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Deerpath Theatre

Lake Forest, IL
272 E. Deerpath Road
, Lake Forest, IL 60045 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Tudor Revival
Function: Shopping Center
Seats: 935
Chain: Unknown
Architect: William B. Betts
Firm: Betts & Holcomb
Add a photo for this theater!
The Deerpath Theatre, in the northern Chicago suburb of Lake Forest, opened in 1928. It was designed by the firm of Betts and Holcomb, who were also responsible for designing the Catlow in Barrington (among several other Chicagoland area theaters).

Both theaters were designed in a neo-Tudor style, though the interior decor differed and the Deerpath had a balcony.

The Deerpath remained open until the mid-80s. After it closed, it was converted into a shopping center.
Contributed by Bryan Krefft


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Here is a (rather large) 1934 photograph of the beautiful exterior of the Deerpath Theatre.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Apr 23, 2004 at 11:47am
The coolest part about the theater, at least in its later years, was the fact that it had real airplane seats in the middle of each row. And not the chincy coach seats of today, but the old comfy reclining seats.
posted by Alexgor23 on Nov 16, 2004 at 7:37am
Digitalpast seems to have changed their directory system. http://www.digitalpast.org/cgi-bin/viewer.exe?CISOROOT=/lfacadem001&CISOPTR=11 should be the new URL, but if it expires, simply search for deerpath on digitalpast.org. Some other promotional material from the theatre is also viewable this way.
posted by BWChicago on Feb 26, 2005 at 9:47am
Spent a lot of time at the Deerpath in the '70s and early '80s. Such a beutiful theater. It was mainly a second-run theater, with prices between $1.50 to $3.00. They played mainly family-oriented films. Not to may R-rated features. The played Rocky 1-3, Star Wars, Empire, E.T., and Raiders. And among the rarities I recall Posse, The Late Show, Silent Movie, and Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen.

It was closed and renovated in 1982. It re-opened as a first-run theater (with a $5.00 ticket price) in 1983 with Superman III. The remodeling included, as previously mentioned, airline seats. But but all of the seats were airline seats. There was a column of them in the center, four to each row (?), for maybe the rear half of the theater.

The theater had a terrific balcony. According to http://www.thecatlow.com, The Deerpath and the Catlow were somewhat similar in their architectural floorplans - the significant difference being the Catlow's lack of a balcony. The Deerpath's interior design motif was quite different and Iannelli was not involved with that design in any way. The theater closed its doors in the early 1980's. It has since been converted into a small shopping mall.

My best recollection is The Deerpath closed in 1985, with Witness (which my Mom and Dad saw there) possibly being its last feature.
posted by shead on Nov 2, 2005 at 8:09pm
Lake Forest has had relatively few historical losses over the years, and I count among them Villa Turricum and the Deerpath Theatre. The Deerpath was a charming theatre with a stage and a pipe organ, and two ranks of pipes flanking the screen, with as I recall, a pair of the comedy/tragedy masks decorating the pipe enclosures. I think there was even a small orchestra pit in front of the stage/screen. I vaguely recall some heavy old-English-styled chandeliers hanging from the ceiling as well... but it was so long ago, I'm not sure.

I think the Deerpath suffered from bad management for many years, which ultimately led to its demise, aided by the era of VHS. Unlike its rival, the Highland Park Theatre which showed first-run movies, the Deerpath only screened re-runs. I saw "Bonnie and Clyde," "Gone With The Wind," "The Wizard of OZ," and "Cabaret" there for the first time, all first-rate pictures but in their second- third- twentieth-runs. The only movie I know of that premiered at the Deerpath was "Thank God It's Friday"...

I never saw the Deerpath after its remodeling, but I was told the balcony was sectioned off into private booths, and the seats were replaced. It seemed a shame, the direction it was headed.

How sad it is to think that a city like Lake Forest could have let its only in-town movie theatre bite the dust and become a (egads!) shopping mall! The theatre had a stage, for god's sake. A better management team might have welcomed local theatre groups (such as Group For...) and orchestral groups to perform there. That opportunity is now gone.

Silly things I remember about the Deerpath: The floors were often sticky with spilled soda (they didn't clean the theatre very well I guess); going to the corner Baskin-Robbins for ice cream after every show; my parents forbidding me to sit in the balcony (where all the stoners used to hang out).
posted by andrewgage on Mar 8, 2007 at 8:05am
That is an interesting point. The Winnetka Community House, which sits in the middle of a town with almost identical demographics, has a steady flow of events. Maybe Lake Forest missed the boat on this one.

posted by Life's too short on Mar 8, 2007 at 8:25am
A Geneva theater organ size 3/10 was installed in the Deerpath Theater in 1927.

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 10, 2007 at 2:12pm
Very fond memories of the Deerpath Theatre in the 70s: amen to the sticky floors, the 1920s Tudor revival decor and bargain that was the Saturday matinée-- generally a very oddly matched double feature for about a dollar. Blinking in the bright light of a summer afternoon after watching "Lost Horizon" and "Westworld"... heady stuff. The interior signage was thematic and "ye olde," too; I still remember the decorative font used in the signs over the interior doors. Warner Brothers' Robin Hood Gothic Bold. (As a kid I puzzled over the word "aisle" for ages-- what could it mean?)
Andrew Gage, I must ask: did you graduate from LFHS?
posted by jeanfilkins on May 1, 2008 at 6:30pm
Despite most predictions to the contrary, yes I did graduate from LFHS. How ya doin' "Feetsy" Filkins? It's been a long long time hasn't it?
posted by andrewgage on Nov 2, 2008 at 9:34am
Andy! Yay! I would love to hear what you've been up to in the past... decades... could you e-mail me at jeanlass @ gmail .com? I don't think it would be good form to shanghai this thread with discussions of 9th grade chorus.
posted by jeanfilkins on Nov 2, 2008 at 2:14pm
The Deerpath in 1982:

http://americanclassicimages.com/Default.aspx?tabid=141&txtSearch=lake+forest&ProductID=26547

I don't remember this theatre being twinned, and yet there is a big "2" on the marquee. Curious.

posted by Life's too short on Apr 22, 2009 at 10:14am
It was not a twin. It was remodeled in the very early 80's and the organ was even restored. It was reopened as the Deerpath 2. Airline seats, private rooms (back of the main floor) good for crying babies, early satellite TV (in the lobby and private rooms), and a rockin Dolby stereo sound system. Pink Floyd The Wall was there right after it reopened. Another cool theater that died due to the Loews / CO multiplex build mania then bankruptcy.
posted by balabankatz on Oct 23, 2009 at 9:15pm
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