Welcome to MOE's
BOOMERABILIA! These
pages represent my attempt to capture
the spirit of the youthful years of baby
boomers through mini-essays and histories,
images, personal anecdotes, quizzes,
timelines, music, brief biographies and
humor. The focus is on popular ["pop"] culture
from the mid-1950's up to the
mid-1970's, twenty years, with the median and
spotlight era being the 1960's.
Some
drive-ins
had miniature
railroads, swimming pools (there was a
"dive-in" in Georgia), picnic areas,
miniature golf, horseshoes, and other
attractions. A drive-in in Winter Haven,
Fla., on the banks of a lake provided
boats so patrons could fish while
watching the film.In Japan where space
is at a premium, portable drive-ins
would be set up at night in empty
parking lots.
One New York
theater complained
that movie-goers often unintentionally
drove away with the speakers still
attached to the cars. Absent minded
drive-in patrons who drove away with the
in-car speakers still hanging on their
windows received a healthy jolt to
remind them of their mistake. The cable
attached to the speakers could withstand
a 300- or 400 pound tug before letting
the speaker go.
Parents
complained that children
living near drive-ins could see
objectionable movies from their bedroom
windows. This wasn't a problem for a
jail warden in St. Louis, who had a
perfect view of a local drive-in screen
from his bedroom window -- the theater
owners graciously installed a speaker in
his room. Prisoners who also had a clear
view of the screen got no such
service.
The popularity
of drive-ins soared
into the 1950s. A Saturday Evening Post
article reported that movie attendance
was down everywhere, except in the
drive-ins. Traditional theater owners
despised the drive-ins, but car owners
loved them. "You can eat your dinner,
get your car washed and see a movie all
at once," the Post article said. Called
"passion pits'" by some, "There are
2,200 of them in the U.S.A. now, and
they're really making money," the Post
went on.
The Post told
of a small drive-in
set up in a cow pasture near Salt Lake
City and received a complaint from a
woman who was watching the movie when a
cow stuck his head in the window and
licked her. In a Michigan drive-in ,a
little girl got lost trying to find her
way back to the family car. The father
was summoned over the public address
system and the two headed back to the
car hand- in-hand. Shortly afterward
they were back at the booth. The father
had become lost, too!
X-rated
movies
at drive-ins became
a hot issue in the 1970s. A Caseville,
Mich., case went all the way to the
State Court of Appeals, which ruled in
September 1979 that "Unless the movie
being shown is judged obscene, a court
cannot close a drive-in theater just
because neighbors complain it's a
nuisance." But by this time the
popularity of drive-ins had begun to
fade. By 1980, the number of outdoor
theaters had dropped to 900.
In
July 1970, the Detroit News
Movie Theatrer Guide advertised 26
drive-in theaters in Metro Detroit, but
this number had fallen to seven by 1988
with the closing of the Grand River
Drive-in to make way for a shopping
mall. Some blamed urban sprawl. Martin
Shafer, who owned the Dearborn drive-in
said, "Drive-in theaters are on the only
land parcels big enough for a shopping
center. It's hard to turn down an offer
that equals 10 years of profits on the
drive-in."
Others blamed
their demise on the
advent of cable TV, VCRs and video
games. Today, there are 851 drive-ins in
the United States, 25 of which are in
Michigan. The Ford-Wyoming in Dearborn
is the only one left in Metro Detroit.
It's been operating for 48 years and is
still thriving. A Detroit News article
described it: "The speakers still are
cheesy, teen-agers still smooch in the
backseat and popcorn is the most
expensive item on the
menu."
The managers
admitted they had to
adapt to survive and enlarged the
theater to nine screens. One appeal is
the relaxed setting and nostalgia. Some
customers remember coming here as kids.
Now they're bringing their children. One
theatergoer summed up her feelings. "You
just worry sometimes that it will be all
gone. We felt so sorry to see those
others all go. We really enjoy this
place."
ADDENDUM: At the height
of the drive-in's popularity [1950's],
the size of them increased dramatically.
They said you can't build one that big!
One of the largest Drive-In Theaters was
the 'All-Weather Drive-In', Copiague,
New York which had parking spaces for
2,500 cars. It also had an indoor 1,200-
seat viewing area, that was heated and
air-conditioned, a playground, a
cafeteria, and a restaurant serving full
dinners. A shuttle train took customers
from their cars to the various areas, on
the 28 acres.
List Of Theaters By
Size
1.Troy Drive-In: Detroit, Michigan.
3,000 cars
2. Panther Drive-In: Lufkin, Texas.
3,000 cars
3. All-Weather Drive-In: Copiague, New
York. 2,500 cars
4. 110 Drive-In Melville, New York.
2,500 cars
5. Newark Drive-In: Newark, New Jersey
2,400 cars
6. Belair Drive-In, Cicero, Illinois.
2,300 cars
7. Timonium Drive-In: Timonium, Maryland
2,479 cars
8. Los Altos Drive-In: Long Beach,
California 2,150 cars
Which Were The
Smallest?
1. Harmony Drive-In: Harmony
Pennsylvania. 50 cars
2. Highway Drive-In: Bamberg, South
Carolina. 50 cars
3. Ponce DeLeon Drive-In: Ponce DeLeon,
Florida. 60 cars
4. Twilite Drive-In: Nakina, North
Carolina. 60 cars
5. Norwood: Norwood, Colorado. 64
cars
"Dad, can I
borrow the
car tonight, I gotta...er...
study with Mary
Sue!"
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by MOE 1999. All
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