Otto Meister Explained

Otto Meister
Birth Name:Otto L. Meister
Birth Place:1869
Other Names:O.L. Meister
Occupation:Theater owner

Otto L. Meister (1869July 10, 1944) was a theater owner that operated Nickelodeon theatres in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Beginning in 1911 he operated several movie theaters including the Butterfly Theater.

Career

1900 Meister began operating Otto Meister’s Nickelodeon Theater and Phanta-Phone dime museum. In 1911 he built the Butterfly Theater on the site of the Nickelodeon, which was torn down in 1930 to make room for the Warner theater.[1] He partnered with John R. Freuler to create the Central Amusement Company which also controlled the Vaudette, the Atlas and the Climax Theaters in Milwaukee.[2]

The Butterfly opened on September 2, 1911; it became nationally known.[3] [4] The theater opened to 1,500 people and showed several movies. A six-piece orchestra played and the Loos Brothers sang a duet called "My Hula Hula Love".[5]

Meister continued to own theaters in the Milwaukee area and he developed a reputation as being unfair to organized labor. In 1929 he was operating the White House Theatre when someone detonated a stick of dynamite against a wall of the building. Windows were blown out but damage was contained. The perpetrator was never found.[6]

Death

Meister died on July 10, 1944; he was 74 years old.[7] He was interred at Holy Cross Cemetery (Milwaukee).[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Vollmert . Les . Lower East Side Neighborhood Historic Resources Survey . 1988 . City of Milwaukee Department of City Development . Milwaukee, Wisconsin . 32 . 18 April 2024.
  2. Book: Widen . Larry . Anderson . Judi . Silver Screens: A Pictorial History of Milwaukee's Movie Theaters . 2007 . Wisconsin Historical Society . Milwaukee, Wisconsin . 978-0-87020-368-8 . 55 . 19 April 2024 . en.
  3. Book: Vollmert . Les . Lower East Side Neighborhood Historic Resources Survey . 1988 . City of Milwaukee Department of City Development . Milwaukee, Wisconsin . 32 . 18 April 2024.
  4. News: Rankin . Jim . The Butterfly Theatre . 19 April 2024 . Astor Theater . 2022.
  5. News: Crowd Blocks Sidewalks . Milwaukee Sentinel . 3 September 1911.
  6. News: Dynamite Bomb Used at Theatre in Milwaukee . 19 April 2024 . The Sheboygan Press . Associated Press . 18 March 1929 . 13.
  7. News: Obituary for Veteran Showman . 20 April 2024 . The Daily Tribune . 10 July 1944 . 7.
  8. News: Widen . Larry . Who’s Buried in Milwaukee? . 18 April 2024 . Shepherd Express . 31 May 2023 . en-us.