Calo Theatre
5404 N. Clark Street,
Chicago,
IL
60640
5404 N. Clark Street,
Chicago,
IL
60640
10 people favorited this theater
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This description of the Calo Theatre is from an article about the Ascher Bros. chain in the March 10, 1917 issue of Moving Picture World:
Two circa 1964 photos as Calo Bowling.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mss2400/32804924277/in/photostream/
Recent Edgeville Buzz article about the Calo Theatre. Mentions building designer George H. Borst again, who coincidentally was also involved in building The Elms hotel on Elm near State Parkway. Which housed many of the stage crews for the downtown live theaters in the
70's &
80’s. The crews were always late night regulars when in town, at my late friend’s nearby tavern, the Hotsie Totsie Yacht Club & Bait Shop on Division. I got too meet many stars back then as a result. Yul Brynner, Sammy Davis Jr. etc. As the crew would sneak them in late at night.http://edgevillebuzz.com/news/andersonvilles-most-curious-places-the-calo-theater
Opened November 20, 1915
The Calo was where cop-killer Gus Amadeo was watching his last movie before being ambushed & killed by Det. Frank Pape back in the 50s. You can read about it here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/39234220@N03/4532317836/
Here is a nice photo of the Calo as a bowling alley.
Teddy’s comment above is almost correct. Reflections Theater, founded by Michael Ryczek, was in the Calo for several years (80s/90s). I was on the advisory board, did the graphics for the programs and marketing, ran a children’s theater program there for a time, and ran lighting too—as well as anything else that no one else had time to do. We were a happy group, but not terribly business-minded sadly. The theatre’s triumph was probably a fine production of Lanford Wilson’s Talley Trilogy.
Front looks so small.
Great interior photos posted by supercharger96.
They should do something about that plaster so that no on e gets hurt.
So, WHY don’t they refurbish all those lights???
A nice picture: View link
This is not exactly a photo, but the Calo Theatre recently made a cameo appearance in my webcomic, Multiplex: http://www.multiplexcomic.com/archive.php?name=376
(The next strip, #377, shows a bit of the interior, as well.)
Maybe I missed it somewhere on these postings, but what was ‘Reflections Theater’ when it inhabited the Calo? Was it an adult theater at some point?
Here is a 1982 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/dyumdu
Thanks for posting that BW. It’s nice to know that even in it’s current thrift store use, they returned the entrance area to a little more as/like original.
1986 photo
Hi everyone! I forgot to mention that the Calo has a sister
theatre “The Portage Park” that was opened by the Ascher Brothers
in 1920. The Portage is larger, but is simuler to the Calo.
Thanks, Jack, the “mechanic”
Hi everyone! I worked at the Calo Theatre from 1954 to 1957. I was
a young teenager. I was there when they installed the Cinemascope
screen. It was reopened by Ray Geraci and Harry Goldsmith. The
Motiograph projectors were rebuilt at this time. The theatre was opened in 1915 as a vauldville house. There was still a full size
stage and a dressing room underneath it when I worked there. They
would have adult and and kid raffles. The stores in the area would
donate the prizes. I would get stuck running the raffle. You could
speak in a normal voice and everyone would hear you. In a room next
to the projection booth is where the organ pipes were.Pipes were
long gone when I was there. The wall was covered by a cheesecloth
type material for the sound to pass through.The admission prices
were Early Bird $.50, $.75 at show time, and $.25 for kids.
I learned how to run the projectors there. I joined the Air Force
1n 1957. I had a part time job running the projectors at the base
thestre. I also worked at the Patio Theatre in Chicago as a part
time projectionst for 5 years till it closed in 2001. So sad!
I am open to any questions you may have about the Calo or Patio.
Thanks, Jack, the “mechanic”
Try Google news. You have to pay for the full articles, though.
Grand Mogul,
Can I ask where you are accessing these Daily News articles from the 50’s? I’m not finding any in the library databases I have access to.
Here is part of a Tribune article dated 2/10/25;
Bert Schreiber, Chicago real estate operator and more lately identified with the Florida realty boom, yesterday sold the Calo theater property, at the northwest corner of Clark and Baimoral, 185x125, to Otto C. Kraemer, for an indicated $350,000.
It appears to be pleading for consideration and renovation.
Thank you, David; your description helps me to recall the interior of the Calo now. It seems I walked through it once out of curiosity but it would have been no later than 1970, or maybe on a trip back but no later than early late ‘70s-early '80s at the latest, and I don’t think it was a theater then.
The Essex is listed as the Guild.