Vogue Art Theater

417 E. Douglas Avenue,
Wichita, KS 67202

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Midnight Blue

Additional Info

Functions: Bar, Restaurant

Previous Names: Marple Theater, State Theater

Nearby Theaters

Vogue Art Theater

The Marple Theater was opened on October 1, 1908 for William H. Marple. On December 27, 1927 it was renamed State Theater. It was last known as the Vogue Art Theater, an adult movie theatre which operated in the 1960’s and 1970’s, closing on February 10, 1977.

In September 1978 it was converted into a dinner theatre which operated until January 1981. The building was then used as a night club called the Midnight Blue club. By 2009 it was Fat Tony’s Grill & Sports Bar.

Contributed by Lost Memory

Recent comments (view all 7 comments)

Keith Wondra
Keith Wondra on March 10, 2009 at 4:14 pm

It is now a bar.
Here is a 2007 photo:
View link

Keith Wondra
Keith Wondra on March 10, 2009 at 4:23 pm

According to the Wichita Eagle and the Wichita Beacon;
Emma Dodd was the wife of E. M. Dodd a contractor. They came to Wichita in 1884. She owned considerable real estate including downtown business property.

Keith Wondra
Keith Wondra on March 10, 2009 at 4:26 pm

E. M. Dodd was not the builder of the Marple since he died in 1899 according to Emma Dodd’s obituary in the 1928 Wichita Beacon and the Marple was built in 1908.

Keith Wondra
Keith Wondra on May 23, 2012 at 5:11 pm

It is now Fat Tony’s Grill and Sports Bar.

Lyndon
Lyndon on December 29, 2014 at 7:21 am

Here are some historical tidbits about the Marple.

rivest266
rivest266 on January 28, 2021 at 2:25 pm

This reopened as the first adult cinema in Wichita, the Vogue Art on September 2nd, 1966. Grand opening ad posted.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on November 8, 2022 at 9:15 am

Emma H. Dodd had the first true new-build movie theater in Wichita built in 1908 across the street from the family’s Elite Theatre operated by William H. Marple in 1908. Dodd fronted the $15,000 venue and Marple added $6,000 in equipment to start and run the new 600-seat Maple Theatre. Marple must have been pleased that it was called the nicest movie house in the West at that time by the local press. Although that point was debatable, the Grand Opening date was not. The Marple launched October 1, 1908. D.W. Griffith’s “Ingomar, the Barbarian” was on the big screen. Bertha Koshler was at the keyboard with Persis Gardner as the vocalist and Sam W. Jones was the chef narrator explaining aspects the silent films.

Arthur and Blanche Ford assumed control of the venue and vaudeville was more heavily added to the programming mix along with film. In 1925, Mr. T.H. and Mrs. Merta E. Slothower took on the venue. 1927 was a year of transition in the film industry with sound exhibition in demand. The Holland Theatre operators decided to close. The State Theater had closed elsewhere in town. To save costs, apparently, the Marple had gone to non-union labor which caused protestations that likely didn’t help its standing as an aging movie theater. It wasn’t the first dance that the Marple had with union workers; in 1922, the venue was picketed and bombs were allegedly planted by activists. On December 27, 1927, the refreshed Marple reopened as the still silent State Theatre with Constance Talmadge in “Venus of Venice.” Vaudeville had been completely removed from the programming at the State. The theater used an Electrola to provide music - likely not pleasing the union folks. And it likely used a repurposed State Theatre sign.

The State closed but reopened with Vitaphone sound on March 6, 1930 for the Slothowers. By decade’s end, the Slothowers would build the Sandra and Southern theaters locally in 1939. They then gave the State, apparently, a much-needed streamline moderne makeover for its relaunch on January 25, 1948. After a period of inactivity, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ross of the Kansas City Strand Theatre took on the venue rebranding it as the Vogue Art Cinema for adult audiences. The seating ws dropped to 400 for or the reboot on September 2, 1966 and the entire theater was modernized with wood paneling hiding the theater’s past. Under manager George Kirk, the business was raided five times by Vern Miller’s request early in 1977 with the final one on February 10, 1977 that would end the Vogue Art’s film run.

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