this purchase a reality. Thank you for your continued support and encouragement.
Listen to the talk of the town on the radio circuit —– the Uptown Theatre purchase campaign. We are in an eleventh-hour “race against the clock” to take ownership of the theatre by October 4, and begin restoration of this historic jewel before it is too late to save.
WGN-AM 720 “The Spike O'Dell Show.” TOMORROW, Thursday, 9-26-02 at 6:50 am. Spike will interview Mark Zipperer, CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts.
WUSN-FM 99.5, “Chicago Up Close” with LeeAnn Trotter. Sunday, 9-29-02 between 6-7 am. The show’s topic is the impact of theatre restorations. Guests include Mark Zipperer, and our architectural partners: Jeff Havel from d'Escoto, Inc., and Bill Latoza from Bauer Latoza Studio Ltd.
WNND-FM 100.3 FM, “Windy City Weekly” with Susan Wiencek. Sunday, 9-29-02 from 7:30 am – 8:00 am. Mark Zipperer, CEO, and Michael Beyer, Director of Marketing, will be interviewed.
WLUW-FM 88.7 Loyola University. Nick Tristano will interview Mark Zipperer on the all-new “The Full on Friday Show” on October 4 at 2:30 pm.
WBEZ-FM 91.5, Investigative report on the Uptown Theatre by Tony Sarabia to air on or about October 4. Get the FULL scoop from the Uptown perspective as Tony interviews the movers and shakers in the political and preservation scene pertinent to the Uptown Theatre restoration. ******
The Uptown Theatre 2003 calendar, IN COLOR, will be unveiled in mid-October. You marveled at, even framed, the beautiful B&W photos from the 2002 Uptown Theatre calendar. Our newest gem features 12 new equally beautiful photographs by Chicago photographer Loren Robare. It is our second and final calendar to showcase photos of the theatre in its current deteriorated state, and is sure to become a collector’s item. The 2004 calendar will proudly feature photos of the restoration of the Uptown Theatre.
Help to Bring Back the Brilliance, by purchasing your calendar(s) TODAY!
Log on to the gift shop on our web site www.uptowntheatrechicago.org and place your advance order. *******
This is one landmark the city can’t afford to lose. Located in the most diverse neighborhood in the city — both economically, racially and ethnically — such an open, community-driven center would be an incredible asset. While renovating the space, a job training program will be used to help the unemployed shadow the skilled manual laborers, thereby allowing people with little or no income to earn both a paycheck and a skill. The rapidly growing Uptown community will have a vibrant entertainment district with the Aragon, the Riviera, the Green Mill, and the newly reopened Uptown Theatre in walking distance from each other. The old Goldblatt’s space is also being reworked to house a Border’s. “People have been trying to use this space for a while now, but I don’t think we were ever ready for it,” says Zipperer. “I think we’re ready for it now … in five years, I can see people having friends from out of town and bringing them to the Uptown as one of their top priorities.”
For more information or to volunteer, call Michael Morehead, the Director of Volunteer and Educational Programs at 773/561-5700, or see www.uptowntheatrechicago.com.
UR Chicago ran the following article on page 9 of the DISTORTION section under the Flavor of the Month column. Link to article: View link
Saving History: Chicago’s only $2.5 million away from restoring the Uptown Theatre
By Terry Selucky
Back in the day, movie theatres were referred to as “palaces” and people came in droves to catch the latest motion picture. Moviegoing was widely considered immoral, so people sought to change that perception by dressing their best and frequenting theatres as grandiose as they were functional.
You might stumble across a skeleton of a palace like this around Chicago (the Oriental Theatre, the Chicago Theatre, the Aragon), but the most impressive of all these, the Uptown, is also the most rundown.
Located on Broadway just north of Lawrence Avenue, the Uptown Theatre is bigger in area than Radio City Music Hall, has more seats than any live indoor venue in Chicago, and is older than the “El.” Built in 1925 on the former beer garden of the Green Mill, the Uptown Theatre compared itself to “a castle in Old Spain upon which countless artists and sculptors have lavished their talents.” But after many starts and stops, the Uptown closed down in 1981 due to a lack of interest and money, and neglect has rendered the building unfit for use without renovations.
Enter the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, a not-for-profit corporation toiling since March 2001 to buy the theatre. If they raise $2.5 million dollars by October 4, they’ll have enough money to purchase the building and begin the process of restoring it. Renovations include a completely new electrical system, updated plumbing, heating and cooling systems and asbestos removal. A mainstage theatre with more than 4,000 seats, three smaller heatres, an art gallery, a museum, a radio station, gift shop and an arts education program for kids will be initiated within the space.
“With the economy in the current shape it’s in,” says Mark Zipperer, CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, “it’s a challenge to raise money to help fund the purchase.”
Building anything like the Uptown today would cost around $110 million, making the $2.5 million needed to buy it a bargain. And Zipperer ensures a money-back guarantee for the contributors. “If we don’t raise enough money by October 4, we give everyone their money back, whether it’s five dollars or five thousand.”
Excerpts From Alderman (48th Ward) Mary Ann Smith’s Letter of Endorsement
dated September 5, 2002
“I am delighted to offer my full support for the plans currently being proposed for the Uptown Theatre with the development team you are putting in place. This building is a treasure which I, along with dozens of other neighborhood people and preservationists nationwide have fought for decades to protect. It is imperative that this first best chance to restore the Theatre to an active and vibrant life be the best it can possibly be … My support for the plan is based on the caliber of the firms and individuals you have brought on board, whose knowledge and experience will maximize the prospects for the success of this huge undertaking … I, along with the rest of the 48th Ward community, look forward to working with you hand in hand to bring back the brilliance of the Uptown Theatre.”
The following article appeared in the Chicago Tribune Metro section on 9-6-02 by Arts Entertainment reporter Chris Jones.
Time is running out for Uptown Theatre Chris Jones
September 6, 2002
With plaster peeling from its walls and rainwater pooling on its historic floors, Chicago’s Uptown Theatre remains unrestored and in deteriorating condition.
The Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, a non-profit group founded to restore and operate the building at 4816 N. Broadway, has an option to buy the building that expires Oct. 4. And the group still is more than $1 million short of the $2.5 million purchase price set by the building owner, Cercore Properties.
