
On Wednesday July 22nd I first learned of the inevitable demise of the famous (once infamous) Art Theater in Champaign Illinois. While known as the Art since only 1958 the theater itself has been at 126 W Church St. in Champaign Illinois since 1913 when it was opened as The Park Theater. It's "official" grand opening featured a screening of the film "The Last Days of Pompeii" complete with it's newly installed pipe organ. As the Park, it began showing sound films in 1929 shortly before being sold to the Alger Theater chain. It was run as a "Poor Cousin" to the larger and more ornate theaters and from the late 40s until 1958 would screen mostly B - Westerns and Comedies. The Park Theater closed in 1958 only to be re-born as the Art Theater later that same year after being purchased by the Art Theater Guild. It's first screening as the Art Theater was the French film "Red and Black" (Le Rouge et le Noir). From Ingmar Bergman to Maya Deren the next ten years would see the Art Theater being know for exactly the sort of films it's name suggested. This was the heyday of the Art Theater that is still waxed poetically by such famous personages as Roger Ebert. http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,314730,00html
Such as the vicissitudes of the human condition so are those of the movie house. In 1969 the Art Theater entered it's infamous stage when the ownership switched it's screenings to adult films. For eighteen years it remained a porn house though no record of the first screening reamains. My memories of the Art when I was growing up alternated from visions of the dark side to sophomoric jokes about newspaper movies. You could still see movies like Alien in the Thunderbird or Star Wars at the Virginia, and so in these years The Art remained neglected and little thought about. In 1986 with little notice the Art Theater closed it's doors. On New Years' Day 1987 it was re-born as The New Art Theater when bought by John Manley, Ron Epple and Tom Angelica who were to return it to screening the Art and Foreign films that it had been known for in it's prime. Coincidentally this was also about the time I was getting serious about films and filmmaking. This was also the rise of the multiplex that saw the single screen theaters scrambling to subdivide and add screens in an attempt to keep up with the Blitzkrieg of the Kerasotes invasion. The Art Theater became and remains the last bastion for art, foreign, and obscure film left in Champaign / Urbana and possibly the entire midwest. Uncomfortable seats, bad popcorn, and watered down soda did nothing to detract from the movie going experience and in fact only added to the mystique. When you sat in those antique seats watching "Henry the V" it was as if it you had discovered a portal to past cool and away from the ubiquitous 80s. It was a treasured sanctuary that that only you and a select few knew of or appreciated. I left for college at SIU Carbondale in 1990 and only managed to get back occasionally, but it has remained there waiting with offerings of the cinematically cool, eclectic, and exotically foreign. Over those years the shifting owners and management have continued to make improvements and restorations which makes the news of it's ultimate demise all the more ironic. The building's owner is determined to capitalize on his investment regardless the outcome, and a steep increase in rent has forced the theater operator to not renew the lease on it. Having survived for 96 years with the ups and downs of countless economic, social, and political upheavals, it seems as though the Art Theater has finally succumbed to greed and financial reality. If anyone is interested in saving this historic theater it is currently for sale for $1,143,888.50 from kraftproperties@ameritech.net