Search

Theaters News Links

Advanced search
 

Theater Guide

Now listing 26,616 theaters & 1,598 photos… more
Browse by...
 

Add Your Cinema Treasure!

Add Theater
Add Photo (offline)
Add Theater News
 
 

Recent Comments

Nov 20 Warner Grand… (65)
Nov 20 Victoria Theater (3)
Nov 20 Paradis Cinema (2)
Nov 20 Mid City 3… (1)
Nov 20 Beverly Theater (34)
Nov 20 Hoyts Cinema… (1)
Nov 20 Grauman's Chinese (629)
Nov 20 Hollywood Malibu… (8)
Nov 20 Bemidji Theatre (1)
Nov 20 Palace Theatre (46)
 
 
 
  Discover. Preserve. Protect.

Milda Theater

Chicago, IL
3140 S. Halsted St.
, Chicago, IL, United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 921
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The over 900-seat Milda opened in 1914 in the then-mostly Irish Bridgeport neighborhood on South Halsted Street, between 31st and 32nd Streets.

It closed sometime during the 50s, and has since been demolished. An office building sits on or near its former location today.
Contributed by Bryan Krefft


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Nothing sits on it's former location. Bah!
posted by Maureen60609 on Mar 2, 2006 at 7:24pm
Was the Milda on the lot whare the doughnut shop was on the corner of 31st And Halsted?
posted by CHI74 on Aug 22, 2006 at 5:04pm
In 1973 the First Run Comedy Theater staged a series of plays at the Milda.
posted by BWChicago on Nov 27, 2006 at 2:58pm
This is from the Ethnic History of Bridgeport. Last paragraph mentions this theater:

"Antanas Olsauskas (or Olszewski, pronounced Olshevski) was the prime force in developing the Lithuanian "downtown" in Bridgeport. Polish and Lithuanian immigrants came to Chicago with all but no business experience (even though some had come as exiles and were educated).

There was a cultural bias against such pursuits. Thus leaders such as Olsauskas had to overcome not only the difficulties of the business world, but also popular resistance to the very notion. Olsauskas founded the first Lithuanian bank in Chicago in 1896. He was followed by another Bridgeport leader, Jonas Tananevicius (or Tananevicze), who established a second bank in 1898 at 3244 south Morgan street.

Tananevicius also ran an insurance agency, travel bureau, and publishing outfit. Olsauskas operated a clothing store, the Milda cinema, a travel bureau, an auto agency, a contracting firm, a book store, a publishing company, and the newspaper Lietuva (Lithuania). As a contractor, he was responsible for building most of the commercial structures that were built on Halsted street between Thirty-first and Thirty-fifth streets from about the late 1890s to World War I.

posted by Lost Memory on Nov 27, 2006 at 4:17pm
The Milda was actually further down the block from the intersection of 31st and Halsted. David's Restaurant and Governor's Table were at the corner location for years before being destroyed by a fire sometime in the 1980s. The Dunkin Donuts mini strip mall was built there not long after that, but that's also gone. A new police station is being built on that location (taking up most of the block).
posted by okcray on Aug 17, 2008 at 2:17am
Here is a 1982 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/cjob4n
posted by ken mc on Apr 19, 2009 at 5:35pm
I'm writing a book about the history of Bridgeport for Arcadia Publishing that will be published mid 2010.

Please contact me if you have any of the Wallace or any Bridgeport theaters. I have some of the Ramova, Milda and The Eagle, but would like to see any and all pictures that you have and are willing to share of all of the 12-13 theaters of Bridgeport's past.

On a really sad note, Nancy of Nancy's Best Little Hair House passed away his past week. The Wallace theater building has been for sale for the last few months too.

Look forward to hearing from you.
Maureen-
posted by mfs3757 on Nov 7, 2009 at 8:13pm
Comment
*

Notify me when someone replies to my comment?
Note: Please read our comment policy before posting. Comments which are off-topic, obscene, spam, or personal attacks will be removed. Help us keep the discussion productive!