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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Park I & II

Capitol Theatre

Racine, WI
3015 Washington Avenue
, Racine, WI 53405 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Renovating
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 700
Chain: Unknown
Architect: J. Mandor Matson
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Capitol Theatre was built in 1920 as a neighorhood vaudeville and movie theatre the interior was beautifully finished with ornate plasterwork and stenciling. A large indirectly light oval covers three quarters of the auditorium ceiling. The proscenium is decorated with plaster ropes flowers and twists. Two pipe chambers complete with false boxes are located on either side of the stage. At one time the theatre boasted a 2/8 Wurlitzer pipe organ.

Twinned in 1976, the organ was removed and much of the plaster work covered. Closed in 1986, it has since been allow to suffer much decay and water damage.
Contributed by Paul Grant


YOUR COMMENTS

 
The Park was purchased in June of 2004 by the Westbury Group LLC, headed by a local man who is very much interested in theatre preservation. The theatre will be completely restored. Two store fronts adjoining the theatre will be incorporated into a much needed lobby and restroom expansion. The second floor apartments will become space for a new restaurant. When originally opened, the theatre was know as the Capitol, upon completion of the restoration it will be know as the "Capitol Theatre for the Performing Arts."
The reopening is scheduled for November 2005.
posted by pbird on Jun 21, 2004 at 2:45pm
Do you know if someone has been chose to do the restoration?
posted by R. J. Heisenbottle Architects, PA on Jul 2, 2004 at 12:04pm
I went to the movies at the Capitol when I was a kid. I think we saw Love Bug and Jungle Book when they first came out. I had worked at the Capitol during my high school days 1976-1977. The owner at the time was Frank? Carmichael - not sure on the spelling. He owned a theater in Kenosha and started publishing the Happenings magazine. I remember delivering those to various locations in West Racine. My main duty at the theater was janitor. I recall hauling the bags of popcorn and the soda canisters from Washington Ave up the entry way and then down the steep stairs into the basement. The projectionist once had me come upstairs and showed me the ornate lighting fixtures that were in between the original ceiling and the drop ceiling. Also, at one time, the fire marshall was about to shut down the operations because of all the junk "in the back". Well, I was able to assist in cleaning out the area behind the twin screens .... what I saw back there was amazing. A stage area and rooms behind or under the stage. My dad later told me he had gone there as a boy to see vaudeville shows. I had been hoping someone would take on this project. I live in Houston, TX now but whenever I'm home I always stop by and peer into the windows. I did so this past July and it appeared work was going on in there but that it had been awhile. I'm sure there will be a good amount of interest in seeing this restored.
posted by CScheller on Nov 17, 2004 at 11:19am
Is this renovation work proceeding? The marquee is advertising judo classes, and the lobby appears to be full of old cash registers.
posted by mp775 on Jul 25, 2006 at 4:55am
A photo in the September 12th, 1987 Racine Journal Times shows the Capitol with the second, triangular Art Deco marquee and the original four-story vertical sign which was fully operational and in use until 1981. At the sign's top was a capitol-like dome and twisted ropelike chasers down to the bottom, a real treat to see at night reminding all of the golden age of the great verticals.

The report said it was twinned in the fall of 1975 (270 seats/240 seats, each with a tiny screen) and was then sold to Milwaukee-based Marcus Corporation in 1981 for $50,000. Marcus, for reasons of its own, then renamed the Capitol the "Park I & II", and that's when the vertical 'Capitol' sign was removed.
Marcus closed the theatre on Labor Day, 1987, admitting to poor business.
For six years a second-run house, Marcus did experiment with some first-run fare there in its final summer.
posted by Louis Rugani on Oct 31, 2006 at 8:17pm
Photos of this theater are HERE
posted by BWChicago on Sep 30, 2007 at 4:51pm
The Capitol's organ was relocated to a newer minimalist-styled playhouse built by a local amateur live-theater group on Northwestern Avenue.
posted by Lou Rugani on Feb 8, 2008 at 6:58am
Here is another photo of the Park/Capitol Theater.

posted by Lost Memory on Aug 5, 2008 at 6:55am
1983 Photo

posted by Lost Memory on May 2, 2009 at 12:08pm
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