Des Plaines Theatre

1476 Miner Street,
Des Plaines, IL 60016

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Showing 76 - 100 of 110 comments

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on July 28, 2007 at 10:07 pm

This is from the Chicago Daily Herald, 3/8/82:

Fire raged through the landmark structure housing the Des Plaines
Theater and three other shops Sunday afternoon, destroying two businesses and causing more than a half-million dollars damage.
About 30 patrons were evacuated from the theater, 1476 W. Miner St., as the blaze flashed across a common basement area in the half-block long building. No one was reported injured. The cause of the fire was undetermined. The three-alarm fire burned for nearly three hours and Des Plaines firefighters called in engine companies from five suburban departments.

Smoke was reported pouring out of the Mar-El Discount shoe store, 1480 Miner, about 2:30 p.m. just as the afternoon showing of the movie “Taps” began playing In the 63-year-old theater, firefighters said. The shoe store, Rappoport watchmakers and jewelers, the theater and Wlndy’s restaurant are located in the same building and share a common basement and roof, according to firefighters. Moviegoers praised the action of John Praught, the theater manager on duty when fire broke out next door.

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on May 16, 2007 at 7:22 pm

May Day. Must have been a communist conspiracy.

Broan
Broan on May 16, 2007 at 7:03 pm

While a great picture, it had to have been taken some time between 2000-2004, probably closer to the latter, as it looks like Fannie Mae is closed. It is probably a scanned photo, which would account for the inaccurate date.

mp775
mp775 on March 27, 2007 at 11:25 am

There will be a benefit for the Des Plaines Theater at the Pickwick on Thursday, April 12 at 8:00 P.M. Acclaimed theatre organist Jay Warren will accompany The Pawn Shop starring Charlie Chaplin (1916), Never Weaken starring Harold Lloyd (1921), and Sherlock Jr. starring Buster Keaton (1924). Visit www.dptheatre.org for more information.

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on February 22, 2007 at 10:13 pm

True crime, October 1950:

Des Plaines theater safe with $200 taken

Sometime between midnight Saturday and 6 a.m. Sunday, October 22, burglars entered the Des Plaines theater manager’s office and removed a small safe containing $200 cash, tickets and valuable papers. They then dragged or carried the safe to the first exit door on the east wall of the theater and left the building. The safe was transported to a waiting automobile in the parking lot to the rear and east of the building in which the burglars fled the scene.

Broan
Broan on February 3, 2007 at 1:39 pm

No, they’re still showing Bollywood, and those definitely aren’t playing. Online listings have been like that for a while, I have no idea where they’re coming from.

Paul Fortini
Paul Fortini on February 3, 2007 at 1:31 pm

Have they stopped showing Bollywood films here? Yahoo Movies says that they are showing BLOOD DIAMOND and THE QUEEN.

Broan
Broan on January 13, 2007 at 5:43 pm

The official website of the National Register of Historic Places is http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/ . There also exists what appears to be a privately-run website at http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/ , which I assume from your format is what you’re using. The latter website does not have any information or links to government websites, nor does it contain any contact information of its own. A WHOIS search on the latter site reveals that it is registered to “American Dreams, Inc.”; I have no idea what their objective is, but their data is unofficial and in cases like this, inaccurate. Also their page title is “National Register of HistoricaL Places”, which is somewhat suspect.

Broan
Broan on January 13, 2007 at 5:08 pm

It wasn’t added; it was deemed eligible. The owner refuses to sign the form to add it. However, National Register eligibility carries with it all the same protections; the addition is a formality.

Bischof
Bischof on January 6, 2007 at 12:02 am

My grandfather passed away on January 4th, 2007 at the age of 82. He leaves behind a long legacy, having been a major pioneer in the in-house, as well as drive-in, motion-picture movie theater industry, having owned LaGrange, Milford, Des Plaines, and Berwyn Theatres 1983-2000, residing as general manager of Kohlberg Theatres 1963-1983, as well as managing and supervising Schoenstadt Theatres 1946-1962. I loved him greatly, and will miss him dearly.

