Chicago's Ford Center, Oriental Theatre Feted With Gala Benefit Oct 29 | Playbill

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News Chicago's Ford Center, Oriental Theatre Feted With Gala Benefit Oct 29 Chicagoans will celebrate their newest theatre, the renovated "Ford Center for the Arts, Oriental Theatre" Oct. 29 with an inaugural benefit gala beginning at 4:30 PM.

Chicagoans will celebrate their newest theatre, the renovated "Ford Center for the Arts, Oriental Theatre" Oct. 29 with an inaugural benefit gala beginning at 4:30 PM.

Sponsored by Marshall Field's and Sara Lee Corporation with support from LaSalle National Bank, the event benefits arts programming at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company and the Theatre and Interpretation Center at Northwestern's School of Speech.

The evening begins at 4:30 PM with a cocktail reception and preview of the renovated seventh floor of Marshall Field's at State Street. At 6:30 PM gala attendees will get a peek at Ragtime , the first resident of the Ford Center, Oriental Theatre. Following the performance will be a tented dinner with the cast and guests at the A. Montgomery Ward Gardens at Randolph Street and Michigan Avenue.

Tickets for the gala run from the Ragtime Mogul's Table at $10,000 to the Ragtime Performer's for $150. For tickets, call Judith Simons, Steppenwolf's Director of Institutional Giving at (312) 335-1888 or Jilana Dellal, Northwestern's Speech Department's Director of Development at (847) 491-4379.

* The Oriental Theatre, the lushly-designed 1926 movie palace in the heart of downtown Chicago's North Loop, was rechristened Oct. 13. With city dignitaries including Mayor Richard M. Daley in attendance, Livent, Inc., formally dedicated the Ford Center for the Performing Arts Oriental Theatre at 1 PM. A free public "open house" was held 11 AM-5 PM Oct. 18.

Rapp and Rapp designed the theatre as a garish Asian-Indian fantasia (leading to the "Oriental" moniker). Its exotic interior, which has been retained where possible, borrows motifs and mythic figures from India.

Under the management of Balaban and Katz, live musical performances and movies were presented (often complemented with lavish live shows) to a resident and tourist crowd for many years. Among stars who performed there were Judy Garland, Al Jolson, Danny Kaye, Bob Hope, Sophie Tucker and others. The theater survived under different managements over the years and finally fell into disrepair in the 1970s. It was closed in 1981.

The renovation, which retains much of the original design while adding bathrooms and widening some spaces, was funded in part by a $17 million grant from the City of Chicago.

The project reduces the original seating capacity from 3,238 to approximately 2,200 and adds 28 feet of stage depth, which required boring into the adjacent Oliver Building, whose facade remains intact.

The theatre's program will be Showbill, a title owned and operated by Playbill. Showbill also services Livent's Ford Center for the Performing Arts on Broadway.

The Ford Center for the Performing Arts-Oriental Theatre, in Chicago's North Loop, is within blocks of the Shubert Theatre, the Chicago Theatre, the Auditorium Theatre and the currently-under-renovation Palace Theatre. The Ford Center is at 24 W. Randolph between Dearborn and State Streets.

Ragtime starring Hinton Battle begins performances at the Ford Center Oct. 27, continuing through at least the spring of 1999. The official opening is Nov. 8. For tickets, call the Ford Center box office at (312) 782-2004.

-- By Christine Ehren and Kenneth Jones

 
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