Villa Theater
3610 W. Villard Avenue,
Milwaukee,
WI
53209
3610 W. Villard Avenue,
Milwaukee,
WI
53209
3 people favorited this theater
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The city of Milwaukee and the Villard Avenue Business Improvement District issued a request for proposals (RFP) for developers interested in restoring the historic Villa/Ritz Theatre and returning it to its original use as an entertainment venue.
“It is our hope that the movie theatre will be a catalytic development such as the open-air theatre rendering that was re-envisioned in our historic virtual charrette during the summer of 2020,” said Villard BID director Angelique Sharpe today. “We would like to see it continue on with its long tradition of being able to house all kinds of entertainment such as cinema and film, performance, comedy, music, and dance.”
Constructed in 1926 by Michael Brumm to be an independent theatre, the 840-seat Spanish Colonial-style theater was used primarily as a movie theatre through a variety of owners, up until 1986 when Marcus Theatres closed it. Tanya and Herman Lewis bought it in 1988 and ran it as both a first and second-run theatre and community playhouse for several years before ceasing operation in 1995. Since then, the building has been used as a salon, a church, a bookstore, and a school. The city acquired the building through a tax foreclosure in 2015.
Restoration is projected at nearly $2 million, with the Department of City Development possibly incorporating alternative financing such as historic tax credits, tax incremental financing, and other sources.
Alderman Ashanti Hamilton who represents the Villard Avenue business district said that he was confident qualified developers would step up to help breathe new life back into the neighborhood landmark. “The impending redevelopment of the historic Villard Theatre is expected to be one of the most significant investments on Villard Avenue, but also for the far northwest side of Milwaukee, and the city as a whole. I can personally remember a time where this theatre was a destination that brought movie lovers from all parts of Milwaukee, both young and old, to visit Villard Avenue. This is a significant step for the commercial corridor, the neighborhood, and the entire city.”
To build excitement, the Villard Avenue BID will host a virtual developers' forum at 11 a.m. on March 25 with a panel discussion from industry experts including Lee Barczak, co-owner of the Neighborhood Theatre Group which operates the Avalon Theatre in Bay View, the Rosebud Theatre in Wauwatosa, and the Times Cinema on Vliet Street in Milwaukee. Immediately following the forum, developer teams will have the opportunity to partake in self-guided tours of the theatre. Proposals are due back to the city by noon on Friday, May 6.
Urban spelunking: The Ritz/Villa Theater (Bobby Tanzilo, July 18, 2017) The former Ritz/Villa movie theater on 36th and Villard is for sale. And it’s mostly intact as a cinema. Perhaps I shouldn’t have been surprised to step inside the former Ritz Theater movie house 3608 W. Villard Ave. and find it intact as a movie house. The same thing happened when I visited the old Grand on Holton and Locust. But, other times, like when I explored the old Lyric Theater on Vliet Street, I had to be content with easter eggs and clues, since all the seating had been removed and the auditorium carved up into rooms. But after The Ritz, which was called the Villa by then, was closed by Marcus Theatres in 1986, it had a brief return as a movie house in the following decade, so it hasn’t really been gone all that long. Now, the building is vacant and was acquired by the city in a tax foreclosure. The Department of City Development has listed it for sale for $20,000. The Spanish Colonial style theater was built as the independent, 840-seat Ritz cinema in 1926 by Michael Brumm, who had opened a nickelodeon called The Princess across Villard Avenue in 1912. His son Arnold helped out at the theaters. As was often the case with movie theaters of the era, The Ritz had an adjacent retail space and offices upstairs. Over the years, those spaces were occupied by a confectioner, a doctor, a barber, a typewriter store, a gift shop, a real estate and mortgage business, and spaces upstairs also served as residences from 1935 until the end of World War II. “In summer, when business declined, the Brumm family would travel to outlying areas with a portable generator and a movie projector, bringing the movies to farmers or businesspeople in small towns without movie theaters,” wrote Larry Widen and Judi Anderson in their book, “Silver Screens: A Pictorial History of Milwaukee’s Movie Theaters. "The show was done on a weekly circuit, with posters left behind to advertiser the next week’s feature. When Michael Brumm opened The Ritz in 1926, he stopped the traveling shows and settled into more routine business operations.” Brumm tapped his son, Arnold, as assistant manager once the latter graduated from high school, Widen and Anderson wrote, leading Arnold to ultimately take over the business entirely. With powerful chains running the theater game, indie owners like Brumm often struggled to stay afloat. “Arnold Brumm remembered many occasions when film booking became a problem at his family’s Ritz Theater,” Widen and Anderson noted in “Silver Screens.” ‘The buying power of the chains really put the squeeze on the little guys,’ Brumm said. ‘And “block booking,” the packaging of one great picture with 20 lousy ones, hurt us a lot.’ Studios often came to the independent owners with a year’s worth of projected films. To keep a constant flow of films on his screen, the theater owner bought the lot sight unseen, hoping that several films in the package would turn out to be hit attractions. Until block booking was made illegal in 1939, it was an accepted way to do business, ‘Film salesmen were very aggressive guys,’ Brumm said. ‘They would do almost anything to … control your screen for 52 weeks at a time.’ In spite of the hardships connected with being independent, the most determined of the owners found their markets, and their theaters prospered.“ For an interesting look at the finances of The Ritz in this era, check out Matthew Prigge’s delve into one of the theater’s ledgers from 1935, a year in which Brumm’s place lost $320. One way Arnold Brumm worked to "find his market” was to catch the public’s eye in unusual ways, according to Widen and Anderson. “Although he had always been known for his innovative advertising techniques, such as displaying movie posters upside down, Brumm pulled off his most successful stunt to promote the sale of war bonds in 1944. "Coming up short on the bond sales quota set for his theater, Brumm climbed to the top of the Ritz theater’s five-story chimney on a Saturday afternoon. A huge sign on the chimney said, ‘BUY ME WITH WAR BONDS.’ He stayed at his post for the next 24 hours, and war bond sales were brisk. When the final figures were tallied, Brumm’s stunt had doubled the theater’s goals.” According to a much later Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article,“ "One of the strangest efforts came in the early 1950s, when the theater implemented something it called ‘Dignity Nights.’ On designated evenings, candy eaters, popcorn munchers and peanut shell snappers were corralled into a special section, protecting the aurally sensitive from the oral cacophony.” In late 1959, Marcus Theaters, which had moved into the Milwaukee market when it acquired the Tosa Theater (now the Rosebud) in 1940, bought The Ritz and ran it for the last 11 weeks of the year. At the time, movies were 85 cents for adults in the evening, 60 cents for matinees and early bird screenings. Children paid 25 cents and students twice that. In 1962, three days before Christmas, the theater was re-launched as The Villa, playing both on the architecture of the building and the location on Villard Avenue. Marcus archivist Leslie Heinrichs shared these interesting tidbits from the theater’s Marcus era…
Nov. 4 1977 – one of 8 Marcus Theatres that had a Thanksgiving Food Drive for the Needy in association with the Milwaukee B’nai B’rith council’s 1977 drive. The idea is to show a movie that would appeal to audience of all ages and have everyone who wants to attend get a free ticket. The ticket and at least a $1.00 contribution in food or cash are necessary for admittance. The movie show was a 1976 limited run film “It’s Showtime”. January 1978 – Villa is one of 10 theatres that has special showings of films for Milwaukee area teachers who want to take their students to the movies as a field trip. Some that are tentatively scheduled include: “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Grease,” “Jungle Book,” “Cat from Outer Space,” “International Velvet,” “Wild Billy and the Keystone Cowboy.” Other films may appeal to select student groups such as social studies, humanities or foreign language classes. These are a perfect supplement to classroom studies. January 1980 – Admission prices are dramatically reduced at the Villa to great success. Ticket prices are only 79 cents. Current showings include two Burt Reynolds hit films “Starting Over” and “The End”. Vice President of the Marcus Corporation, Bruce Olson, said: “ We choose to offer these lower priced admissions especially for those families who may find it difficult, at times, to afford regular admission prices. We also believe it will stimulate the older audiences who seldom go to the movies anymore. Furthermore, in today’s inflationary environment, we want to provide a low cost form of entertainment.” (Note: The Villa is one of two theatres that did this.) March 1980 – The Marcus Theatres Corporation will institute a $1 admission price on Mondays and Tuesdays beginning Monday, March 16th. The $1 policy will be in effect at most theaters throughout the statewide Marcus Theatres chain, for a limited time only. Note: The Villa is one of 74 theaters that had this policy. October 1984 – Marcus Corporation offers 50 cent movies for 1 night only at all theaters including the Villa. This is in honor of its 50th anniversary. In 1986, Marcus closed The Villa and two years later Tanya and Herman Lewis bought the building and attempted to run it as a second-run house, then a first-run cinema, then a community theater and center before calling it quits in March 1995.
Since then, the building has been home to a salon, a school (called AGAPE), a church, a bookstore. But now it’s vacant, and while it’s seen better days – there is a fair bit of water intrusion – it still looks entirely like a theater inside.
There’s a lobby that looks as though it’s definitely been altered at some point. The marquee still hangs above the door, with a vertical sign advertising the school that once occupied the building. Up the terrazzo stairs are a handful of empty offices facing the street. Across the hall are some storage rooms and the projection room, which, as was customary, has its own bathroom. One door offers a view (though no ladder anymore) up to the attic lit by those dormers you can see on the facade. In the basement, which I didn’t get to explore completely, were the bathrooms, which look as though they’d been updated at least once. Inside the auditorium, the seats are all still there, including what are surely the original cast iron decorative standards at the ends of each row. There are decorative plaster moldings on the walls, and the ceiling has a recessed dome painted blue. Flanking the stage are a pair of exits with organ pipe lofts above (there was a 2/5 Kilgen organ – now in a private collection in Columbus, Ohio – up there). On one side, you can scale a ladder to peek into the organ pipe loft, which is empty and the opening that allowed the sound into the theater has been boarded up. There’s a space below the stage, accessed via the orchestra pit – which itself sits under a stage extension – where there are extra seats and other objects stored. Up in one of the offices there are more modern plexiglass letters for the marquee. Seven of them now appear outside: “For Sale.”