View link

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on December 16, 2006 at 9:19 am

Controversy over the marquee in 1983:

Local sign ordinance doesn’t play at Des Plaines Theater

Rows of Hollywood-style bulb lights and orange neon lettering remind some old-timers of the days when the Des Plaines Theater marquee advertised 10-cent movies, the kind that didn’t need to be rated for sex and violence. But a city ordinance regulating business signs has no similar sense of nostalgia, and under its provisions the theater marquee has to come down by 1985. However, most city officials and members of the business community say the marquee should be granted an exemption from the sign law.

“The marquee is something that should be preserved,” 2nd Ward Alderman Herb Volberdeng said at a recent bearing on the ordinance. City merchants, particularly those in the downtown area where the
theater is located, fear that a strict interpretation of the 1978 ordinance could mean the old marquee would be replaced with a flat, plain modern sign out of character with the 64-year-old theater building. “If we have to tear the canopy down, people are going to think there’s no theater here anymore. It’s part of Des Plaines,” theater manager John Fraught said at a bearing this week on the sign law. Also, theater owner Richard Balaban estimated the cost of removal at $25,000.

The marquee has been sheltering theatergoers from rain and snow since the building went up in the early 1900s. It survived a theater war that occurred when the now-demolished Echo Theater, a block away on Ellinwood Street, played serials â€" old-time soap operas â€" which were drawing big crowds. The Des Plaines Theater countered with live vaudeville acts and first-run movies, said James Williams, president of the Des Plaines Historical Society, which also opposes replacing the marquee. During the years, the 990-seat theater, unable to keep up with the new shopping mall theaters, began showing second-run films at cheaper ticket prices, Williams said.

Williams said the marquee is part of “what makes the character of an old town like Des Plaines,” and the historical society plans to make the theater building and marquee a candidate for national landmark status.

The sign ordinance goes into effect Jan.1,1985. Sometime before that, the city council can enact a list of proposed changes, which includes a special waiver for the marquee. “I don’t think there will be any problem getting that through,” said Alderman Robert Martin, 3rd, a member of the building code committee. Committee members say the proposed changes will be considered by the council some
time after Christmas. Chamber of Commerce members have long battled the sign ordinance, which outlaws most overhanging street signs and restricts the sizes of other types of signs. They too are expected to support the marquee waiver.

Patrons of the theater also seem to like the old marquee. “It’s a part of a heritage, I think,” Ralph Tobar, a resident of Des Plaines for 18 years, said as he was leaving the theater after a showing of “Mr. Mom.” “The theater and the marquee have been here for a long time and they never bothered anybody before.”

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on November 4, 2006 at 9:25 am

It’s a website that has copies of old newspaper pages. Unfortunately I can’t post the actual pages as the link fails in less than a day.

Broan
Broan on November 3, 2006 at 7:59 pm

Cool, where did you get that

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on November 3, 2006 at 6:45 pm

Here is the lineup on 9/15/60:

DES PLAINES THEATRE
FREE PARKING
Comfortably Cool
VA 4-5253
* FREE PARKING *

Last Time Tonight
ICE PALACE
LOST WORLD
Friday for 7 days, Sept. 16-22
At Popular Prices …
52 Best Picture Awards and World-Wide Honors
MICHAEL TODD'S
Around the World in 80 days
Weekdays 9:00, Saturday 3:30, 8:30, Sunday 3:00, 8:00
Plus
“MY FAIR LADY” OF FILM DOM!
The NEW musical in COLOR by the “My FairLady” composer
Weekdays 7:00, Saturday 1:30, 6:30, 11:20, Sunday 1:00, 6:00, 11:00

PLEASE NOTE FEATURE TIMES
Due to the length of the program, on weekdays each
film will be shown only once.

mp775
mp775 on August 8, 2006 at 10:37 am

Article in yesterday’s Chicago Tribune: “Des Plaines Theater’s restoration at standstill”

crazylady888
crazylady888 on July 31, 2006 at 11:20 am

Windy’s! That was it. Thanks for the help Brian. I remember eating lunch there and when we left, you could still smell the grease on your clothes. But the food was good, so we went there alot anyway.
Mary

