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The Downer Theatre was opened in 1915 as part of a mixed-use complex located on Downer Avenue in the Upper East Side neighborhood of Milwaukee developed by Oscar and Marc Brachman and movie entrepreneurs Thomas and John Saxe for a price of $65,000. [3] Downer theatre opened during a time of rapid development in the area.
The theater is the world record holder for continual showings of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. [3] It has hosted the film as a Saturday midnight movie since January 1978. In 2005, the theater was dubbed one of the "10 Theaters Doing It Right" by Entertainment Weekly .
The building closed in 1995 and the theater remained empty. [5] In December 2017, the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra purchased the former Warner Grand Theatre. An anonymous donor led the initiative to buy the vacant theater. [6] In 2021 the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra moved into the building renaming it the Bradley Symphony Center. [4]
The six-screen movie theater at the heart of the center had a soft opening in late July. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ...
Bayshore (formerly called Bayshore Mall and Bayshore Town Center) is an open-air shopping mall/mixed use complex including retail shops, restaurants, offices and residential units [1] in Glendale, Wisconsin. It is currently anchored by Barnes & Noble, Kohl's, Total Wine & More, and Target along with one of the Milwaukee area's two Apple Stores. [2]
Star Cinema was a movie theater chain owned by AGT Enterprises, Inc., of Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, with nine locations in the states of Iowa and Wisconsin in the United States of America. Altogether, the chain's nine locations included 95 total movie screens, including Wisconsin's only IMAX theater at the Fitchburg location.
The theater is now located on the east bank of the Milwaukee River in Associated Bank Theater Center at 108 E Wells St, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. [2] Milwaukee Repertory Theater is dedicated to presenting new playwrights, reliving classics, and commissioning translations of classic and contemporary foreign playwrights.
Opening on April 29, 1928, the theater primarily played vaudeville performances, big bands, and movies. However, by the 1950s, the theater had transitioned to almost exclusively showing first-run movies. [2] [3] The building was sold in 1962 to Towne Realty (now Zilber Ltd.), who leased the theater to United Artists.