Bradley Symphony Center
History
In December 1929, Warner Brothers negotiated to purchase the Butterfly Theater and other buildings on the site. They planned to build a 10–12-story building with a 2,500 seat capacity. By January 1930 it was confirmed that the Butterfly would be razed to make way for the US3M (equivalent to $54,717,131 in 2023) theater and hotel. In February 1930 workers began demolishing the Butterfly Theater. The theater was demolished in 1930 and the Warner Theatre was built on the site. The architectural firm that designed the building was Rapp and Rapp and the final cost was US$2.5m (equivalent to $50,087,527 in 2023). It opened in 1931 and the grand opening was attended by thousands of people. The theater struggled during the Great Depression in the United States.
In 1964 the building was purchased by the Marcus Corporation and renamed "Centre". In 1982 the building was renamed "The Grand" to match the shopping mall across the street: Grand Avenue Mall. The building closed in 1995 and the theater remained empty.
In December 2017, the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra purchased the former Warner Grand Theatre. An anonymous donor led the initiative to buy the vacant theater. In 2021 the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra moved into the building renaming it the Bradley Symphony Center.
Description
The building has an Art Deco style theater. The theater had a single screen and the interior was described as French Renaissance style. The lobby was described as art-deco style and the exterior was described as Moderne. When the theater was operating it had a 28-rank Kimball pipe organ.
There is a 13-story office building which is part of the theater and its exterior is designed in the Art Deco style and the facade features polished granite on floors one through four.
References
- ^ "City Will Get New Theater". Milwaukee Sentinel. December 4, 1929.
- ^ "Butterfly Made Movie History". Milwaukee Sentinel. January 5, 1930.
- ^ "Old Timer Tramps Streets Lost Among New Buildings". Milwaukee Sentinel. February 24, 1930.
- ^ Foran, Chris (January 8, 2021). "Premieres, prayers and movie stars: The past lives of Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra's new home". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
- ^ Tanzilo, Bobby (December 13, 2016). "Urban spelunking: The Warner Grand Theatre, future MSO home". OnMilwaukee. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
- ^ Lauren Anderson (December 29, 2017). "Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra acquires former Warner Grand Theatre". BizTimes / Milwaukee Business News. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
External links
- Media related to Warner Grand Theater (Milwaukee) at Wikimedia Commons