Antioch, Illinois·theater The PM&L Theatre in Antioch, Illinois was originally constructed in 1914 under the name Crystal Theater, serving the entertainment needs of a growing suburban community in the Chicago metropolitan region during the height of the silent film era and the golden age of theatrical performance. The theater represented a substantial investment in community infrastructure, providing a dedicated venue for motion pictures, stage performances, and community gatherings during an era when theater attendance was a primary form of entertainment and social engagement for residents. The building itself reflects the architectural styles and construction methods of the early twentieth century, with period features that would be progressively modified and updated through subsequent decades of operation and renovation. The PM&L Theatre continued to operate as an entertainment venue through the twentieth century under various names and ownership arrangements, adapting to changing entertainment technologies including the transition from silent film to sound pictures, and later to modern cinematic systems.
The paranormal reputation of the PM&L Theatre rests upon claims of haunting by the spirit of a young girl, a legend that persisted in local community consciousness and paranormal literature for many years before the truth of its origins came to light through the admission of a retired theater volunteer. This volunteer, long associated with the theater and respected in local community circles, eventually confessed to deliberately perpetuating and embellishing the ghost girl story as a collaborative effort with other theater buffs and enthusiasts who found the legend entertaining and atmospheric. The fabricated haunting story attributed strange sounds, mysterious phenomena, and paranormal activity to the ghost of a young girl haunting the theater, drawing paranormal enthusiasts and curious visitors to the location. The volunteer later revealed that much of the activity they had attributed to the supernatural actually originated from more mundane sources, particularly the nighttime activities of a neighboring shoemaker whose shop adjoined the theater and whose work created sounds that echoed through the shared walls separating the two businesses.
Despite the revelation of the deliberate hoax perpetuated by theater staff and volunteers, paranormal investigator Chris Pumala came forward with claims of genuine paranormal evidence collected at the PM&L Theatre, providing alleged documentation that contradicted the hoax confession and suggested that authentic paranormal activity did occur at the location. Pumala claimed to possess electronic voice phenomenon recordings in which a girl's voice could allegedly be heard screaming within the theater space, recordings he asserted were captured during paranormal investigations employing professional audio equipment. Additionally, Pumala reported having obtained photographs allegedly showing a full-bodied apparition or humanoid figure near one of the theater's emergency exit points, photographic evidence he interpreted as support for the existence of the haunting. The contradiction between the hoax confession and Pumala's claims of genuine paranormal evidence created an unresolved controversy regarding the true nature of paranormal activity at the theater.
The PM&L Theatre continues to operate as an entertainment and cultural venue, hosting performances and events while simultaneously maintaining the cultural identity it developed through the ghost girl legend and subsequent paranormal investigation claims. The theater has become a focal point of debate within the paranormal research community regarding the reliability of historical claims in paranormal investigation, the possibilities for false claims and deliberate hoaxes, and the challenges of distinguishing genuine paranormal evidence from fabricated or misinterpreted phenomena. The story of the PM&L Theatre demonstrates the complexity of paranormal history and the difficulties in establishing definitive truth regarding allegedly haunted locations when multiple competing narratives and sources of evidence exist. Whether the PM&L Theatre is authentically haunted, solely the product of a collaborative hoax, or contains some degree of genuine paranormal activity remains a matter of ongoing debate and speculation.
Disembodied Voices
Full-Body Apparitions
Poltergeists
Unexplained Sounds