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Today Theater

Chicago, IL
62 W. Madison Street
, Chicago, IL 60602 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Art Moderne
Function: Unknown
Seats: 300
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Today, which opened in 1941 on Madison Street near Dearborn Street, was the second theater in the Loop that featured a mostly newsreel format. The first Loop theater to do this was the Loop Theater, originally called the Telenews.

During the Today's last years, it showed adult films. Visitors to the Today Theatre often went to the Forum Cafeteria -- a two-level Streamline Moderne delight that was next door and was razed in the early 1980s at the same time as the Today. The site of the theater is now 3 First National Plaza.
Contributed by John Keating, Ray Martinez


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Demolished Toward the end it showed porno movies. Site is now the 3 First National Plaza Building
posted by John Keating on Dec 16, 2001 at 10:56am
The Forum -"Serving the Best in Foods" (motto)
posted by Ben Cybulski on Mar 11, 2004 at 12:38pm
Also located on the block that was razed to make way for the 3 First National Plaza building (which was built in 1982) was Tad's Steakhouse, a Harding's restaurant, Andes Candies, a liquor store, and a couple of other small businesses. The Today opened in 1941.
posted by Bryan Krefft on May 2, 2005 at 4:57pm
The book "Chicago's Loop" claims that the Castle theatre on State was the first newsreel theatre in chicago, beginning in 1932
posted by BWChicago on May 3, 2005 at 8:08pm
The Adams Theatre was another early Chicago theater that was a newsreel and short-subject house in its later years (after starting out showing feature films). I think the Telenews was the first express-built newsreel house in the Loop, since both the Castle and Adams weren't opened as newsreel houses.
posted by Bryan Krefft on May 20, 2005 at 7:40am
In the book "THEN & NOW"-CHICAGO'S LOOP" by Janice A. Knox, there is a nice shot of the Today theatre- circa 1960- on page 69. ONE HOUR PROGRAM LATE NEWS on the marquee. Just west of the theatre is the great Forum Cafeteria, which was wildly popular. On page 94, there is a shot of Madison and Dearborn -circa 1960- looking west.There is another picture (very small) of the Today.
posted by KenC on Aug 10, 2006 at 6:04pm
There is a small photograph on page 189 of Neal Samors' 2006 book Chicago in the Sixties of the corner of Madison and Dearborn Streets from 1966. The marquee of the Today Theatre can be seen and reads in part:
HOLIDAY IN LA SAVOIE
IVORY COAST CALLING
PICTURE IN THE ...
KEEPING UP WITH THE WOR...
There is a sign from a next door lounge blocking the bottom corner of the marquee. In the same photo, the large vertical sign for Tad's Steakhouse, next to the theater, can also be seen.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Jul 14, 2007 at 12:27pm
A 1/23/75 dated article from the Chicago Tribune with the headline "6 Loop Theaters Shut; fire code cited" lists the Today as one of the six theaters. The article mentions it was playing an X-rated movie, "Important Date".

The article states in part, "The violations cited by the city include allegedly faulty electrical switches and flamable materials stored in open boxes". The article also says that at that time, it was the largest crackdown against movie houses in the city's history. Also noted was the fact all of the theaters were playing X-rated, violent, or "blaxploitation" movies.
The other five theaters closed were the State Lake, the McVickers, the Monroe, the Michael Todd, and the Cinestage.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Jul 28, 2007 at 3:52pm
Here is a June 1973 article in the Harrisonburg (VA) Daily News Record:

Some adult movie houses and book stores closed their doors Friday or planned to change their fare in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling apparently giving police more leeway to get tough with pornography peddlers. "Closed due to uncertainty of court decision. Open when situation more stable," read a sign on the door of the Adult Movie Arcade in downtown Louisville, Ky.

Don's Playland a block away decided on a closeout sale. "Due to the most recent ruling by the Supreme Court, we are liquidating all stock — 50 per cent off." Owner Don Marsh prophesied the ruling would drive pornography back underground. He called the decision a "rape of the Constitution." Other newsstands and bookstores displayed signs saying closed "for inventory."

Most pornography peddlers agreed the industry was in trouble and some film houses planned to change their tastes as a result. "The law is the law. We have to abide by what they say," said Paul Jones, manager of Today, an X-rated theater in Chicago. "We'll just have to go to something else. We'll go to the films with less sex and black films."

Joseph Boardman, advertising manager of the underground newspaper, the Los Angeles Free Press, said he alerted his sales staff that "there's a good chance we'll be changing our advertising policy drastically in light of the Supreme Court ruling." "If they (the police) start hasseling us ...we'll take the nudies out..."
posted by ken mc on Sep 11, 2009 at 6:40pm
I kind of discovered this theater by chance. They never ran ads in the newspapers.
posted by vicboda on Oct 5, 2009 at 9:53am
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