According to executive director Mark Zipperer, the group thus far has raised about $1.3 million, in addition to the original $1 million pledged to the cause by Albert I. Goodman. Most of Goodman’s initial donation has been used to pay staffers and fundraising expenses. However, an additional anonymous donor has contributed $1 million, which forms the bulk of the new funding.
Still, that leaves a big hole. And if the additional money is not raised within the next 30 days, Zipperer says he doubts the theater ever will be saved.
“We’re in the eleventh hour,” Zipperer said. “The building is deteriorating so fast.”
Up until this week, Ald. Mary Ann Smith (48th) had withheld her support from the Uptown Center for the Arts, which was mired in scandal when its former executive director, Michael Morrison, was charged in a civil suit with using some of Goodman’s donation for personal expenses.
Indeed, the luxury car currently being raffled by the theater formerly was leased by Morrison for his own use. But on Thursday, Smith said she now had changed her mind and decided to publicly support the group.
“A lot of people with substantial backgrounds in entertainment, development and law finally are coming on board,” Smith said. “I think people will pull the trigger on the money now that they know that the right plan is in place. I’m confident that the deadline will be met.”
Eight stories high, architects C.W. Rapp and George L. Rapp created what is still the largest free-standing theater in the United States, bigger than New York’s Radio City Music Hall, Balaban and Katz’s flagship Chicago Theatre and Chicago’s famed Auditorium Theatre.
The crowd of 12,000 that came to the first shows that day entered a cavernous grand lobby that later hosted early Hearts Foundation parties before the building was closed. From its marble baseboards and stained glass windows to its bronze railings and gold-leaf trim, the theater glistened with opulence.
And the opulence went well beyond the visual. Eight lobbies were built so the huge crowds could be managed between shows, and the theater featured a state-of-the-art air conditioning system that could not only completely exchange the air every two minutes, but could also dehumidify it, purify it, ozonize it and perfume it.
Its stage lighting system was the most sophisticated in the world, using 10,000 bulbs and capable of making 10 complete light changes in 14 seconds. The roof sign, with 12-foot-high lighted letters, could be seen from the Loop. In a final flourish, in 1928 Balaban and Katz installed a Wurlitzer Grande pipe organ that was the most expensive ever built.
People and Hollywood stars flocked to the palace through the 1930s. But when movie attendance trailed off in the 1940s, Balaban and Katz tried other ways to turn a profit at the Uptown, even hosting the 1950s TV game show, “Queen for a Day,” at times. By the 1970s, entrepreneur Rene Rabiela featured Spanish-language movies and hosted rock concerts featuring such performers as Bob Marley, the Grateful Dead, Peter Gabriel, Santana and others.
But, unable to make a consistent profit, the Uptown closed its doors for the last time in 1981 and ownership reverted to the Plitt movie chain. Plitt never reopened the Uptown and disaster struck in the 1983-1984 winter when, with the heat shut off, water pipes burst, flooding the basement, ruining much of the plaster walls and making restoration inevitable if the grand palace was ever to be opened again.
Zipperer says architects and preservationists estimate the building can be fully restored for $22-$28 million, still a bargain considering what it would cost to duplicate. And a restored Uptown Theatre, Zipperer says, would once again be the crown jewel of a vibrant cultural scene and nightlife in Uptown.
“It’s a key piece of property in Uptown,” says Zipperer, also president of the Buena Park Neighborhood Association just south of Uptown. “The community here is our best advocate. People are passionate about this building.”
The buzz continues! Chicago Free Press ran a front page article on the Uptown Theatre in the August 7 issue. Pick up a copy off the newstand and check out the amazing shots of the interior taken by photographer Jason Smith. Link to article: View link
******* THIS OLD THEATER NON-PROFIT POLISHING TARNISHED UPTOWN JEWEL
By Gary Barlow Staff writer
Even with the dust, the crumbling patches of plaster and the tarnished wood and metal flourishes, the interior of the Uptown Theatre evokes looks of awe.
For starters, it is huge, from the grand lobby on Broadway to the tiered 4,400-seat theater. Built as the crown jewel of one of America’s premier theater chains as the golden age of film dawned in 1925, it’s been shuttered for two decades.
That could change, if an Uptown group racing against time to save and restore it succeeds in getting the community support it needs.
“Every day that passes by is lost,” says Mark Zipperer, CEO of the non-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Performing Arts. “We may not be able to restore the building in five years.”
Now, Zipperer says, the time and circumstances are right for refurbishing the Uptown.
“Ten years ago, the neighborhood wasn’t ready for it,” he says. But in the past decade, the neighborhood has changed; gay and lesbian Chicagoans in particular have moved to Uptown in large numbers. The organization Zipperer leads in the effort to save the Uptown reflects the area’s changing demographics.
“There’s an equation about neighborhoods evolving,” Zipperer says. “There now needs to be community areas to support that.”
The group has an agreement with the property’s owners to buy the theater for about $2.5 million if it can raise the money by Oct. 20. Walking through the musty but still ornate lobby, Zipperer makes it clear that he thinks closing the deal is both a community imperative and an incredible bargain.
“In today’s dollars, it would cost about $110 million to duplicate this building,” he says, walking up one of the grand circular staircases rising from the lobby to the balcony level of the theater.
“All this stuff can be saved,” Zipperer says. “It might look bad in spots, but structurally it was built to withstand anything.”
That was the boast when the Uptown, just north of Lawrence on Broadway, opened Aug. 18, 1925. “Built for all time,” its owners, Barney Balaban and Sam Katz, declared. It was and is an imposing Spanish baroque movie palace. (cont.)
TOURS OFFER FIRST PUBLIC GLIMPSE INSIDE HISTORIC UPTOWN THEATRE IN TWO DECADES
CHICAGO (July 31, 2002)
For the first time in more than two decades, Chicago’s historic Uptown Theatre will open its doors to a limited number of the general public interested in glimpsing the grandeur of what was once one of the most famous movie palaces in the country, and learning more about current efforts to restore the landmark theatre. David Bahlman, President of the Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois, and Mark Zipperer, Chief Executive Officer of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, a not-for-profit group dedicated to purchasing and restoring the Uptown to its former artistic, architectural and cultural prominence, will host public tours of the theatre at noon, Tuesday, August 13, and 6 p.m., Wednesday, August 14.
