Viking Theatre

344 W. College Avenue,
Appleton, WI 54911

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Marcus Theatres

Architects: Perry E. Crosier

Functions: Bar

Styles: Streamline Moderne

Nearby Theaters

VIKING Theatre; Appleton, Wisconsin.

The Viking Theatre opened on January 29, 1942 with two films, “Tanks a Million” starring William Tracey & “Aloma of the South Seas” starring Dorothy Lamour.

By 1980 it had been renamed Viking Cinema and was on March 22, 1992. The theatre remodeled into stores. It is now the Luna Lounge.

Contributed by Ed Wilke

Recent comments (view all 10 comments)

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on April 11, 2007 at 11:33 pm

This is from the Appleton Post-Crescent, dated 8/27/64:

Beatles Film Debut Greeted With Sighs
Early-Rising Girls Wait Long Hours
For Seats of Afternoon Performance

A number of young girls showed up at the Viking Theater at 4 a.m. Wednesday to assure themselves a seat when the show opened after noon. Wayne Berkley, Viking manager, discovered them huddled on his doorstep and invited them in to get warm. Busy with arranging publicity material in the lobby, Berkley asked the girls to help and gave them some large Beatle pictures to move into place.

Berkley is still shaking his head in disbelief. He may not understand the Beatle mystique, but he does know the film packed his house to full capacity Wednesday. Next week, more exclusively adult adulation gets a chance at the Viking when Peter Sellers returns in a sort of sequel of “Pink Panther” as he bumbles through “A Shot in the Dark”. Then it will be the kids’ chance, perhaps, to shake their heads in disbelief.

edwilke
edwilke on April 13, 2007 at 4:57 pm

Here are some links to pictures of the Viking, from the Post-Crescent website.

The Viking Theater in 1954

View link

The Viking Theater in 1962

View link

The Viking Theater in 1989

View link

This is what the building presently looks like.

View link

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on September 8, 2007 at 11:42 pm

Here is an October 1963 ad from the Appleton Post-Crescent:
http://tinyurl.com/2d78mq

wimovies
wimovies on April 1, 2008 at 10:27 pm

I started working at the Viking Theatre in 1991. The theatre closed March 22, 1992. It hadn’t shown a first run movie since 1977. It showed 2nd run films for years, and at its end did not do well. The state of downtown Appleton at the time it closed was not very good. The multiple basements and office space left much to be explored while the films were running. Interestingly enough, you could not enter the projection booth from the theatre itself, you had to exit the theatre and enter a door to the right of the main entrance, this also gave access to the offices upstairs, and the multiple basements below. It sat empty for at least a year, before Route 66 renovated the space for a niteclub.

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on October 14, 2010 at 11:31 pm

The Luna Lounge is listed at this address now.Is this the old theatre building?

wimovies
wimovies on October 20, 2010 at 4:13 am

Yes, the Luna lounge is the old theatre building.

OakCreekmovielady
OakCreekmovielady on July 11, 2016 at 10:04 pm

The Viking was a basic late 40s-style move theater with no balcony. It’s greatest claim is Star Wars played there for nearly six straight months in 1977. Also Marcus occasionally ran soft-core porn flicks at the Viking from time to time in the 70s and early 80s.

Bobak
Bobak on September 17, 2021 at 3:41 pm

Theater architect:

Perry E. Crosier, Minneapolis-based theater architect of some renown in the region in that era.

However: “the remained of the building was designed locally.” [no names specified]

Source:

“1 2-3 Acres of Space on 4 floors of Bachcall Building,” The Post-Crescent, January 28, 1942, page 21.

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