This weblog post by Matthew J. Prigge describes a business ledger from Michael Brumm’s Ritz Theatre for the month of October, 1935. It’s an interesting glimpse into the operations of a small, independent theater during that period.
The basic Kilgen organ from the Ritz is in private hands in Columbus, Ohio now.
December 22nd, 1962 grand opening ad can be found at
View link
The RITZ was the sole movie house for the village of North Milwaukee until the village was annexed by Milwaukee. It struggled for years and stopped showing films on a regular basis in 1986 when Marcus theatres abandoned it. In its issue of Oct. 16, 1995, the “Milwaukee Journal” ran this article excerpted here, with a color photo of the auditorium:
“THEATRE SEEKS AN AUDIENCE; Film May Be Salvation For Movie House.
A movie that has succeeded despite the odds may be the salvation of a Milwaukee movie theatre that is struggling agains the odds to succeed.
The movie is "Sankofa,” an award-winning and critically acclaimed flilm playing this week at the Villa Theatre, 3610 W. Villard Ave.
The Villa is one of but a handful of Black-owned movie houses in the country. For more than seven years, its owners — Tanya and Herman Lewis — have tried to keep alive their dream of building the Villa into a cultural resource for the city’s African-American community.
Not without struggle. The Lewises have tried offering second-run movies at budget prices. They’ve tried offering first-run movies at regular prices. They’ve tried to turn the theater into a community center, opening its facilities to theater groups and educational programs. Nothing has caught on.
“The Villa has never, ever, made enough money to pay for itself,” Tanya Lewis said. “We have always had to subsidize it.”
When the theatre opened in 1926, it was called the Ritz. Through the years, its various owners have employed all kinds of tactics to fill the 680 seats. One of the strangest efforts came in the early 1950s, when the theatre implemented something it called “Dignity Nights.” On designated evenings, candy eaters, popcorn munchers and peanut shell snappers were corralled into a special section, protecting the aurally sensitive from the oral cacophony….
The theater had been closed for three years when in 1988, Tanya Lewis drove by and saw “For Sale” on the marquee. She went home and convinced her skeptical husand that they should buy the place. “We thought we were getting a deal of a lifetime,” she said. “A movie theatre for $50,000.” “It took us nine months to get it going. The building was just a shell. It needed everything. It had a projector, but no sound system. Just the platter and rewind table worked.”
The Lewises spent $120,000 on repairs, including $30,000 from the city. Lewis admitted that she and her husband knew little about running a movie house. “We didn’t even know how to pop popcorn,” she said. They learned. Everybody in the Lewis family learned….
In March, the Lewises decided the Villa just wasn’t working out. They closed the theatre and put it up for sale. If their decision had been reduced to a headline, it would have said ‘Villa a big mistake, Tanya, Herman agree.“ ….”
The photo shows the original single ceiling dome remains with its cove lights, but those lights were apparently too expensive and now only side wall up-lights serve. The murals between the pilasters are covered in plain red draperies and the Palladian-arched organ screens are the only ‘Mediterranean’ touch remaining to justify the name ‘Villa’, though the pipe organ disappeared long ago. Uplights hidden in their balconnets remind one of what it must have been like so many years ago. The theater has not appeared in the movie listings for a long time, and the status of it in this decaying area is unknown.
A grand attempt at reopening the Villa Theater was made in the early 1990s. At one point the Villa was operating as a single screen FIRST RUN theater. I saw the movie “Trespass” (Ice-T, Ice-Cube) there. The theater was very clean. The auditorium was in good shape, although understandably not in “museum perfection”.
“Trespass” was an exclusive showing at the Villa that night. (Either Friday or Saturday.) There were about 200 people in the theater. Nice, but not for an exclusive showing of a first run movie. Sad.
The Villa soon closed. I doubt if anything more could have been done. I haven’t driven by the building in a while, but I believe it is now a nightclub.
One more thing. Not to puff myself up, but I DID PATRONIZE THIS THEATER. I just feel like mentioning that.
Sincerely,
Andrew N. Willenson
In the Film Daily Yearbook,1943 the Ritz Theater is shown as being operated by the Fox Wisconsin Circuit under a subsidiary Fox City Theatres Corp. A seating capacity of 800. It was equipped with a Kilgen theatre organ. It closed as the Villa Theatre in 1986