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Rialto Square Theatre

Rialto Square Theatre
Rialto Square Theatre in Joliet IL, 23 Nov 2012.jpg
Address 15 E. Van Buren St.
Location Joliet, Illinois
Owner Will County Metropolitan Exposition And Auditorium Authority
Type Movie palace
Construction
Built 1926
Renovated 1978
Architect Rapp & Rapp
General contractor Kaiser-Ducett
Website

www.rialtosquare.com

Rubens Rialto Square Theater
Coordinates 41°31′33.52″N 88°4′52.88″W / 41.5259778°N 88.0813556°W / 41.5259778; -88.0813556Coordinates: 41°31′33.52″N 88°4′52.88″W / 41.5259778°N 88.0813556°W / 41.5259778; -88.0813556
NRHP Reference # 78001199
Added to NRHP July 24, 1978

www.rialtosquare.com

The Rialto Square Theatre is a theater in Joliet, Illinois (U.S.). Opening in 1926, it was originally designed and operated as a vaudeville movie palace, but it now houses mainly musicals, plays, concerts, and standup comedy. It is also available for public and private functions. Designed in the Neo-Baroque style, it is considered one of "150 great places in Illinois" by the American Institute of Architects.

Inside Rialto Square Theatre, which opened in 1926 and underwent a restoration in the 1980s, shining scagliola columns rise into a celestial dome full of intricate sculptures. A Duchess chandelier dominates the rotunda. Cream-colored marble walls line the lobby and cherubim flutter into the auditorium. The lobby’s marble walls were polished by Conrad Schmitt Studios, the same company that did major restoration work at the Rialto in 1980. The black marble base on the walls of the esplanade, fashioned after the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles in France, has been polished, as has the elegant red, pink and gray scagliola above the base.

C.W. and George Rapp designed the Rialto Square Theatre in 1924, and the theatre opened May 24, 1926, featuring the production "The Evolution of Joliet". The first talking picture at the Rialto was shown on October 9, 1928, with Lights of New York. In 1953 stereophonic sound was installed in the theatre.

As one of the theatre's original purposes was to exhibit silent films, which typically required musical accompaniment and sound effects, a four manual, 28 rank Barton theatre organ was included in the building's design, with the pipework installed into two chambers that flank the stage. The organ's console is mounted on a movable platform that can be raised to stage level or lowered into the orchestra pit. This instrument underwent an extensive restoration and is the focal point of the organ extravaganza concert held each year in the spring.


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