Comments from MichaelKilgore

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MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Auburn Drive-In on Sep 18, 2017 at 4:10 pm

My old, fallible reference books point to the renaming from the Danville to the Auburn in the late 50s / early 60s.

Theatre Catalog data, as listed as the Danville:

1949-50: Collin and Wood, 550.

1952: Lockwood and Gordon Ent., 450.

1955-56: Lockwood and Gordon Ent., and Daytz Theatre Ent., 450.

(I)MPA data:

1953-59: Danville, 450, Daytz Theatre Ent.

1963: Aubury (sic), 450, Daytz Theatre Ent.

1969-76: Auburn, 475.

1982: 300, SBC Mgt. Corp.

1984-88: SBC Mgt. Corp.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Bridgton Twin Drive-In on Sep 18, 2017 at 3:41 pm

Only a few hints from my IMPAs:

1957-59: not listed.

1963: 300, Daytz-Walter Esley.

1969-76: 300.

1982: 300, J. Tevanian.

1984-88: J. Tevanian.

That was the elder John Tevanian, who bought the Bridgton in 1971. His son, also John Tevanian, took over in 1996. He rebuilt the concession stand / projection booth in 2013 and installed digital projectors in time for the 2014 season.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Skowhegan Drive-In on Sep 17, 2017 at 3:27 pm

The IMPAs don’t give us much to talk about.

1955-63: 368, Somerset Drive-In Corp.

1969-76: 368.

1982: 300, SBC Mgt. Corp.

1984-88: SBC Mgt. Corp.

A 2012 article in the Press Herald said that Doug Corson sold the Skowhegan to Donald C. Brown Jr. that year. It also said that Lockwood & Gordon Co. of Boston built the drive-in in 1954.

In January 2017, it posted to its Fundrazr page, “We’d like to thank all of the patrons of the Skowhegan Drive-In who helped us go digital. We didn’t get the full amount, but at least the amount we raised helped with the installation costs.”

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Bangor Drive-In on Sep 16, 2017 at 11:12 am

The same photo is on TripAdvisor with the credit “Photo provided by management (May 2016)”. Really nice picture, though.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Bangor Drive-In on Sep 16, 2017 at 10:20 am

Steve Ginn’s YouTube video has the full history of the Bangor. It opened on June 7, 1950.

The video claims that “(b)y the late 50’s it was an ‘adult’” theater, but more burlesque than porn. From the ads shown, this was just an occasional thing. A 1955 newspaper ad showed a nudist colony movie; a 1960 ad showed a stripper movie at midnight, and plenty of others had titles that sounded more lascivious than the movies really were.

Okay, there’s one 1970 newspaper ad with softcore porn. And one from 1974 with an X-rated second feature. But in between, there are plenty of multiplex-worthy movies. Based on the newspapers I checked separately, there were several full-time X-rated drive-ins in the area, but the Bangor wasn’t one of them.

A storm blew down the original screen on Jan. 8, 1978. It was replaced that year by the two screens that survive today.

AM Radio sound was added before the 1985 season, which is odd because the Bangor’s final night was July 23, 1985. By noon on the 25th, every speaker had been removed. The eight-screen Bangor Mall Cinemas, owned by the same company as the drive-in, opened on the 26th.

With the 2015 revival, capacity is about 250 for Screen One, about 160 for Screen Two.

BTW, the IMPA continued listing the Bangor Twin through its 1988 edition. Those guys sure were slow on the uptake sometimes!

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Neptune Drive-In on Sep 15, 2017 at 12:20 pm

The very short IMPA report:

1969: not listed.

1972-76: capacity 300.

A 2013 Global News video with Coates said the “40 year old” Neptune opened “in the early 70s,” which would account for the missing IMPA listing.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Neptune Drive-In on Sep 15, 2017 at 10:02 am

A Times & Transcript article, copied into notes on a 2008 petition at GoPetition.com, said that then-owner Gilles LeBlanc’s father opened the Neptune in 1964, but Gilles was closing it and putting it up for sale. It didn’t mention the earlier closing but said “the drive-in started to fall on hard times in the 1980s”.

The Globe and Mail reported that in 2010, “a local business person bought the property and approached (Jeff) Coates with a suggestion to lease the drive-in business. After discussing the opportunity with (Robert) Farquharson, the duo decided to team up and leased the theatre in 2010.

“After a lapse of four years, the drive-in opened for a 17-week period in the summer of the same year.”

The Neptune’s web site was active in the summer of 2010, so we know it had been revived by then. The site had a note in June 2013 that the drive-in had gone digital.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Sussex Drive-In on Sep 14, 2017 at 4:37 pm

The Open Air Cinema blog posted in 2009 that the Sussex opened in 1967, founded by Gerald Alexander and his family. They sold to Tom Boudreau, Paul Galloway and Randy Defazio in 2008.

For whatever reason, the Sussex never appeared in the IMPAs. That happens sometimes.

