RKO Madison Theatre

54-30 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood, NY 11385

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Showing 776 - 800 of 1,251 comments

vikrok
vikrok on October 4, 2006 at 8:33 am

Sure I just recently visited the ridgewood theater – as you may have guessed it is now a multiplex theater – but still in tact… I’ll take a run out there sometime today…
vik

PKoch
PKoch on October 4, 2006 at 8:23 am

Not in the photo that Warren posted a link to, but in another photo from the same time, the Madison had both a vertical and a horizontal marquee.

I remember Howard’s, on the northwest corner of Myrtle and Putnam. Didn’t that have a vertical sign, too ? Got my First Holy Communion suit there in May 1963 and another suit there in February 1969 for my dad’s parents' 50th anniversary bash, which I also wore first year of high school.

Exactly where was Irv and Syd’s place ? Koletty’s Ice Cream Parlor was on the n.e. corner of Myrtle and Palmetto, next to the Rathskeller.

L'chaim !

AntonyRoma
AntonyRoma on October 4, 2006 at 8:02 am

Did the Madison have a marquee in the 1927 photo? Hard to tell.

Sounds like the Cigar store is still there. I was this kid from Glendale who worked at Ripley’s from 1952 to 1960. Took the Myrtle Ave el to Bklyn Tech HS until ‘55 and then to Brooklyn Poly 'til '59.

Madison was the class theater. I was a regular at Cappy’s pool hall above the Ridgewood. Our competition, Howard’s Clothing, was located on the corner

Don’t recall Koletti’s. Had my ice cream, egg creams and humongous cheeseburgers at “The luncheonette” down street from the Madison run by Irv and Syd.

Shalom, ciao, and excelsior

Shalom, ciao, and excelsior

mikemorano
mikemorano on October 4, 2006 at 5:26 am

Perhaps you would be interested Vik in helping other member’s to land mark the Ridgewood theatre. Photo’s of the Ridgewood theatre would be a big help in achieving that status.

PKoch
PKoch on October 4, 2006 at 4:22 am

Yes, ‘Tonino, it’s still there, on top, albeit fainter and fainter, while the graffiti on the bottom becomes ever bolder. In 1976 it was still legible enough for me to read it from atop the WTC with 25 power pay binoculars.

I was born in mid-November 1955, and remember Ripley’s, but not the Automat, only Koletty’s Ice Cream Parlor, Gottlieb’s Deli Restaurant, and Bickford’s, where McDonald’s is now, next to the the immortal Optimo Cigar store on the southeast corner of Myrtle and Wyckoff.

Live long and prosper.

AntonyRoma
AntonyRoma on October 4, 2006 at 1:27 am

Thanks Vic. Testimony to bad signage rules and zoning regulations.

Is the ad on the west facing wall still for the Madison ? It was mentioned in discussion of photos from the Myrtle Ave el on this page.

Are you old enough to remember Ripley’s Clothing a few doors away, and the Horn and Hardart Automat?

Shalom, ciao, and excelsior

vikrok
vikrok on October 3, 2006 at 7:58 pm

well, back to the Madison theater which is what this page is supposed to be about = I live very close to what was the Madison theater and is now Liberty Stores – I took some photos from the outside and here they are

  1. View link

and

  1. View link

Vik……

mikemorano
mikemorano on October 2, 2006 at 8:33 am

Two horror movies available on dvd that I have never seen or heard of before fella’s. Both movies involve nudist camps. The first movie is titled ‘The Beast that Killed Women’ 1965 directed by Barry Mahon. A gorilla runs around a Miami nudist colony killing people. The second title is ‘The Monster of Camp Sunshine’ 1964. Toxic waste is released into a river. A man in the nudist camp drinks the water and turns into a monster. The second movie is better then the first. Unfortunately BrooklynJim they are both in full screen.

PKoch
PKoch on October 2, 2006 at 7:13 am

Ed Solero, I think I remember Castle Films being advertised in “Famous Monsters Of Filmland” and “Monster World” forty-odd years ago. Possibly named after “Castle Of Frankenstein” magazine, or mayve schlock B gimmick director William Castle ? A boyhood friend of mine had the 8mm highlights of James Whale’s 1935 “The Bride Of Frankenstein”. We watched it on his 8 mm home movie projector. He directed me to watch for a certain subtle change of facial expression by Karloff as The Monster, which I did, and saw.

“Incredible Shrinking Man” as a comedy …. ugh !!!!

Ed Solero
Ed Solero on September 30, 2006 at 12:38 pm

In a box somewhere in my closet rests truncated and silent single reel 8mm versions of “Tarantula” and “Incredible Shrinking Man” – both courtesy of Castle Films! Those movies – and many other Universal titles I had as a kid – were quite popular at the annual block parties we used to have every Summer when I lived in Laurelton, Queens. I know I’ve mentioned this elsewhere on this site, but some of my favorite memories involved our home-movie projector and screen being set up by my dad at the curb in front of our house (with several extension cords strung from the socket under the front stoop lamp to supply power). I think I had just about every film from the original Frankenstein series – right up to “Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein!”

