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Theatre Tours

BROADWAY IN CHICAGO TO OFFER
HISTORIC THEATRE TOURS AT THREE THEATRES

CHICAGO - Chicagoans and visitors will have the opportunity to get an unforgettable look at two of the most beautiful and historic venues of Chicago's famed Theatre District. Broadway In Chicago will offer a weekly, guided walking tour of two of their three theatres: the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre (24 W. Randolph St.), Bank of America Theatre (18 W. Monroe) and the Cadillac Palace Theatre (151 W. Randolph St.) The tour will showcase the glittering vintage décor inspired by the foremost theatre designers of our time Rapp and Rapp, who created through their designs the riches of the Orient and the luxury of the palace of Versailles.

Tour guides will escort patrons through the lobbies of the theatres, sharing historical information, little known facts and colorful folklore about the grand venues, such as:

How the two main brass chandeliers in the lobby of the Cadillac Palace were disguised in the 1940’s to avoid being removed, melted down and made into ammunition shells to aid in the war effort.
How a typographical error by a Chicago newspaper reporter caused such distress to the Gumm Sisters – mistakenly called the Glumm Sisters - that the group changed their name before going on stage that night at the Oriental Theatre, where Judy Gumm became Judy Garland.
How the Palace Theatre once housed one of the very first Cinemascope movie systems, employing three synchronized projectors and a multi-channel directional sound system.
How the Oriental décor features over 50 different exotic animals throughout the theatre.

Broadway In Chicago Theatre Tours, priced at $10 per person, will take place every Saturday at 11 am. The tour begins in the lobby of the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre, 24 W. Randolph St. in Chicago. To purchase theatre tour tickets, click here.





The Palace Theatre opened at the corner of Randolph and LaSalle Streets in Chicago on October 4, 1926. Designed by legendary theatre architects the Rapp Brothers, the theatre's interior featured a splendor previously unseen in Chicago - a breathtaking vision inspired by the palaces of Fontainebleau and Versailles. The theatre's distinctive characteristics included a lobby richly appointed in huge decorative mirrors and breche violet and white marble, which swept majestically through a succession of lobbies and foyers; great wall surfaces enhanced with gold leaf and wood decorations; and 2,500 plush, roomy seats. The theatre was originally opened as the flagship of vaudeville's legendary Orpheum Circuit, and among the stars believed to have played the Palace in its early years are Jimmy Durante, Mae West, Jack Benny, Sophie Tucker and Bob Hope.

Despite the popularity of such acts, audiences in the late 1920s and early 1930s had begun to lose interest in vaudeville, and in 1931 the theatre was converted into a movie palace, initially presenting films with live stage shows, and then eventually showing only movies. When movie audiences began staying at home to watch television in the 1950s, the theatre managers, hoping to attract larger audiences, booked occasional Broadway shows into the theatre, such as "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" starring Carol Channing.

During the late 1950s, the Palace was fitted with special equipment to show films in Cinerama. During the mid-1970s, the management of the Bismarck Hotel transformed the auditorium into a banquet hall by removing the seats on the orchestra level and bringing the floor flush with the stage. In 1984, the theatre, now renamed the Bismarck Theatre, was converted into a rock venue. Sporadically used during the 1990s, the venue was completely restored and renovated during 1999, and renamed the Cadillac Palace.

The renovated theatre was reopened during the fall of 1999, with the premiere of Elton John and Tim Rice's "Aida." Since then, the Cadillac palace has been the home to several pre-Broadway hits including "The Producers - The New Mel Brooks Musical" and "Mamma Mia!” as well as long-run engagements of "Disney's The Lion King" and “Oprah Winfrey presents The Color Purple.” In September, 2008, the Cadillac Palace will be home to the U.S. Premiere of "Dirty Dancing- The Classic Story on Stage".


As one of the first motion picture palaces whose décor was inspired by the Far East, Chicago's Oriental Theatre opened to much fanfare on May 8, 1926. Also, designed by George L. and Cornelius W. Rapp for theater managers Balaban and Katz, the theatre, a virtual museum of Asian art, presented popular first-run motion pictures, complemented by lavish stage shows. Turbaned ushers led patrons from the lobby, with polychrome figures and large mosaics of an Indian prince and princess, through an inner foyer with elephant-throne chairs and multicolored glazed Buddhas, to the auditorium's "hasheesh-dream décor." Among the many stars that played the theatre are Paul Ash (billed as "the Rajah of Jazz"), The Three Stooges, Judy Garland, Al Jolson, Stepin Fetchit, Sophie Tucker, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, Fanny Brice, Danny Kaye and Alice Faye. During a record-breaking week in 1930, as many as 124,985 patrons visited the Oriental to see the hit film "Flight." Although management changed hands several times in the subsequent decades, the theatre continued to feature films until the early 1970s, at which time the M&R Amusement Company briefly presented live performances by such artists as Stevie Wonder, Gladys Knight and the Pips and Little Richard.

Soon the theater fell into disrepair. In an effort to preserve the theatre, it was added to the Federal National Registry of Historic Places in 1978, but the building continued to crumble. The theatre was closed to the public in 1981, and the site was considered for a two-story, 50,000 square-foot shopping mall and a 1,600 seat cinema. In 1996, Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley announced that the Oriental would be restored to its original grandeur for the presentation of live stage musicals by Livent, Inc. Renamed Ford Center for the Performing Arts in 1997, the restoration of the theatre was completed in October 1998, at which time it was opened with the Chicago premiere of "Ragtime." The venue was acquired by SFX Theatrical Group in 1999, and its production of "Fosse" debuted at the Ford Center before embarking on a national tour. The list of hits goes on including the pre-Broadway of "Blast" in 2000, as well as the world premiere of "Sing-A-Long Wizard of Oz" in January 2003. The Ford Center/ Oriental Theatre currently plays home to "Wicked", which has been in an open run since 2005.