Each tour will be limited to a maximum of 30 people and reservations are being accepted by phone only, on a first-come, first-served basis, at (773) 381-6312. Cost is a tax-deductible donation of $15 per person to the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts. The Uptown Theatre is located at 4814-4816 N. Broadway, near the corner of Broadway and Lawrence Avenues, in the center of Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood.
Built in 1925 by the Chicago-based Balaban & Katz movie palace empire and designed by world-renowned Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp, the 4,381-seat Uptown was touted at its opening as ‘an acre of seats in a magic city.’ It remains the country’s largest freestanding theatre building in terms of square footage and one of the top five in seating capacity. “”
Crain’s Chicago Business ran the following article in the July 8 issue. Link to article: View link
July 06, 2002
Uptown Theatre Seeks Funds
A group dedicated to restoring Chicago’s Uptown Theatre is kicking off a series of eight fund-raising events this week as part of an effort to raise $4 million to purchase the building before an Oct. 5 deadline.
The non-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, which last month signed a 120-day letter of intent to buy the dilapidated theater from Cercore Properties Corp., is targeting local business leaders, preservation groups and the philanthropic community in its campaign.
The group will also host the first public tours of the structure in more than two decades later this summer as part of the fund-raising drive.
In addition to the purchase price, estimates of the restoration costs for the theater range from $18 million to $30 million.
To make a donation to the Uptown Theatre restoration project,
Mail to:
Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts
4707 N. Broadway, Suite 315
Chicago, IL 60640
Visit us on the web at: www.uptowntheatrechicago.com
Or, call us: 773-561-5700
One of the ways he wants to include the community in the restoration of their theater is to collect stories of the residents. “One woman who now lives in the Edgewater Beach Apartments reminisced about when she was a child, she and her girlfriend would throw water balloons from the top balcony and, when chased by the Andy Frain ushers, they would hide in the woman’s washroom.” Zipperer and the Uptown’s public relations firm are thinking of publishing a book of these remembrances for the grand re-opening of the theater on its 80th anniversary in 20005.
“The Uptown opened August 18, 1925, at noon. At 2 p.m. when the first show emptied, 12,000 people were in a line for the next show,” Zipperer said. “I want to get everyone involved, not just big donors. Even someone with just a few dollars will be welcome and I hope that when they are 80 years old they will pass the theater and say to themselves, ‘See, I helped keep our Uptown Theater for all of us.’”
“It is a precious part of our community and also of my family,” Al Goodman added. “The theater will be dedicated to all the employees of my grandmother’s Appleton Electric Company who fought in World War II.” The factory was on Wellington St. and Paulina Ave. before it became condos. It is the Appleton foundation that has pledged its financial support for the Uptown.
Viewed as pivotal piece in the redevelopment of Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood, the Uptown Theater is the country’s largest freestanding theater building in terms of square footage. It was designed by famed Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp and was one of the crown jewels of the national Balaban & Katz movie palace empire.
Shuttered since 1981, the Uptown has been listed on “America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places” by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is also on the National Register of Historic Places and the Illinois Historic Structures Survey and is protected as a Chicago Landmark.
“We are always looking for volunteers to stuff envelopes and keep our lists current,” said Zipperer. “Or to man our information booths that we plan to have in most neighborhood festivals where we will sell T-shirts to raise money.”
Inside Newspaper ran a front page article about the Uptown Theatre restoration project in the June 19 – June 25 edition.
Text from Inside Online (part 1):
Inside Newspaper
“Legendary Uptown Theater gets a boost”
By: Jim Sterne
News Editor
An agreement signed last Wednesday, June 19, between the not-for-profit Uptown Theater and Center for the Arts and Cercore Properties Corp. breathes new life into the groups' bid to purchase and restore the historic Uptown Theater to its original grandeur.
In the first major initiative spearheaded by Uptown Theater and Center for the Arts' newly-appointed Chief Executive Officer Mark Zipperer, the agreement allowing the group to buy the landmark building is extended from the original deadline of December 2001 to early October 2002.
“We need $4 million to complete the purchase, stabilize the theater, replenish our operating funds, and rekindle the fundraising campaign,” Zipperer said. The fundraising campaign that was started last July when Albert I. Goodman, on behalf of the Edith-Marie Appleton Foundation, kicked off the drive to renovate the theater with a generous gift of $1 million and a pledge of continuing support.
“My belief in the importance of purchasing and restoring the historic Uptown for future generations is stronger than ever,” said Goodman. “It’s not only a treasure for the citizens of Chicago, it’s a gem for us to share with all America.” Goodman added that, “I have pledged another million dollars if the theater can raise the $3 million.”
Zipperer, who expressed confidence that funding for purchasing the theater will be finalized by early October, is a Board Member of the Uptown Chicago Commission and president of the Buena Park Neighborhood Association, the Uptown area’s largest block club. He has just been elected to the Local School Council for Disney Magnet School, where he will serve as budgeting manager responsible for fundraising , increasingly important as the city’s financial crisis forces budget cuts in all areas.
“You get a good feeling when you do something for the community,” Zipperer said, “It’s as simple as that.” He has lived in Uptown for ten years and is excited about the TIFs for Wilson Yard and Lawrence and Broadway. “The Uptown theater will be the anchor for the whole area.”
The 37-year-old Zipperer hails from the Milwaukee area and graduated from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in finance and real estate.
RADIO INTERVIEW that will be webcasted!
WLUW-FM 88.7 (Loyola University Radio)
Date: Friday, June 21, 2002
Time: after 2:00 pm
Mark Zipperer, newly appointed CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, will be interviewed on “Stephen in the Evenin'” by Nick Tristano. The 7-10 minute segment will be a casual interview on the group’s plans for the Uptown Theatre.
Tune in to the show via webcast at http://www.stephenintheevenin.com/
The show is on Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 6-10 pm and Fridays 2-6 pm.
