The return of the Arlee Theater at 139 S. Main St., Mason City, Illinois is the most recent piece in a patchwork quilt of local entertainment.
Lipman Frank came to Mason City in 1875 and in time acquired the LaForge Building at the northwest corner of Chestnut and Tonica Streets for his clothing and shoe store. He operated the Frank Opera House in the upstairs, where grand balls were held and Ward Ackerman showed early movies. Traveling plays with famous entertainers were produced there, but most shows were homegrown. Edith Robertson was an accomplished local musician who wrote plays and arranged the music for such shows.
Later, Frank moved his business across the street, and after 1926 the Opera House was used as the Legion Hall. In the mid-1930s, a representative from Chicago’s WLS Barn Dance came to Mason City and recruited local talent to put on a program there.
In 1917, Ackerman moved his movie business to the Pritchett Building at 132 S. Main St. and named it the liberty Theater. Local pianists, including Vera Fink and Mildred “Ditter” Behrends, accompanied the silent movies, sometimes with only one day’s preparation.
Across the street was the Midway Garage, built by carpenter/musician Roy Garner. He built it with the intentions that the acoustics would be right for a theater. In 1934 Gardner attained his moment of fame as a star attraction at Ripley’s Chicago Odditorium at the World’s Fair with his eight-instrument one-man-band. Frank’s son-in-law, Lou Herman was Gardner’s booking agent.
Sometime after Art and Leah Struck purchased the Liberty Theater, Gardner informed them of the unusual garage across the street. Art bought it in 1936 and in three months expanded it and turned it an Art Deco theater considered lavish for its time and place. Sister-in-law Jessie Struck suggested blending Art and Leah’s names to call it the Arlee. The grand opening on November 19 billed Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire in “Swing Time.”
The Arlee seated 500 and had patrons waiting in line for the second showing. Tickets were 10 and 25 cents. Peanuts, gum and other snacks were forbidden in order to preserve the beautiful carpet and other appointments. It took projectionist Dale Fancher several years to convince Struck that selling refreshments would help him turn a better profit.
Struck sold his equipment to Charles Thomas in the 1960s, who continued the theater’s operation. Thomas sold the business to Larry Rodgers, who kept showing movies there from 1973 until 1979. For a few years the building was used for live Community Theater productions.
Struck sold his building to retired farmers Don and Thelma Keith in 1984, who renamed it Nashville Sound Country Opry. Mr. Keith transformed a rear garage into two dressing rooms and hired a house band. He kept most of the original décor and opened up the stage for live country music shows every Saturday night, even drawing people from out of state.
Keith closed the business down in the spring of 2000, and one of the last shows there was a special Sunday performance by Ivan Parker.
Dale Roddy held the property for a short time and made some improvements before deciding to sell the property. John and Gaye Maxson purchased it in 2003 as a family project and at the prompting of their children Mary, Marcia, Dale and Daniel, who agreed the community needed the theater. Since then, several community members have come onboard, helping restore the Arlee so once again there will be local family entertainment. |