Comments from WayOutWardell

Showing 1 - 25 of 27 comments

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about February 1924 on Oct 26, 2018 at 9:07 am

February 1924

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Dec 13, 2016 at 1:45 pm

*just to clarify my comment of 12/8 – the lounge next door to to the Tivoli closed sometime after ‘65. I don’t think the theater ever reopened after '63 but is still standing in the photo taken after the lounge’s closing.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Dec 8, 2016 at 5:29 pm

I believe that the Tivoli building survived beyond 1963, as I have recently found a photo of a lounge in the Strand Hotel (next door to the theater) and in the background is the Tivoli, minus the marquee, fire escapes cut down and grand front window broken, yet not boarded up. In the photo, the lounge itself is closed and has a ‘for rent’ sign in the window; I can verify that it was open and hosting concerts at least until 1965.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Kimbark Theatre on Feb 2, 2016 at 10:28 am

Demolition complete 2/1/16.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Kimbark Theatre on Dec 4, 2015 at 11:00 am

Demolition permit issued 12/1, construction fencing erected around the building 12/3.
There may be segments of the facade that will be salvaged.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about United Artists Theatre on Jan 31, 2015 at 7:14 pm

Re: the nightclub next door, Flo’s Kit Kat – there’s a short film called “Dance Craze” on YouTube filmed at Flo’s, including a scene of the swinging girl outside.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Oct 24, 2014 at 8:17 am

@LTS – Good points all. I came across an article in the Defender which talks about the closing and how the manager, Ken Blewitt, would be transferred to the Maryland around the corner. The B&K business manager interviewed for the article said something to the effect of, ‘we’ve tried to give the public what they want, but they don’t want the Tivoli’.

@BobbyS – That’s the Strand Hotel, and it’s actually in the early stages of being rehabbed into residences. The windows were recently removed for the work which is why it looks the way it does.

The plan for the hotel (Zachary Taylor Davis, arch.)actually included a theater next door, tentatively called the Calumet, but after the hotel was completed in 1919, the funding dried up and the site was then sold to B&K.

On the other side of the Tivoli, the Cinderella Tea Room (the other marquee in the early theater photos) has been rehabbed and is now known as the Grand Ballroom. The exterior stud lighting is now functional and is quite something to see.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Woodlawn Theatre on Oct 24, 2014 at 7:59 am

Wow, how did they manage to convince the CTA to allow their marquee to wrap around the Jackson Park El support beam?

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Maryland Theatre on Feb 4, 2014 at 1:04 pm

A book about the Jackson Park Theater antitrust case lists the Maryland as opened in 1918 and acquired by B&K in 1928, showing films 9 weeks after the first-run in the Loop.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Feb 2, 2013 at 10:13 pm

I’m still curious about the decision to close and demolish in so short a time; surely this is one of the first of the movie-palace era in the nation to be demolished.

Looking at periodicals of the day, it seemed to be doing good business up until the very end. A 1963 issue of Jet Magazine mentions a touring concert show and a conference having to scramble to find a new venue, as though the theater closed without much notice. A Moms Mabley LP released in 1964 was recorded at the theater in March of ‘63.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Piccadilly Theatre on Jan 29, 2013 at 5:51 pm

Some of the remaining lobby ornamentation has been recently removed and is supposedly going to be reused in a new restaurant in Hyde Park.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Midway Theatre on Jan 29, 2013 at 11:53 am

I’d place the photo at 1924. The bank building just beyond the tracks was completed that year, the Gypsy Lane dine and dance (marquee visible on the left) was closed by 1928, and the theater itself is presenting ‘Shuffle Along’ on stage, which, after its Broadway run, went on a road tour that year.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Woodlawn Theatre on Jul 16, 2012 at 9:31 pm

Rivest266 – looking at the ad you posted, I’m wondering if that’s the ad for the opening of the Maryland Theater across the street. The address on the ad is the same as that theater. Is there a chance the ‘Woodlawn’ title is actually referring to the neighborhood and not the theater?

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Woodlawn Theatre on Apr 19, 2012 at 6:45 am

So, it would seem that the early theater at this address was replaced or renovated, correct? The trade magazine referenced above gives the impression that it was to be replaced.

Maps of the late ‘20s and early ‘30s only show one theater, the Drexel, at 858 E.63rd, with a small jewelry shop occupying 854 E., a storefront in the building that houses the theater. However, in the 1916 University of Chicago commencement program there’s an ad for the Drexel Popcorn Shop at 856 E. ('The Best Popcorn You Ever Ate – Next To The Drexel) which was still at that address twenty years later.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about DeLuxe Theatre on Apr 19, 2012 at 6:26 am

In the 1916 University of Chicago commencement program, there’s an ad for the DeLuxe Theater: ‘Matinee Daily At 1PM – Now Showing Paramount Pictures In Exclusive Advance’.

A 1930 map shows the address being used as a Publix Cafeteria. Ira Rosenzweig, building owner.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Apr 18, 2012 at 6:19 pm

In the paperwork submitted to the Landmarks Commission regarding the Portage Theater, it’s mentioned that the marquee from the Tivoli was refashioned and installed on the Portage, and that doors from the Marbro were reused there as well – I assume since they were fairly new at the time.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Piccadilly Theatre on Apr 18, 2012 at 6:08 pm

There’s a bizarre photo of the auditorium taken in the late ‘60s during construction of a mock-up of Bertrand Goldberg’s San Diego Theatre project.

See here: http://bertrandgoldberg.org/projects/san-diego-theatre/

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Apollo Theatre on Feb 22, 2012 at 10:29 am

Demolished 1/30/12.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Kimbark Theatre on Jul 10, 2010 at 5:43 pm

As of 7/7/10, there is a for-rent sign on the exterior.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Apr 21, 2009 at 11:17 am

There is a photo of the updated Tivoli marquee visible in a different book called Chicago Jazz, by Sandor Demlinger.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Tivoli Theatre on Apr 21, 2009 at 11:16 am

I’ve only ever seen two exterior photos of the Trianon, and one of those only has the building’s marquee and radio transmission towers ever so slightly in the background (find it in Max Grinell’s book on Hyde Park). The other is a good shot taken from a building across the street that can be seen in William Kenney’s book Chicago Jazz: A Cultural History. Hope this helps.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Owl Theatre on Apr 14, 2009 at 2:34 pm

A street-level photo of the Owl can be seen in Sandor Demlinger’s book Chicago Jazz.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Lawndale Theatre on Apr 14, 2009 at 2:29 pm

Great photos. It appears as though the square panes of glass in the window surrounding the medallion were later spray painted in various colors. The dropped ceiling that closes off the balcony and above from the main floor was done in a similar way at the Central Park/COGIC.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Regal Theater on Apr 13, 2009 at 10:11 pm

Many of the handbills, show posters and tinted photograps (including those of Al Hibbler, Sarah Vaughan and Dizzy Gillespie) that were in the offices at the Regal were given to Gerri Oliver, who ran the Palm Tavern, where the stars would go after their performances. They remained on the walls until 2001 when she closed up shop. She still has them in her posession.

At the risk of nitpicking, the South Side sister of the Aragon Ballroom would have been the Trianon at 62nd and Cottage Grove; aside from similar size, general layout and richness of furnishings, both were developed and run by the Karzas Brothers, sharing the same entertainers and under the same race-restrictive admission policy.

WayOutWardell
WayOutWardell commented about Kimbark Theatre on Sep 1, 2008 at 1:59 pm

Update: the deteriorating south wall of the building has been repaired and tuckpointed somewhat. Signs of pending reuse, perhaps?