For more information on the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, check out the official web site:
uptowntheatrechicago.com
An agreement signed last Wednesday between the not-for-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts and Cercore Properties Corp. breathes new life into the group’s bid to purchase and restore the historic Uptown Theatre to its original grandeur. In the first major initiative spearheaded by Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts' newly-appointed Chief Executive Officer Mark Zipperer, the agreement extends through early October the contract allowing the group to buy the landmark building, which originally expired in December 2001.
The top priority of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts now, according to Zipperer, is to re-build the momentum of the fundraising campaign that was started last July, when Albert I. Goodman, on behalf of the Edith-Marie Appleton Foundation, kicked off the drive to renovate the historic Uptown Theatre with a generous gift of $1 million and a pledge of continuing support.
“My belief in the importance of purchasing and restoring the historic Uptown for future generations is stronger than ever,” said Goodman. “It’s not only a treasure for the citizens of Chicago, it’s a gem for us to share with all America.”
Zipperer, who expressed confidence that funding for purchasing the theatre will be finalized by early October, is a Board Member of the Uptown Chicago Commission and president of the Buena Park Neighborhood Association, the Uptown area’s largest block club. Professionally, his credentials span 14 years of marketing, management and financial experience with Andersen, UCC TotalHome of Chicago, General Electric Company and the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago. He also serves as the Vice Chairman of the Walt Disney Magnet School Local School Council and a member of the Dance for Life Corporate Donation Committee.
The 37-year-old Zipperer hails from the Milwaukee area and graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in Finance and Real Estate.
“The future of Uptown has never shone brighter,” said Zipperer. “Working together and drawing upon the strength of our diversity, we have the opportunity to restore a building that is a key part of our history, promote tourism, create jobs within the community, make theatre more readily accessible to area children, and eventually provide a home to many theatre groups that cannot currently afford one.”
NOSTALGIC GALA TO BENEFIT UPTOWN THEATRE GROUP
CHICAGO (February 19, 2003)
The not-for-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts (UTCA) announces ‘Bring Back the Brilliance,’ a gala benefit, Friday, March 21, at 7 pm at Northwestern School of Law, Thorne Auditorium, located at 375 E. Chicago Avenue. Tickets for the evening are $75 per person or $125 per couple. For reservations call 773-561-5700. Proceeds from the event, which will include a vintage fashion show, live swing music, light fare and cash bar, will support programming and operational expenses for the UTCA during the year.
The evening will commence with a reception in the lobby with hors d'oeuvres and live swing music provided by Speakeasy Entertainment. The main attraction will be an elaborately staged vintage fashion show assembled by producer, director, and award-winning designer William T. Buster. Showcasing spectacular American fashions from 1925 to 1963, the garments recall the glamorous styles of Hollywood’s Golden Age, paying tribute to the great history of the legendary Uptown Theatre. The collection consists of evening wear, daywear, outerwear, hats, furs, jewelry, lingerie, and bridal fashions. Following the fashion show there will be dancing in the lobby, with Speakeasy Entertainment playing a variety of classic big-band and disco favorites from the heyday of the Uptown Theatre.
Businesses or individuals that are interested in sponsorship opportunities for this high-visibility gala event should contact the UTCA at (773) 561-5700.
Often cited as a pivotal piece in the redevelopment of the Uptown neighborhood, the Uptown Theatre is the country’s largest freestanding theatre building in terms of square footage. Built in 1925 and designed by famed Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp, the Uptown Theatre was the crown jewels of the national Balaban & Katz movie palace empire. Shuttered since 1981, the Uptown has been listed as one of ‘America’s Most Endangered Historic Places’ by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is also on the National Register of Historic Places, the Illinois Historic Structures Survey, and is protected as a Chicago Landmark.
The Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts is a 501©(3) not-for-profit corporation created in March 2001 to purchase and restore the Uptown Theatre to its former prominence. Comprised of professionals with backgrounds in business administration, finance, theatre, and community development, the group’s efforts have given life to the most credible effort yet to save the neglected theatre. Upon restoration, the theatre’s physical space will be used to present a broad spectrum of programming designed to entertain and educate the diverse people who live in the Uptown neighborhood and the surrounding region, and will become a world-class center for the arts.
For more information on the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, visit www.uptowntheatrechicago.org.
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NAME-A-SEAT in the Uptown Theatre!
For the person who has everything, here’s a unique holiday gift idea! Help celebrate the diversity and vitality of the arts by endowing a seat in the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts.
For as little as $500, you can dedicate a new seat in the renovated theatre to yourself, a loved one, favorite artist, or arts champion. Seat endowments are available in all theatre sections:
Orchestra: $2,500
Mezzanine: $500
With your tax-deductible donation, a plaque measuring 2.5" high by 4.5" wide, with a two-line 48-character dedication, will be affixed to the arm of the seat. Additional space for a 25-character line acknowledging your donation will also be included on the plaque.
To reserve your seat now, click here: View link
Or, call 773-561-5700.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (part two)
(Continued)
Often cited as a pivotal piece in the redevelopment of the Uptown neighborhood, the Uptown Theatre is the country’s largest freestanding theatre building in terms of square footage. Built in 1925 and designed by famed Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp, the Uptown Theatre was one of the crown jewels of the national Balaban & Katz movie palace empire. Shuttered since 1981, the Uptown has been listed as one of “America’s Most Endangered Historic Places” by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is also on the National Register of Historic Places and the Illinois Historic Structures Survey and is protected as a Chicago Landmark.
The Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts is a 501©(3) not-for-profit corporation created in March 2001 to purchase and restore the Uptown Theatre to its former prominence. Comprised of professionals with backgrounds in business administration, finance, theatre, and community development, the group’s efforts have given life to the most credible effort yet to save the shuttered theatre. On July 27, 2001, Albert I. Goodman, on behalf of the Edith-Marie Appleton Foundation, kicked off the drive to renovate the historic Uptown Theatre with a generous gift of $1 million and a pledge of continuing support.
For more information on the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts or to make a donation, call (773) 561-5700 or visit www.uptowntheatrechicago.com.
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (part one)
Group refuses to take final bow on Uptown Theatre Restoration
CHICAGO (October 3, 2002) – An agreement signed Tuesday between the not-for-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts and Cercore Properties Corp. extends through October 21 the contract allowing the group to purchase and restore the historic Uptown Theatre. The purchase option was to have expired tomorrow.