Owner Tom Boudreau told the Telegraph-Journal in May 2017 that the Sussex had never shut down and had been open for “50+ years.” He also said the drive-in’s capacity was “around 450,” reached twice in 2016.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Valley Drive-In on Sep 12, 2017 at 12:18 pm

I saw another source that claimed 1950 as the opening year, but it didn’t show up in the MPAs until 1956 or 57.

1957-63: capacity 400, owned by Hazel and Barkhouse.

1969-76: 400.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Brackley Drive-In on Sep 11, 2017 at 1:19 pm

My IMPAs suggest that the “mid-50s” opening estimate might be off a little. In my 1963 edition and going forward, they listed the Parkview (300) in Charlottetown along with the North River (450), but the Parkview wan’t there in the 1959 edition or earlier.

1957-59: not listed (only the North River).

1963: 300, Parkview Tourist Corp. Ltd.

1969-76: 300.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Skylite Drive-In on Sep 9, 2017 at 11:22 am

Note that the Cinema Treasures entry for the closed Madawaska Drive-In is under Upper Frenchville here.

Multiple sources say the Skylite opened in 1973, owned from its beginning by the Pelletier family, currently by Donna and Gary Pelletier. Here are my IMPA listings since then:

1972-76: not listed.

1978-82: Skylit, Pelletier, 395.

1984-88: Skylite, R. Pelletier.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Madawaska Drive-In on Sep 9, 2017 at 11:17 am

Historic Aerials shows a drive-in at 47.337 N, -68.376 W, now in Frenchville. That’s gotta be it. HA has a photo from 1981 and a topo map reference from 1986. (Also photos from 1996-97, then replaced by a building in 2007.) Oddly, it’s not on the 1973 topo map; that plus the IMPA hiatus make me wonder if we’re really talking about two different drive-ins.

The Google Street View from Sept. 2015 shows the site with a sign for CAN-AM Forest Products.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Madawaska Drive-In on Sep 9, 2017 at 11:08 am

Every listing I’ve seen has it in Madawaska ME.

The 1952-56 Theatre Catalogs show the Madawaska DI, E. Micheaud and Herbert Higgins, 300. Not listed in the 1949-50 edition.

Here’s what the (I)MPAs show:

1953-54: Drive-In, 300, Emile Michaud.

1955-63: Drive-In, 300, Emile Michand.

1969: Drive-In, 300.

1972-76: not listed.

1978-88: Madawaska DI, PO Box 259, “Eldon Stcyr” or “Eldon, St. Cyr.”, 300.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Ciné-Parc Mont St-Hilaire on Sep 7, 2017 at 9:32 am

On the night of August 21 2010, thieves tied up an employee, stole the night’s proceeds and torched “the drive-in building” according to CTV News. No one was ever charged with that crime.

One year later to the day, fire broke out on a Sunday afternoon in the main building and burned through the roof (photo and story at Zone911.com).

A 2012 article in TVA Nouvelles said that Clément Longpré had owned the Mont-Saint-Hilaire for nearly eight years. André Monette was the co-owner during that time, at least.

Kevin Patenaude bought André Monette’s share of the drive-in in July 2017. (Or Monette had owned the whole thing at this point and Patenaude bought half ownership; I’m not sure.) There were nice articles about the change in ownership in L'Oeil Régional and Les Versants.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Ciné-Parc Boucherville on Sep 6, 2017 at 9:00 am

Mike Rivest makes the point elsewhere, but in case the reader starts on this page we should note that this is not the Ciné-Parc Boucherville that opened in 1970 and lived on the west side of the Boulevard de Montarville before closing in 1985.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Carte topographique de 1979 montrant le Ciné-Parc on Sep 6, 2017 at 8:43 am

Thanks for this map, showing the old ciné-parc’s location where Brasserie New Deal Brewing Co and several other buildings sit today. The current Ciné-Parc Boucherville is so close (3.6 km) to the old one, and uses the same highway exit, that it’s very easy to get confused.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Cine-Parc Templeton on Sep 4, 2017 at 3:58 pm

The notes under its YouTube advertisement say it’s been open since 1974.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Skylight Drive-In on Sep 3, 2017 at 4:44 pm

The drive-in’s news page says it was opened in 1954, purchased by husband and wife Kevin Marshall and Kathy Lepine in 2014, and nothing in between. What do my Motion Picture Almanacs say?

1953-54: not listed.

1955: Drive-In, …, Twinex.

1959: Pembroke, 350, Twinex.

1963: Pembroke, 438, Twinex.

1969: Pembroke, 438. 1969: Skylight, … .

1972-76: Pembroke, 438.
1972-76: Skylight, 300.

Hmm! The MPAs aren’t perfect, but that would be a very long time to not notice a name change, plus there’s that discrepancy in capacity numbers.

