Delavan Theatres
405 E. Walworth Avenue,
Delavan,
WI
53115
2 people favorited this theater
Additional Info
Previously operated by: Carmike Cinemas, Essaness Theaters Corp., Excellence Theatres, Standard Theaters Management Corp., Warner Bros. Circuit Management Corp.
Architects: John Wolf
Styles: Atmospheric, Spanish Renaissance
Previous Names: Delavan Theatre, Delavan 1 & 2 Theatre
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This was a charming Atmospheric style small-town theatre, at the east edge of the downtown business district on busy Wisconsin State Highway 11. The Delavan Theatre was opened in spring of 1929. Through the 1960’s it retained its original appearance, with its rectangular marquee and classic chaser-lighted vertical sign. It was twinned in 1978 and the stage house was demolished at that time. But by the 1970’s much of the lower façade was redone in the current simplistic style of that age, exterior ornament was removed, and its 1929 exterior charm was largely gone.
In 1999, newspapers reported that theatre operator Carmike Cinemas was sued by Standard Theatres of Brookfield, Wisconsin (which no longer operated theatres) for leaving the Delavan Theatre in unsatisfactory condition after vacating its tenancy.
After being listed on the real-estate market for some time, the Delavan Theatre was sold in about 2006 to the River Of Life Christian Church of Williams Bay, Wisconsin. They assembled some historic photos of the Delavan Theatre on its website, including construction photos and interior scenes. By summer of 2019, the church had vacated the building and moved on to 1220 S. Shore Drive. The name on the marquee became Delavan Theatres, but its use is unknown.
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Here is a view of the church from Google maps:
http://tinyurl.com/6s3u2e
Here is a better view of the 11/14/08 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/yz97gmj
January 14, 1955) (AP) FREIGHT TRAIN KILLS DELAVAN THEATRE MAN
Irwin Stephan, 36, was killed Thursday afternoon when his car collided with a freight train at a crossing in Delavan. Stephan, married and the father of four, came here six weeks ago from Palmyra (Jefferson County) to manage the Delavan movie theatre.
Manager of this theatre quits after protest on Italian film Bitter Rice.
Article in Boxoffice magazine, July 7, 1951:
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[For the record, Bitter Rice is now considered a major Italian film classic and even appeared on an Italian postage stamp commemorating the films of the Italian neo-realist period after World War II.]
(Janesville Gazette, September 26, 1969)
ELKHORN â€" Daniel F. Kelliher, 87, a native of Mt. Horeb and operator of the Sprague Theater here for 47 years, died at home Thursday September 25. Mr. Kelliher operated a movie theater at Mt. Horeb for 11 years. He bought a theater here in 1922 and later built the Sprague Theater, which he operated until his retirement. Mr. Kelliher also had operated theaters in Lake Geneva, Delavan, East Troy, and Burlington. He has been credited for holding the state record for longtime theater operation. The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Saturday in St. Patrick’s Catholic Church here. Friends may call at the Murray funeral home here after 4 p.m. today. He is survived by his wife, Luella.
From the 1950s a photo postcard image of the Delevan in Delevan
The “New Theaters” column in The Film Daily of March 12, 1929, said: “Delavan, Wis. — Construction of the new
Delavan is nearing completion.”
There is surprisingly little about this theater in the trade journals. In the 1940s it was a Warner Bros. house, and in 1949 the manager was named Bud Campbell, and that’s all I’ve found.
The NRHP nomination form for the Delavan Downtown Commercial Historic District says that the Delavan Theatre was designed by Milwaukee architect John Wolf. The twinning took place in 1978, and the stage house the theater originally sported was demolished at that time.
Once operated by Essaness Theaters and later Excellence Theatres prior to its Carmike takeover.