Comments from tomcory

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tomcory
tomcory commented about Arion Theatre on Mar 2, 2009 at 6:41 pm

Ticker, I remember the Flatow Brothers fruit store! They always had some kind of straw/hay strewn about the tile floor. One of the brothers, I remember, was named Murray. They were nice guys. Most of all, I remember the smell of fresh produce there…it’s right in the forefront of my sense memory. Everything was so fresh and ripe. If I close my eyes, I can bring the place right back.

By the way, my folks still live in the town, and I go back to Carlo’s Pizza most every time I visit. It’s still the best slice of pizza in the world to me—and yes, Carlos' sons always remember me too. They’re the kind of guys that make a neighborhood great.

tomcory
tomcory commented about Arion Theatre on Oct 28, 2008 at 6:01 pm

Of course, I remember Scheinfeld’s! We shopped at the Men & Boy’s store next door to Kopp’s Bakery, across the street from the women’s store. I was friends with the Scheinfeld boys, actually. We worked at the same summer camp up in the Catskills. Besides being a terrific store, they were the finest, nicest family one could ever hope to meet. Thanks for sharing the memories! T.C., N.Y.

tomcory
tomcory commented about Arion Theatre on Oct 27, 2008 at 6:55 pm

Decembra—That was Midville Radio & TV where you used to buy your 45’s. I bought mine there too! They used to keep the 45’s in a spinner rack with the titles and artists hand-printed in black magic marker below each of the slots. I hate to sound like an old man, which I’m not, but those were truly great times to be a kid! TC

tomcory
tomcory commented about Arion Theatre on Oct 27, 2008 at 3:25 am

Of course I remember Willie’s! Best damn hot dogs and knishes on earth. While we’re at it, anybody remember Zweibel’s (sort of a 5 & 10 store) a little further down Metro on the same side of the street?

tomcory
tomcory commented about Arion Theatre on Jun 30, 2008 at 11:21 am

THANK YOU, Warren, for sharing these photos. I felt like I was right back there again…

tomcory
tomcory commented about Arion Theatre on Mar 19, 2005 at 7:08 pm

GarrettH—You’re not going to believe this, but I WAS AT THE VERY SAME SHOWING OF THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE at the Arion where they had the reels out of order. I remember everyone making fun of the fact that the Shelley Winters character was dead, and then we saw her swimming around ten minutes later!

I too grew up in Middle Village (in the 60’s and 70’s), and spent many a happy hour at the Arion. Of my many memories, my favorite is the week (usually once a year, in the summer) when the Arion would “Go Ape”—that is, they aired all 5 of the “Planet of the Apes” movies back to back over the course of a single week.

I loved the double features, and discovered some of my favorite movies quite accidentally because of them. I remember going to see a version of “The Three Musketeers,” (starring Michael York, Richard Chamberlain, etc.) and having to first sit through the B-feature, a film starring Jon Voight entitled, “Conrack.” Well, this many years later, I can’t remember a single thing about that version of “Musketeers,” but “Conrack' remains a film that changed my life forever.

Something else I remember about the Arion… in those days, most of us in Middle Village DIDN’T have air conditioning in our homes. Come summer each year, the Arion would hang out a banner with a picture of a penguin sitting on an ice block, and the advertisement to come see a movie in “air conditioned comfort.”

I remember the matrons shining the flashlight at us as kids, and telling us to be quiet. Whatever happened to matrons in movie theaters??

And I remember, as a teenager, smoking cigarettes—legally!—in the last ten rows of the Arion.

It’s funny the impact such things as a small neighborhood movie house can have on us, especially while we’re young. To this day, every time that I dream I’m in a movie theater (a frequent scenario for me), no matter where I’m “supposed to be” in that particular dream, I realize—it’s always the Arion. If I live to be a hundred, I will never forget the place.

Tom C.