Broan
Broan on July 30, 2006 at 9:28 pm

In 1985-1988 it would have been Andy’s Grill, I believe. Before that it was Windy’s Italian Beef.

crazylady888
crazylady888 on July 30, 2006 at 11:45 am

Lost Memeory,
Thanks for posting those photos. In your last post on July 28, I scanned through some of the pictures and I had forgotten all about the Sugar Bowl and the Choo Choo. I used to eat at these restaurants all the time when I worked downtown Des Plaines. There was another restaurant I used to eat at too that was right next to the theater, (not the Chinese Restaurant but on the other side of the theater) only I can’t remember the name. (This was in 1985-1988). Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
Mary

crazylady888
crazylady888 on July 25, 2006 at 3:37 pm

Wow, I just found this website a couple of weeks ago while looking up some info from another theater, and thought I’d try to look up the Des Plaines.
I remember growing up in Des Plaines and watching many movies here. I was sad when the fire hit, (but I wasn’t there), and remember walking to work at the First National Bank of Des Plaines, past the theater and thinking it looked kind of spooky. I was glad when they fixed it up and re-opened it, although I never went inside the theater after that because I moved away shortly thereafter.
I’m glad to see it’s still open and running.
Mary

Broan
Broan on July 3, 2006 at 11:51 am

Oh, excellent! I have a fair amount on the Polka Brothers that i’ve collected researching the theater. Email me by clicking my name. Some interesting stuff, and maybe you can help me, too!

Ormazd
Ormazd on July 3, 2006 at 6:45 am

Greetings!
I stumbled across this site while searching for ‘Polka Brothers’. Martin Polka was my great-uncle and I’m collaborating with his son to research family history. If anyone knows where I could find out more information about the Polka Brothers movie chain, I would be most appreciative.

bleedingchicago
bleedingchicago on March 16, 2006 at 8:50 am

Hey everybody

I am a Michael LeVan. I have lived in the city of Chicago my entire life. I am a filmmaker and a attendee of Columbia College, heading into my final year. I love all the old movie palaces of Chicago. It has been my intent for sometime to Make a documentary on the history, and the ongoings of these historic theaters in the present. The means to make this documentary are finally in my grasp. I planned on featuring 3 theaters, the Copernicus Center(formally The Gateway), The Patio(Formally The Avalon), and The Uptown. While the Documentary will focus on the entire history, These are the three that will be visual examples, and the ones i would like to film in. I have spoken with the People at The Gateway Theater, and they are estatic that i am doing this. The only problem now is The Uptown and the The Patio. These two theaters seem to have ghosts of owners , or even managers. If somebody could help me in finding someone to talk too, i would be very appriciative. Also, this documentary will require interviews, and finding old information as well. If anybody would be kind enough to do either that would be fantastic. My somewhat set date to start filming is June 10 ,2006. My goal with the entire project is to help and benifit these theaters. Help alot more people to gain interest, and all the profit that i attain, if any, will be donated to help with these theaters. I am going to submit it to Wttw(Pbs Chicago) , and also the History Channel. So if anyone would like to help in anyway, they can contact me at my email.

or by phone (773)-656-5821

Well i appriciate if you read that entire thing, and hopefully i will be hearing from you

Michael Levan of Bleeding Chicago Productions

dankapel
dankapel on May 20, 2005 at 4:54 pm

The Pioneer Press ran a nice article about what is going on with the Des Plaines Theatre. The link below is to the article and has a picture of the theatre today.

View link

GayMiezin
GayMiezin on March 14, 2005 at 6:44 pm

Hi- I’m interested in any info yu might have regarding the Old Temple Building in Des Plaines that housed the DesPlaines theatre Guild for 35 years – the theatre was on the 2nd floor of the Masonic Temple Building just down the street from the Cinema mentioned here- I’m trying to research how the Temple Building was built, how the theatre came to be, what it looked like inside, any actual building or architectural plans that exist- I’m currently a partner in a children’s educational charitable theatre group that is working on rennovating this wonderful old theatre but have had no luck in finding original plans. Thankyou- Gay Miezin