Good times…

FYI… a big-screen remake of “Incredible Shrinking Man” is in the works for 2008. The director is Keenan Ivory Wayans, which surely means that this will be a comedy.

PKoch
PKoch on September 29, 2006 at 11:22 am

“Incredible Shrinking Man” on DVD interests me.

BrooklynJim
BrooklynJim on September 29, 2006 at 11:11 am

Got my copy of “This Island Earth” earlier this month. Best feature: the (restored) color is the most vivid I’ve seen since the original release in ‘55. Worst feature: only available in full screen format.

As much as I like this movie over the aforementioned FP & WoW, I can no longer view it without hearing the witty, acerbic and often insane dialogue inserted in the “MST3K: The Movie” version. Tom Servo or Crow commenting on the initial appearance of Brack, Exeter’s assistant: “He’s president of the Buddy Ebsen Fan Club.” LMAO!

And for those of you who’ve patiently been waiting…

5 movies previously unavailable on DVD have been released by Universal last week and are available only through Best Buy franchises at the present time under the title of Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection, and I believe every one played at RKO Madison matinees 1955-1958:

Tarantula
Mole People
Monster on the Campus
Incredible Shrinking Man
Monolith Monsters

I loved the $19.99 price tag, too. ;)

Can Gog (1954 in EastmanColor) be next???

[“If it’s ‘Universal,’ doesn’t that automatically make it ‘International?’” – Crow at the outset of MST3K’s “This Island Earth” parody.]

PKoch
PKoch on September 29, 2006 at 10:10 am

“This Island Earth receives far less attention then War of the Worlds and Forbidden Planet. In my opinion fella’s This Island Earth is the better of these 3 movies.”

Why ?

mikemorano
mikemorano on September 29, 2006 at 9:27 am

Very cool. I must buy that dvd. This Island Earth receives far less attention then War of the Worlds and Forbidden Planet. In my opinion fella’s This Island Earth is the better of these 3 movies. The next year Jeff Morrow could be seen in the Creature Walks Among Us. Only two years prior to This Island Earth; Jeff Morrow was in the Robe. That is diversity.

AntonyRoma
AntonyRoma on September 28, 2006 at 3:23 pm

To restore my auto notification

Shalom, ciao, and excelsior

Bway
Bway on September 28, 2006 at 8:20 am

PKoch, that was quite an interesting description above, lol.

PKoch
PKoch on September 28, 2006 at 5:58 am

Thanks, RobertR !

I remember those icicle-encrusted block letters advertising “HEALTHFULLY AIR CONDITIONED” very well.

I missed that double feature at the RKO Madison, but saw “This Island Earth” and “Creature From The Black Lagoon” at NYC’s Film Forum in late July 1989, the latter in 3-D, yet.

Vacation on Metaluna, anyone ?

Maybe this site needs an inter-rossiter !

RobertR
RobertR on September 27, 2006 at 2:10 pm

Perfect summer fun PLUS healthfully cooled
View link

PKoch
PKoch on September 26, 2006 at 6:49 am

Thanks, Bway. Fortunately, the RKO Bushwick, with some help from the NYC Board Of Ed, and its chosen building contractor, has risen like the phoenix from its own ashes, exterior preserved, albeit with interior gutted, and changed into a school.

PKoch
PKoch on September 26, 2006 at 6:45 am

Glad you liked that, mikemovies. I don’t know if a double was used for Mia Farrow’s nude scene, only that the nude female that appeared, her areolas, as well as her nipples, were puffy, and elevated above the skin of her breasts, like those of an adolescent girl.

Bway
Bway on September 26, 2006 at 6:43 am

The RKO Bushwick stopped showing movies sometime during 1969. I am not sure what month. The Church moved in some time after that. I don’t know exactly how many years the church was in the RKO Bushwick before moving into the Gates Theater. The Gates may also have sat empty for a few years before the church moved in, so even if we find out when the church moved into the Gates, that doesn’t mean it’s the same year it closed.
Of course, once the church moved out of the RKO Bushwick Theater, it began it’s now infamous decline into complete shambels over the following 25 to 30 years…..

PKoch
PKoch on September 26, 2006 at 6:36 am

Thanks, Bway. Do we have exact dates for Loews Gates and the RKO Bushwick showing their last movies ?

mikemorano
mikemorano on September 26, 2006 at 6:34 am

‘Lung warts’ is very funny PKoch. Any of you fella’s know if they used a double for Mia Farrow’s nude scene?

Bway
Bway on September 26, 2006 at 6:31 am

The RKO Bushwick stopped showing movies before the Loews Gates, if I am not mistaken. Actually, the church congregation that is now housed in the old Loews Gates Theater, originally started out in the RKO Bushwick Theater for a while. However, when the Loews Gates became available, they for some reason moved into there, and out of the Bushwick Theater.