“We still believe that we’ll be able to save this magnificent gem,” said Mark Zipperer, chief executive officer of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, noting that although the group remains $1.5 million short of the total funds needed to purchase and winterize the landmark theatre, support for the campaign is escalating. “The same economic conditions that have created a tough fundraising environment make restoration of the Uptown a fiscally sound project, given the immediate jobs the project would create and its long-term economic impact on the blighted Uptown neighborhood.”
Even within the last week, momentum towards the purchase continues to build as corporations and individual donors make monetary commitments on a daily basis. And high-profile supporters, including Chicago Alderperson Mary Ann Smith (48th Ward), Illinois Rep. Rod Blagojevich (5th District), and former U.S. Sen. Paul Simon have endorsed the organization’s plan for revitalizing the aging movie palace.
“If we’re going to fulfill our obligation of restoring this historic landmark for future generations to enjoy, there’s no better time than now,” said Zipperer, who, in a relatively unprecedented move, has guaranteed that all contributions will be held in a special, secured account and returned to donors in what he calls “the unlikely scenario” that the group’s bid to purchase the theatre fails.
“Restoration costs have doubled within the last 10 years, and experts have estimated that another five to seven years of neglect will render the Uptown Theatre irreparable,” Zipperer clarified. “After a recent incident when a chunk of falling plaster prompted a city building inspector to cancel all future fundraising tours of the theatre, I’m left wondering if we even have that long.”
“This really is the Theatre’s eleventh hour, and I’d like to make one final plea to everyone, whether you’re the administrator of a major philanthropic trust, a corporate leader or a neighborhood resident with fond memories of Saturday afternoons spent watching quarter movies at the Uptown, to do what you can,” Zipperer said. “If 150,000 Chicagoans each donated $10, we could close on the building tomorrow.”
A letter from Mark Zipperer, CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts:
******* Dear Uptown Theatre Supporters and Friends:
As you are likely aware, today marks the expiration of the agreement we entered into for the, to purchase of the historic Uptown Theatre. In the purchase agreement, our not-for-profit organization, the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts (UTCA), agreed to pay the current owner of the Theatre $2.5 million dollars. We made a down payment of $250K and agreed to purchase the property in 120 days. Yesterday, on behalf of the UTCA, I signed an agreement with the owner of the theatre to extend our deadline to October 21. As the attached press release indicates, we still do not have the funds to complete the purchase. Our staff, board, volunteers, supporters, and community leaders remain hopeful that we can make this happen in the not-to distant future.
I ask you not to lose faith in our endeavor. We’ve accomplished much in a short period of time. 48th Ward Alderman Mary Ann Smith has endorsed our project. We have received tremendous media attention including in-depth coverage from CNN. Theatre experts, political officials, and business advisors alike have reviewed our business plan. We’ve received high praise for our vision and sound financial forecasting. Thus, the foundation for a successful future has been built.
We are committed to this cause and will continue on. In order to move forward, we need the financial support of individuals, corporations and others to complete the purchase. Our plans to secure funding for the restoration include special benefit concerts, our “name-a-seat” campaign, as well as benefiting from area tax financing as well as historic tax credits. Once we conclude the purchase of the Theatre, we will move forward with the restoration planning phase. We plan to kick-off the restoration in early 2003, which will result in more than 100 jobs for the restoration team, our operational staff, and surrounding supporting businesses.
If you can contribute monetarily, the time is NOW. If you work at a company in which you have the ability to influence your company leaders to make a donation or loan to us, please have those conversations NOW. If you know someone who has the financial ability to help us complete this purchase, please call on that person NOW. With your help, we can make this purchase a reality. Thank you for your continued support and encouragement.
Best Regards,
Mark M. Zipperer Chief Executive Officer
RADIO CIRCUIT
Listen to the talk of the town on the radio circuit —– the Uptown Theatre purchase campaign. We are in an eleventh-hour “race against the clock” to take ownership of the theatre by October 4, and begin restoration of this historic jewel before it is too late to save.
WGN-AM 720 “The Spike O'Dell Show.” TOMORROW, Thursday, 9-26-02 at 6:50 am. Spike will interview Mark Zipperer, CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts.
WUSN-FM 99.5, “Chicago Up Close” with LeeAnn Trotter. Sunday, 9-29-02 between 6-7 am. The show’s topic is the impact of theatre restorations. Guests include Mark Zipperer, and our architectural partners: Jeff Havel from d'Escoto, Inc., and Bill Latoza from Bauer Latoza Studio Ltd.
WNND-FM 100.3 FM, “Windy City Weekly” with Susan Wiencek. Sunday, 9-29-02 from 7:30 am – 8:00 am. Mark Zipperer, CEO, and Michael Beyer, Director of Marketing, will be interviewed.
WLUW-FM 88.7 Loyola University. Nick Tristano will interview Mark Zipperer on the all-new “The Full on Friday Show” on October 4 at 2:30 pm.
WBEZ-FM 91.5, Investigative report on the Uptown Theatre by Tony Sarabia to air on or about October 4. Get the FULL scoop from the Uptown perspective as Tony interviews the movers and shakers in the political and preservation scene pertinent to the Uptown Theatre restoration. ******
2003 UPTOWN THEATRE CALENDARS – ADVANCE SALES
The Uptown Theatre 2003 calendar, IN COLOR, will be unveiled in mid-October. You marveled at, even framed, the beautiful B&W photos from the 2002 Uptown Theatre calendar. Our newest gem features 12 new equally beautiful photographs by Chicago photographer Loren Robare. It is our second and final calendar to showcase photos of the theatre in its current deteriorated state, and is sure to become a collector’s item. The 2004 calendar will proudly feature photos of the restoration of the Uptown Theatre.
Help to Bring Back the Brilliance, by purchasing your calendar(s) TODAY!
