The Uptown Theatre was on Milwaukee's near north side (hence, uptown of downtown) until the summer of 2001 when the city demolished it to use its large parcel of land and another in front of it for a new district police HQ and a communications center. While it was not the fanciest or largest of the city's theaters, it was a nice neighborhood job by noted Chicago architects Rapp & Rapp.
When it opened in 1926 it stood on a large lot bordered by streets and alleys, so the clear view of the freestanding building allowed for a more dramatic treatment on the exterior, but nowhere near the design quality the Rapps gave such giant theaters as Chicago's Paradise.
Originally, the theater was to have a dance hall and amusement center, but plans were simplified and only the six unusual niches on the parapet wall above the four stores flanking the theater's entry were retained as gestures to beauty. Each niche was 20 feet long, by 10 feet high, by four feet deep and the openings were centered by four-foot tall limestone urns surrounded by artificial shrubbery and backlit at night. A cascade of lights on the original marquee backed the name sign and the triple windows above it had beautiful draperies visible which hung in a display alcove above the ticket lobby.
A long, narrow lobby with a barrel vaulted ceiling led to the back of the auditorium and in the center of that lobby was a fountain of a boy holding a copper umbrella which spouted water from its apex and the base was a pedestal of glazed tiles in mixed blues. Similar tiles were used to outline the blind panels that made up the walls with poster cases upon them and there were frosted glass Art Deco chandeliers overhead.
The foyer originally had a small candy stand that allowed room for an ornate etched glass mirror hung on silken cords, but by the 1940s the stand had grown to a 15-foot-long counter that extended past the aisle entry doors so that they had to build out new curved walls to form a way to get to the doors. By that time, the mirror was long gone.
The auditorium was graced by pergolas projecting six feet from the walls, three on each side, and contained murals on canvas of Italian landscapes lighted from the balconettes which formed the bottoms. From the tops of the columns the pergolas met the pierced arabesques of a flat cornice behind which were lights in the three house colors: red, blue and yellow. The organ screens were similar pergolas with panels of white fabric covering the swell shades, right in the middle of their murals. Up lights here cast a changing glow of colors. A stenciled ashlar pattern in mixed blues and browns bordered the single rectangular dome in the ceiling, the cove of which furnished the major illumination. In front of the organ screens hung art deco styled chandeliers of frosted glass sheaths with a bottom bowl of crystal strands (these were removed many years ago and used in a farmer's barn!). The rectangular proscenium arch was cove lighted and had the same 'in-curved' corners sometimes called 'plaque shaped' that the cove of the dome had. The original Grand Drapery was a line of seven swags in dense pattern separated by six light colored galloons from which tassels were suspended.
Perhaps the most unusual feature was the act curtain used to cover the picture sheet (screen). It was a shiny satin arranged in light and dark colored 'V' shapes radiating from the center line of the drapery where they no doubt parted as the footlights bathed the rippling satin in colorful display. The shallow balcony held only ten rows but that made the acoustics easier to plan, all the better to enjoy the three-manual, ten-rank Barton theatre pipe organ, the console of which was in ivory with gilt rococo mountings (it was removed and sold years ago). There were only seven control groups of house lights, but then this was a modest movie palace.
The 23-line stage had several traps and the permanent counterweight system allowed a variety of stage uses, such as the Muscle Man contests held in the theatre's last days.
When it closed in 1980, it was still in good enough condition to reopen, but a careless maintenance man reportedly turned on the water to a red hot boiler that had been dry and the resulting steam explosion destroyed the boiler and flooded the theater up to the fourth row of seats. Perhaps this was the last straw, for United Artists abandoned the building and it rapidly decayed without the heat vitally needed to keep the plaster from softening in our freeze-thaw-freeze climate.
Small community groups did manage to make sporadic use of the drained auditorium, but their unit heaters plunked on top of the seats with vent stacks bored through the exit doors did not make the place very hospitable. Several citizens nominated the theater for local landmark status in the eleventh hour, but the city's Historic Preservation Commission meeting on June 15, 1998 declined to grant any designation citing the extensive damage to the fabric of the building and the lack of any real outstanding significance vis-a-vis other extant theatres in the city.
By the time of demolition, pigeons flew freely through the stagehouse's rotted-out roof and their droppings made a carpet upon the stage. Local theater buffs made a farwell tour as the salvage man removed the chandeliers in the lobby and any other remaining materials of value. For so substantial a building of beige brick and limestone trim, it was disheartening to see the ease with which the new hydraulic 'jaws' of a steam shovel-like device could just bite through the heavy steel columns and drop the building upon itself. How sad to watch the destruction that is always so much easier than construction.
Contributed by James H. (Jim) Rankin
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