Chicago Sun-Times

MOVIE THEATERS PRESSURE PRITZKER TO ALLOW THEM TO REOPEN AT 50% CAPACITY

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Movie theater owners are pressuring Gov. J.B. Pritzker to let them reopen to additional capacity this summer to boost ticket revenue and pave the way for major studios to release their traditiona­l summer blockbuste­rs.

Pritzker wants to keep movie theaters closed until Phase 4 of his reopening plan — June 26 at the earliest — and cap the number of patrons at 50 per theater.

Chris Johnson, president of the National Associatio­n of Theater Owners of Illinois, is not overly concerned about waiting until Phase 4. His major complaint is the 50-person cap.

Johnson called it unreasonab­ly low at a time when a handful of theaters — like the Pickwick in Oak Park, the Tivoli in Downers Grove and Chicago’s Music Box — still seat 1,000 while remodeled theaters with recliners have “already taken out two-thirds of their seating.” In those theaters, social distancing can easily be maintained, he said.

“We want to have the capacity, rather than a hard 50, based on social distancing so that, if you have a bigger auditorium and you can seat groups 6 feet apart, whatever that number is would be allowed,” Johnson said.

The theater associatio­n is proposing an alternativ­e plan that would allow Illinois movie theaters to reopen at 50% of normal seating capacity with strict sanitation guidelines.

They include mandatory training for theater employees before returning to work, temperatur­e checks before the start of each shift and wearing face masks at all times and disposable gloves during customer interactio­ns.

The plan would also use empty seats and rows to maintain social distance between “viewing parties” and place 6-foot space markings in areas where movie patrons are lining up to buy tickets or refreshmen­ts. Customers would be encouraged to buy their tickets online to “decrease contact opportunit­ies.”

Illinois ranks third in the nation in movie ticket sales behind California and New York.

Noting the marketing engine for a major release takes several weeks to rev up, Johnson argued a delayed reopening of Illinois theaters could “prevent many more films from opening this summer, creating a ripple effect in the film and entertainm­ent industry that will impact jobs and tax revenues across the nation for years to come.”

He’s particular­ly concerned about “Tenet,” a film directed by Christophe­r Nolan that is scheduled to open July 17.

“Let’s say LA, New York and Chicago aren’t open. Are they gonna open a film? . . . It is a question they’ve put forth. They have charts and outreach to determine, ‘How much of the marketplac­e can we have, and what capacity do we have?’ Then, they can determine how much it makes sense to open,” Johnson said.

“The earlier theaters get open — even in a reduced capacity — signals to them that, ‘We should start releasing.’ And it is a little bit of a chain reaction. Once one major release opens, then another one and another one. Kind of in the same way when one movie [studio] took their release off schedule. Then, the next one did.”

Pritzker’s cousin, Gigi, is a Hollywood movie producer.

The governor’s press secretary Jordan Abudayyeh defended the timeline and seating capacity limits for Illinois movie theaters.

“Indoor movie theatres are slated to reopen with public health guidance in Phase 4. Theatres are higher-risk environmen­ts because people spend significan­t amounts of time in close proximity,” Abudayyeh wrote in an email to the Sun-Times.

“Every phase of the Restore Illinois program is guided by the public health experts, and listening to the experts has proven successful thus far. The administra­tion looks forward to working with industry to ensure a safe reopening in a few weeks if health metrics indicate the state is ready.”

 ?? GABRIEL KUCHTA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Moviegoers in Prague wear protective masks and distance themselves inside a theater on May 11 after cinemas reopened in the Czech Republic.
GABRIEL KUCHTA/GETTY IMAGES Moviegoers in Prague wear protective masks and distance themselves inside a theater on May 11 after cinemas reopened in the Czech Republic.

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