A saved Rialto: A championship team trophy for the folks of Deer Lodge, Montana

Photo shows Rialto Theater in Deer Lodge, Montana

Steve Owens, president of Rialto Community Theater, shown in the reconstructed hallway leading to the balcony. Photos by Kevin Giles

By Kevin S. Giles

The fire was so horrific that it lit the night sky for miles. It consumed the priceless 1921 theater with frightening urgency. In the end, most of the ornate movie palace was gone.

Three days later, after dozens of volunteer firefighters poured three million gallons of water on the inferno’s sad work, the people of Deer Lodge, Montana, took stock of their Rialto Theater.

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The terra cotta Beaux-Arts façade stood, a near-miracle. Most of the stage remained, as did five original painted canvas backdrops. A fire curtain fell when the heat rose, saving the back portion of the Rialto.

Between the front and back, the illustrious Rialto smoldered in ash and embers, water and ice. One of the best-preserved theaters anywhere, the heart and soul of Deer Lodge, was dead.

And the 3,500 people of this town wondered.

Bulldoze the remains? Save what’s left?

The answer came in the humblest way possible. Several girls, determined to impress on their fellow residents a message of hope and revival, baked brownies. They sold their creations for $5 apiece, and the $300 and change the girls raised was the first contribution to the Rialto restoration fund.

Shows cover of 'Summer of the Black Chevy'

The novel ‘Summer of the Black Chevy’ by Kevin S. Giles grew from memories of his hometown. The novel also takes place there, in Deer Lodge, Montana.

What happened in that little town in the Rocky Mountains, a town that’s never won a state title in football and basketball, will stand as perhaps the greatest championship trophy of all. People of all ages, skilled or not, united to save the only remaining theater in Deer Lodge, its apparent death marked on Nov. 4, 2006, bringing it back from the ashes to live again. Their teamwork shows why sports doesn’t dominate the will to win the ultimate prize.

The Rialto now takes its place as one of the best theater rescue stories in America. The new Rialto, reconstructed and reopened in 2012, became more than a legend. It was the house the community built.

Today, it sparkles. The Rialto looks almost exactly same as it did before the fire, except that it’s safer and has a few new amenities, such as modern restrooms and an elevator to the balcony.

The road traveled from the fire to restoration is a long story that won’t be told here, better heard from Steve Owens, Mr. Rialto. He thinks nothing of a two-hour tour, telling in explicit detail of the contractors and hundreds of just ordinary townspeople who brought the Rialto back to life on the strength of photographs and old drawings, grit and elbow grease. Attention was given to every detail, involving even high school art students, returning the Rialto to its familiar splendor.

Today the Rialto is a 485-seat community theater, run by volunteers, that shows movies but also hosts community entertainment. In the spring, that meant a Rotary talent show, a “Dancing with the Stars” benefit, a spring band and choral concert, a dance and tumbling recital, a high school concert with music awards, and a concert by nationally known performer Rob Quist. The year’s calendar also includes a magic show, a stage drama, and a youth “town meeting.”

Some work remains at the Rialto. The faded marquee out front needs new vivid paint, as soon as Owens and the rest of the directors of the nonprofit Rialto Community Theater, Inc., raise $8,200 to complete the complicated job of first removing the neon lighting.

To sum up what happened here, numbers tell the story.

After the fire, workers hauled away 70 semi-truck loads of debris. The $300 the girls donated from their bake sale at the beginning started a campaign that eventually raised $3.5 million for restoration through grants and donations. The hundreds of volunteers included an inmate crew from Montana State Prison. A new roof was built in the summer of 2007. Work on the interior began in the spring of 2008. Fire and elevator monitoring, by the way, costs $600 annually.

Owens thinks back to when the Rialto opened in May 2012, offering this oft-repeated quote about the remarkable feat of a little town that never gave up:

“We found out we couldn’t put out a fire with tears.”

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Western Montana native Kevin S. Giles wrote the popular prison nonfiction work Jerry’s Riot, the coming-of-age novel Summer of the Black Chevy, and a biography of Montana congresswoman Jeannette Rankin, One Woman Against War, which is an expanded version of his earlier work, “Flight of the Dove.” His new novel, Headline: FIRE! is the third in the Red Maguire series. Masks, Mayhem and Murder is the second. The first is “Mystery of the Purple Roses.” More information is available at https://kevinsgiles.com.

11 thoughts on “A saved Rialto: A championship team trophy for the folks of Deer Lodge, Montana

  1. hmmmm, did I miss the fact that the theatre…was under RE-construction at the time of the fire??? Seems rather an important part of the tale…

  2. Steve is a true hometown hero. I am humbled to have known him and so proud to claim this wonderful man as a classmate. This is a truly inspiring story of grit and determination and says it all about the character of this little town in the West.

  3. The rescue was assured as soon as the first $5.00 brownie was sold. It was not the sweet treat that was purchased, but the acquisition of hope and the vision of a dream completed. Great job Deer Lodge. Kevin, thanks for the flashback and the visions ahead.

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