Log on to the gift shop on our web site www.uptowntheatrechicago.org and place your advance order. *******
UR Chicago article (part two)
This is one landmark the city can’t afford to lose. Located in the most diverse neighborhood in the city — both economically, racially and ethnically — such an open, community-driven center would be an incredible asset. While renovating the space, a job training program will be used to help the unemployed shadow the skilled manual laborers, thereby allowing people with little or no income to earn both a paycheck and a skill. The rapidly growing Uptown community will have a vibrant entertainment district with the Aragon, the Riviera, the Green Mill, and the newly reopened Uptown Theatre in walking distance from each other. The old Goldblatt’s space is also being reworked to house a Border’s. “People have been trying to use this space for a while now, but I don’t think we were ever ready for it,” says Zipperer. “I think we’re ready for it now … in five years, I can see people having friends from out of town and bringing them to the Uptown as one of their top priorities.”
For more information or to volunteer, call Michael Morehead, the Director of Volunteer and Educational Programs at 773/561-5700, or see www.uptowntheatrechicago.com.
UR CHICAGO ARTICLE (part 1 of 2)
UR Chicago ran the following article on page 9 of the DISTORTION section under the Flavor of the Month column. Link to article: View link
Saving History: Chicago’s only $2.5 million away from restoring the Uptown Theatre
By Terry Selucky
Back in the day, movie theatres were referred to as “palaces” and people came in droves to catch the latest motion picture. Moviegoing was widely considered immoral, so people sought to change that perception by dressing their best and frequenting theatres as grandiose as they were functional.
You might stumble across a skeleton of a palace like this around Chicago (the Oriental Theatre, the Chicago Theatre, the Aragon), but the most impressive of all these, the Uptown, is also the most rundown.
Located on Broadway just north of Lawrence Avenue, the Uptown Theatre is bigger in area than Radio City Music Hall, has more seats than any live indoor venue in Chicago, and is older than the “El.” Built in 1925 on the former beer garden of the Green Mill, the Uptown Theatre compared itself to “a castle in Old Spain upon which countless artists and sculptors have lavished their talents.” But after many starts and stops, the Uptown closed down in 1981 due to a lack of interest and money, and neglect has rendered the building unfit for use without renovations.
Enter the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, a not-for-profit corporation toiling since March 2001 to buy the theatre. If they raise $2.5 million dollars by October 4, they’ll have enough money to purchase the building and begin the process of restoring it. Renovations include a completely new electrical system, updated plumbing, heating and cooling systems and asbestos removal. A mainstage theatre with more than 4,000 seats, three smaller heatres, an art gallery, a museum, a radio station, gift shop and an arts education program for kids will be initiated within the space.
“With the economy in the current shape it’s in,” says Mark Zipperer, CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, “it’s a challenge to raise money to help fund the purchase.”
Building anything like the Uptown today would cost around $110 million, making the $2.5 million needed to buy it a bargain. And Zipperer ensures a money-back guarantee for the contributors. “If we don’t raise enough money by October 4, we give everyone their money back, whether it’s five dollars or five thousand.”
POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT
Excerpts From Alderman (48th Ward) Mary Ann Smith’s Letter of Endorsement
dated September 5, 2002
“I am delighted to offer my full support for the plans currently being proposed for the Uptown Theatre with the development team you are putting in place. This building is a treasure which I, along with dozens of other neighborhood people and preservationists nationwide have fought for decades to protect. It is imperative that this first best chance to restore the Theatre to an active and vibrant life be the best it can possibly be … My support for the plan is based on the caliber of the firms and individuals you have brought on board, whose knowledge and experience will maximize the prospects for the success of this huge undertaking … I, along with the rest of the 48th Ward community, look forward to working with you hand in hand to bring back the brilliance of the Uptown Theatre.”
The following article appeared in the Chicago Tribune Metro section on 9-6-02 by Arts Entertainment reporter Chris Jones.
Time is running out for Uptown Theatre Chris Jones
September 6, 2002
With plaster peeling from its walls and rainwater pooling on its historic floors, Chicago’s Uptown Theatre remains unrestored and in deteriorating condition.
The Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, a non-profit group founded to restore and operate the building at 4816 N. Broadway, has an option to buy the building that expires Oct. 4. And the group still is more than $1 million short of the $2.5 million purchase price set by the building owner, Cercore Properties.
According to executive director Mark Zipperer, the group thus far has raised about $1.3 million, in addition to the original $1 million pledged to the cause by Albert I. Goodman. Most of Goodman’s initial donation has been used to pay staffers and fundraising expenses. However, an additional anonymous donor has contributed $1 million, which forms the bulk of the new funding.
Still, that leaves a big hole. And if the additional money is not raised within the next 30 days, Zipperer says he doubts the theater ever will be saved.
“We’re in the eleventh hour,” Zipperer said. “The building is deteriorating so fast.”
Up until this week, Ald. Mary Ann Smith (48th) had withheld her support from the Uptown Center for the Arts, which was mired in scandal when its former executive director, Michael Morrison, was charged in a civil suit with using some of Goodman’s donation for personal expenses.
Indeed, the luxury car currently being raffled by the theater formerly was leased by Morrison for his own use. But on Thursday, Smith said she now had changed her mind and decided to publicly support the group.
“A lot of people with substantial backgrounds in entertainment, development and law finally are coming on board,” Smith said. “I think people will pull the trigger on the money now that they know that the right plan is in place. I’m confident that the deadline will be met.”
Copyright © 2002, Chicago Tribune
Chicago Free Press article (continued —part two)
Eight stories high, architects C.W. Rapp and George L. Rapp created what is still the largest free-standing theater in the United States, bigger than New York’s Radio City Music Hall, Balaban and Katz’s flagship Chicago Theatre and Chicago’s famed Auditorium Theatre.
The crowd of 12,000 that came to the first shows that day entered a cavernous grand lobby that later hosted early Hearts Foundation parties before the building was closed. From its marble baseboards and stained glass windows to its bronze railings and gold-leaf trim, the theater glistened with opulence.
And the opulence went well beyond the visual. Eight lobbies were built so the huge crowds could be managed between shows, and the theater featured a state-of-the-art air conditioning system that could not only completely exchange the air every two minutes, but could also dehumidify it, purify it, ozonize it and perfume it.
Its stage lighting system was the most sophisticated in the world, using 10,000 bulbs and capable of making 10 complete light changes in 14 seconds. The roof sign, with 12-foot-high lighted letters, could be seen from the Loop. In a final flourish, in 1928 Balaban and Katz installed a Wurlitzer Grande pipe organ that was the most expensive ever built.
