Comedy club iO Theater won’t reopen, owner says
IO Theater, the longtime North Side comedy hub, is closing its doors indefinitely.
Charna Halpern, the owner and co-founder of the company formerly known as ImprovOlympic, told the Sun-Times on Thursday that the revenue loss brought on by the March mandated shutdown of all theaters (and other non-essential businesses in Illinois) was the deciding factor.
Halpern added that she was “heartbroken” most over the inability to continue the teaching arm of the theater, whose famous alums include Tina Fey, Mike Myers, Chris Farley, Amy Poehler and Stephen Colbert.
Halpern, the sole decision-maker at the company, said her main financial woe is a looming $100,000 property tax bill that she is unable to pay while iO’s income is reduced to near zero. Halpern owns the building and is in discussion with potential buyers of the site at 1501 N. Kingsbury.
“I can only do so much,” said Halpern, 68. “This isn’t a time to start over. It’s not like the other 15 times I’ve been thrown out of a theater. I was young, I could start over, I didn’t have to worry. But, you know, this isn’t the time.”
IO and Halpern were also the subjects of recent change.org petitions alleging racism at the company and demanding changes, including “decentralizing theater decisionmaking, distribution of power more equitably especially with regards to BIPOC, and creating a more genuinely inclusive space for QBIPOC.” The petition also called for Halpern to “publicly acknowledge and apologize for the institutional racism perpetuated at iO as well as her individual history of racism.”
Responding to those demands in an open letter to staff, students and performers last week, Halpern indicated her intention to work toward change, saying in part: “I want to be transparent with you about the state of the theater . . . . Our forced closure caused by COVID-19 has taken a large financial toll on the business. But we are working now on a way to determine how and when we will be able to finance the decentralized power structure you suggest, as well as the hiring of a BIPOC Diversity & Inclusion Coordinator . . . . I realize now that this criticism and critique and calls for reform come from a place of love. I wouldn’t receive the critical comments and messages if people didn’t want the theater to change for the better.”
She said her decision to step away was unrelated to the racial discussions.
Diversity issues also are roiling Chicago’s other giant of improv shows and classes, Second City, where executive producer and co-owner Andrew Alexander stepped down this month in response to accusations of institutional racism.
IO’s closing comes in the wake of another Chicago theater venue shutting its doors. On Tuesday, the Mercury Theater announced it was closing its doors permanently because of the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown.
“I’ve always been putting money into the theater,” Halpern said. “There’ve been times after we pay taxes — in the beginning of this year, we didn’t have enough money for payroll and I took money out of my own pocket. Because I love my theater. It’s my baby.”