Monday, June 30, 2008
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Groovin' at The Parlor
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Sunday, June 22, 2008
There is a Petition.
Petition to Alderman Moore
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Friday, June 20, 2008
Adelphi Theater 2006
It was a beautiful, historic building from the begining of the century. It was a vaudeville theater, turned single screen movie theater. It stayed that way until it's untimely demolition.
The Adelphi Theater, 1917-2006.
Demolished by Golden Hands Construction, under the supervision of Alderman Joe Moore.
Read more here.
The Adelphi Theater, 1917-2006.
Demolished by Golden Hands Construction, under the supervision of Alderman Joe Moore.
Read more here.
Adelphi Theater Art Deco Ushers
I moved to the Rogers Park neighborhood in the late 1970's, to attend Loyola U. I lived on Estes Avenue, and I think the Adelphi was on the southwest corner of Clark and Estes. The Adelphi’s entrance on Clark Street had a very unusual sidewalk in front it. It wasn't anything like a typical Chicago "Streets and San" sidewalk, because it contained two very large inlays, that were art-deco style images of ushers. There was one on each side, and they looked as if they were bowing to you. Each usher extended one arm to welcome you to the show, and tucked the other behind his back.I found them remarkable for two reasons. First, they belonged to only the Adelphi, in that were created right there on that spot, and would never be used anywhere else. Second, they only made sense because the building was a theatre. If someone converted it into a grocery store, for example, customers would wonder what kind of oddball has two theatre ushers outside his grocery store. Read more here.
Adelphi Theater 1959
Wow..what a trip through time! I found this page after pondering a childhood memory of the Adelphi! Anyway, to set the record straight..I know the Adelphi on Clark Street in Chicago was showing mainstream Hollywood films as early as 1959. I am sure of this, because my mom took us to see a movie there that summer, and spotted this gorgeous brand new 1959 white Ford Country Squire wagon parked directly in front of the theatre, after which she proclaimed "I gotta have one of those!". Sure enough, on Thursday, September 3 of that year, we bought one from Courtesy Ford of Chicago, brand spanking new. (fawn tan color tho). Then, on New Year's Eve, December 31 we were treated to a movie about John Dillinger which ended that night just before the end of the Fab 50s! Read more here.
The Adelphi Theater on Cinematreasures.org
The Adelphi, built in 1917 for the Ascher Brothers circuit, was designed by local architect J.E.O. Pridmore. The theater stood on Clark Street at Estes Avenue in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood. In the 1930s, the Adelphi received an Art Deco remodeling. The theater was modernized during the 1940s and again in the 1950s. It began to show second-run features starting in the late 1960s, and closed briefly in the early 1980s, after several years screening Spanish movies.In the mid 1980s, the Adelphi reopened as the North Shore Theater, but was again known as the Adelphi when it began to show East Indian films and became the premiere venue for Bollywood features in the Chicagoland area, despite its down-on-the-heels appearance both inside and out.The Adelphi closed in January 2002. Sadly, the still-viable theater was demolished in January 2006. Read more here.