People and Hollywood stars flocked to the palace through the 1930s. But when movie attendance trailed off in the 1940s, Balaban and Katz tried other ways to turn a profit at the Uptown, even hosting the 1950s TV game show, “Queen for a Day,” at times. By the 1970s, entrepreneur Rene Rabiela featured Spanish-language movies and hosted rock concerts featuring such performers as Bob Marley, the Grateful Dead, Peter Gabriel, Santana and others.
But, unable to make a consistent profit, the Uptown closed its doors for the last time in 1981 and ownership reverted to the Plitt movie chain. Plitt never reopened the Uptown and disaster struck in the 1983-1984 winter when, with the heat shut off, water pipes burst, flooding the basement, ruining much of the plaster walls and making restoration inevitable if the grand palace was ever to be opened again.
Zipperer says architects and preservationists estimate the building can be fully restored for $22-$28 million, still a bargain considering what it would cost to duplicate. And a restored Uptown Theatre, Zipperer says, would once again be the crown jewel of a vibrant cultural scene and nightlife in Uptown.
“It’s a key piece of property in Uptown,” says Zipperer, also president of the Buena Park Neighborhood Association just south of Uptown. “The community here is our best advocate. People are passionate about this building.”
(Part one)
The buzz continues! Chicago Free Press ran a front page article on the Uptown Theatre in the August 7 issue. Pick up a copy off the newstand and check out the amazing shots of the interior taken by photographer Jason Smith. Link to article: View link
******* THIS OLD THEATER NON-PROFIT POLISHING TARNISHED UPTOWN JEWEL
By Gary Barlow Staff writer
Even with the dust, the crumbling patches of plaster and the tarnished wood and metal flourishes, the interior of the Uptown Theatre evokes looks of awe.
For starters, it is huge, from the grand lobby on Broadway to the tiered 4,400-seat theater. Built as the crown jewel of one of America’s premier theater chains as the golden age of film dawned in 1925, it’s been shuttered for two decades.
That could change, if an Uptown group racing against time to save and restore it succeeds in getting the community support it needs.
“Every day that passes by is lost,” says Mark Zipperer, CEO of the non-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Performing Arts. “We may not be able to restore the building in five years.”
Now, Zipperer says, the time and circumstances are right for refurbishing the Uptown.
“Ten years ago, the neighborhood wasn’t ready for it,” he says. But in the past decade, the neighborhood has changed; gay and lesbian Chicagoans in particular have moved to Uptown in large numbers. The organization Zipperer leads in the effort to save the Uptown reflects the area’s changing demographics.
“There’s an equation about neighborhoods evolving,” Zipperer says. “There now needs to be community areas to support that.”
The group has an agreement with the property’s owners to buy the theater for about $2.5 million if it can raise the money by Oct. 20. Walking through the musty but still ornate lobby, Zipperer makes it clear that he thinks closing the deal is both a community imperative and an incredible bargain.
“In today’s dollars, it would cost about $110 million to duplicate this building,” he says, walking up one of the grand circular staircases rising from the lobby to the balcony level of the theater.
“All this stuff can be saved,” Zipperer says. “It might look bad in spots, but structurally it was built to withstand anything.”
That was the boast when the Uptown, just north of Lawrence on Broadway, opened Aug. 18, 1925. “Built for all time,” its owners, Barney Balaban and Sam Katz, declared. It was and is an imposing Spanish baroque movie palace. (cont.)
TOURS OFFER FIRST PUBLIC GLIMPSE INSIDE HISTORIC UPTOWN THEATRE IN TWO DECADES
CHICAGO (July 31, 2002)
For the first time in more than two decades, Chicago’s historic Uptown Theatre will open its doors to a limited number of the general public interested in glimpsing the grandeur of what was once one of the most famous movie palaces in the country, and learning more about current efforts to restore the landmark theatre. David Bahlman, President of the Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois, and Mark Zipperer, Chief Executive Officer of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, a not-for-profit group dedicated to purchasing and restoring the Uptown to its former artistic, architectural and cultural prominence, will host public tours of the theatre at noon, Tuesday, August 13, and 6 p.m., Wednesday, August 14.
Each tour will be limited to a maximum of 30 people and reservations are being accepted by phone only, on a first-come, first-served basis, at (773) 381-6312. Cost is a tax-deductible donation of $15 per person to the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts. The Uptown Theatre is located at 4814-4816 N. Broadway, near the corner of Broadway and Lawrence Avenues, in the center of Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood.
Built in 1925 by the Chicago-based Balaban & Katz movie palace empire and designed by world-renowned Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp, the 4,381-seat Uptown was touted at its opening as ‘an acre of seats in a magic city.’ It remains the country’s largest freestanding theatre building in terms of square footage and one of the top five in seating capacity. “”
Crain’s Chicago Business ran the following article in the July 8 issue. Link to article:
View link
July 06, 2002
Uptown Theatre Seeks Funds
A group dedicated to restoring Chicago’s Uptown Theatre is kicking off a series of eight fund-raising events this week as part of an effort to raise $4 million to purchase the building before an Oct. 5 deadline.
The non-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, which last month signed a 120-day letter of intent to buy the dilapidated theater from Cercore Properties Corp., is targeting local business leaders, preservation groups and the philanthropic community in its campaign.
The group will also host the first public tours of the structure in more than two decades later this summer as part of the fund-raising drive.
In addition to the purchase price, estimates of the restoration costs for the theater range from $18 million to $30 million.
To make a donation to the Uptown Theatre restoration project,
Mail to:
Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts
4707 N. Broadway, Suite 315
Chicago, IL 60640
Visit us on the web at: www.uptowntheatrechicago.com
Or, call us: 773-561-5700
Inside Online article
(continued – part 2)
One of the ways he wants to include the community in the restoration of their theater is to collect stories of the residents. “One woman who now lives in the Edgewater Beach Apartments reminisced about when she was a child, she and her girlfriend would throw water balloons from the top balcony and, when chased by the Andy Frain ushers, they would hide in the woman’s washroom.” Zipperer and the Uptown’s public relations firm are thinking of publishing a book of these remembrances for the grand re-opening of the theater on its 80th anniversary in 20005.