Also, a January 2008 retrospective ramble in the Daily Observer included, “Pembroke’s first Drive-In Theatre afforded you the luxury of enjoying movies right in the comfort of the family car with a speaker slung from the window. … Residents of this area are now rediscovering this unique, outdoor movie adventure every summer at Matt McLaughlin’s Starlight Drive-In.” A 2016 Daily Observer article said the drive-in was built in 1954 on land “severed off farmland owned by the McLaughlin family,” and that Matt was the guy who sold it to the current owners.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Kingston Drive-In on Sep 1, 2017 at 10:02 am

Also, according to Cinema Treasures, Bryan Adams' Summer of 69 music video was shot at the about-to-be-demolished Chilliwack Drive-In in British Columbia. Sure, he was born in Kingston, but the Chilliwack sign in the video is pretty hard to miss.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Kingston Drive-In on Sep 1, 2017 at 9:37 am

The current Kingston Family FunWorld drive-in is unrelated to whatever was the Kingston.

Kingston’s first drive-in was the Gardiners Road Drive-In, as shown in this photo from November 1948. I could easily believe it became known as the Kingston Drive-In. There’s a strip mall on the site now.

A Kingston This Week article said, “Kingston used to be home to two (drive-ins), the Mustang and the Kingston Drive-in, now a shopping mall.”

A 50th anniversary article in The Whig-Standard, they provided a lot of details about the old Mustang. It “was built in 1965 and opened the following year under the name 66 Drive-In.” Opening night was Aug. 26, 1966 (why so late in the season?) with a double bill of A Big Hand for the Little Lady and Never Too Late. “In 1967, the owner, Famous Players, sold it to Premier Theatres, which owned and operated the Mustang Drive-In chain”.

The Kingston Family FunWorld site agrees. “The Drive-In Theatre was founded in 1966 and was originally called the 66, in 1968 the mustang drive-in chain purchased and operated the drive-in under their name until 1993. The year 1995 brought a change to the drive-in Mr. (Dan) Wannemacher purchased the theatre and re-named it Kingston Family FunWorld.”

My Motion Picture Almanacs confirm that the two drive-ins operated in Kingston at the same time, although they overlooked the Mustang for a while.

1953-55: Drive-In, 500, H. J. Ochs.

1959-63: Kingston Drive-In, 500, Regional Theatres Circuit.

1969: Kingston, 500.

1972-76: Kingston, 770.
1972-76: Mustang, 690.

Now I want to learn more about the actual Kingston Drive-In. Where was it? Was it the Gardiners Road? When did it close?

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Mustang Drive-In PEC on Aug 31, 2017 at 2:22 pm

Paul Peterson bought the Mustang, seemingly on a whim after driving past its For Sale sign, in the summer of 1988. He’s owned and operated it ever since.

In his book A Good Day’s Work: In Pursuit of a Disappearing Canada, John Demont wrote that the Mustang opened in April 1956. But actually, it opened as the Picton Drive-In and later changed its name, probably reflecting an ownership change. The only other clues I have for when that happened come from my incomplete set of Motion Picture Almanacs:

1955: not listed.

1959: Drive-In, capacity …, owner A. Wincix.

1963: Drive-In, 350, F. G. Brown.

1969: Drive-In, 350.

1972-76: Mustang, 350.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Muskoka Drive-In on Aug 28, 2017 at 5:46 pm

Muskoka is the name of the tourism region there. See http://www.discovermuskoka.ca/

Also, Larry Baxter’s LinkedIn page says that he owned the Muskoka during July 1973-2009, which would make him the guy who sold it to William Alexander. Baxter also owned the Port Bolster (1991-99) and the Lindsay Twin (Jun 2000-“present”, actually May 2015).

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Lindsay Twin Drive-In on Aug 28, 2017 at 5:35 pm

Nibbles of info from my Motion Picture Almanacs:

1953-59: capacity 350, owner H. J. Ochs.

1963: 350, National Bkg. Co.

1969-76: 350.

Also, Larry Baxter owned the Lindsay from 2000 (according to his LinkedIn page) until Danny Zita bought it in 2015.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Stardust Drive-In on Aug 27, 2017 at 2:17 pm

The drive-in was bought by Premier Theatres in 2013 and reopened with the new name Stardust Drive-In Newmarket. Here’s the new web site.

Newmarket notes from the Motion Picture Almanac:

1959: Newmarket Drive-In, …, C. E. Murrell.

1963: No. York Drive-In, 400, Assoc. Bkg. Service.

1969-76: No. York, 400.

MichaelKilgore
MichaelKilgore commented about Sunset Barrie Triple Drive-In on Aug 26, 2017 at 5:54 pm

Some of these Canadian cities are so confusing to me. The Motion Picture Almanacs list drive-ins for Barrie and Shanty Bay, ending with both the Barrie and Shanty Bay drive-ins listed for the town of Barrie.

1953-54: Barrie – Huronia, H. L. Hagey & A. Winch, 400.

1959: Barrie – Huronia, A. Winch, 400.

1963: Barrie – Huronia, W. Dykeman, 400; Shanty Bay – Drive-In, B. S. Betts, 362.

1969: Barrie – Huronia, 400; Shanty Bay – Drive-In, 362.

1972-76: Barrie – Barrie, 400; Barrie – Shanty Bay, 400.

In 2008, the Barrie was owned by Stinson Theatres, founded by the late Bob Stinson and run by his sons, Henry and Tim.

Premier Operating Corporation bought the place in March 2011 and renamed it Sunset Barrie Drive-In.