“The Uptown opened August 18, 1925, at noon. At 2 p.m. when the first show emptied, 12,000 people were in a line for the next show,” Zipperer said. “I want to get everyone involved, not just big donors. Even someone with just a few dollars will be welcome and I hope that when they are 80 years old they will pass the theater and say to themselves, ‘See, I helped keep our Uptown Theater for all of us.’”
“It is a precious part of our community and also of my family,” Al Goodman added. “The theater will be dedicated to all the employees of my grandmother’s Appleton Electric Company who fought in World War II.” The factory was on Wellington St. and Paulina Ave. before it became condos. It is the Appleton foundation that has pledged its financial support for the Uptown.
Viewed as pivotal piece in the redevelopment of Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood, the Uptown Theater is the country’s largest freestanding theater building in terms of square footage. It was designed by famed Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp and was one of the crown jewels of the national Balaban & Katz movie palace empire.
Shuttered since 1981, the Uptown has been listed on “America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places” by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is also on the National Register of Historic Places and the Illinois Historic Structures Survey and is protected as a Chicago Landmark.
“We are always looking for volunteers to stuff envelopes and keep our lists current,” said Zipperer. “Or to man our information booths that we plan to have in most neighborhood festivals where we will sell T-shirts to raise money.”
The Uptown Theater and Center for the Arts, a 501©(3) not-for-profit corporation incorporated in March 2001, is comprised of business, theater, and other professionals from the Uptown community who are committed to purchasing and restoring the Uptown Theater to its former prominence.
To make a donation to the Uptown Theatre restoration project,
Mail to:
Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, 4707 N. Broadway, Suite 315,
Chicago, IL 60640
or visit us on the web at: www.uptowntheatrechicago.com
or call us: 773-561-5700
Inside Newspaper ran a front page article about the Uptown Theatre restoration project in the June 19 – June 25 edition.
Text from Inside Online (part 1):
Inside Newspaper
“Legendary Uptown Theater gets a boost”
By: Jim Sterne
News Editor
An agreement signed last Wednesday, June 19, between the not-for-profit Uptown Theater and Center for the Arts and Cercore Properties Corp. breathes new life into the groups' bid to purchase and restore the historic Uptown Theater to its original grandeur.
In the first major initiative spearheaded by Uptown Theater and Center for the Arts' newly-appointed Chief Executive Officer Mark Zipperer, the agreement allowing the group to buy the landmark building is extended from the original deadline of December 2001 to early October 2002.
“We need $4 million to complete the purchase, stabilize the theater, replenish our operating funds, and rekindle the fundraising campaign,” Zipperer said. The fundraising campaign that was started last July when Albert I. Goodman, on behalf of the Edith-Marie Appleton Foundation, kicked off the drive to renovate the theater with a generous gift of $1 million and a pledge of continuing support.
“My belief in the importance of purchasing and restoring the historic Uptown for future generations is stronger than ever,” said Goodman. “It’s not only a treasure for the citizens of Chicago, it’s a gem for us to share with all America.” Goodman added that, “I have pledged another million dollars if the theater can raise the $3 million.”
Zipperer, who expressed confidence that funding for purchasing the theater will be finalized by early October, is a Board Member of the Uptown Chicago Commission and president of the Buena Park Neighborhood Association, the Uptown area’s largest block club. He has just been elected to the Local School Council for Disney Magnet School, where he will serve as budgeting manager responsible for fundraising , increasingly important as the city’s financial crisis forces budget cuts in all areas.
“You get a good feeling when you do something for the community,” Zipperer said, “It’s as simple as that.” He has lived in Uptown for ten years and is excited about the TIFs for Wilson Yard and Lawrence and Broadway. “The Uptown theater will be the anchor for the whole area.”
The 37-year-old Zipperer hails from the Milwaukee area and graduated from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in finance and real estate.
(continued)
RADIO INTERVIEW that will be webcasted!
WLUW-FM 88.7 (Loyola University Radio)
Date: Friday, June 21, 2002
Time: after 2:00 pm
Mark Zipperer, newly appointed CEO of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, will be interviewed on “Stephen in the Evenin'” by Nick Tristano. The 7-10 minute segment will be a casual interview on the group’s plans for the Uptown Theatre.
Tune in to the show via webcast at http://www.stephenintheevenin.com/
The show is on Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 6-10 pm and Fridays 2-6 pm.
For more information on the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts, check out the official web site:
uptowntheatrechicago.com
CHICAGO (June 11, 2002)
An agreement signed last Wednesday between the not-for-profit Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts and Cercore Properties Corp. breathes new life into the group’s bid to purchase and restore the historic Uptown Theatre to its original grandeur. In the first major initiative spearheaded by Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts' newly-appointed Chief Executive Officer Mark Zipperer, the agreement extends through early October the contract allowing the group to buy the landmark building, which originally expired in December 2001.
The top priority of the Uptown Theatre and Center for the Arts now, according to Zipperer, is to re-build the momentum of the fundraising campaign that was started last July, when Albert I. Goodman, on behalf of the Edith-Marie Appleton Foundation, kicked off the drive to renovate the historic Uptown Theatre with a generous gift of $1 million and a pledge of continuing support.
“My belief in the importance of purchasing and restoring the historic Uptown for future generations is stronger than ever,” said Goodman. “It’s not only a treasure for the citizens of Chicago, it’s a gem for us to share with all America.”
Zipperer, who expressed confidence that funding for purchasing the theatre will be finalized by early October, is a Board Member of the Uptown Chicago Commission and president of the Buena Park Neighborhood Association, the Uptown area’s largest block club. Professionally, his credentials span 14 years of marketing, management and financial experience with Andersen, UCC TotalHome of Chicago, General Electric Company and the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago. He also serves as the Vice Chairman of the Walt Disney Magnet School Local School Council and a member of the Dance for Life Corporate Donation Committee.
The 37-year-old Zipperer hails from the Milwaukee area and graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in Finance and Real Estate.
“The future of Uptown has never shone brighter,” said Zipperer. “Working together and drawing upon the strength of our diversity, we have the opportunity to restore a building that is a key part of our history, promote tourism, create jobs within the community, make theatre more readily accessible to area children, and eventually provide a home to many theatre groups that cannot currently afford one.”