Ridgewood Theatre
55-27 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood,
NY
11385
55-27 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood,
NY
11385
31 people favorited this theater
Showing 2,051 - 2,075 of 2,835 comments
PKoch ..“What would theaters be without movies ?”, you asked. What they were in their original lives of course, Burlesque Houses. Or vaudeville or stage plays.
And as long as I’m here, let me add my support to BklynJim’s suggestion of a “Research” site.
and vote “A”. (Subject to the clarification offered by EdSolero re a single theater in contrast to opening a new research page for each theter inquiry, which is bizarre, and I’m sure not what the writer had in mind.)
And finally, in a similar vein, start another page for theater related kibbitsing. Maybe we could call it ‘Goldbrick’. (I still have a dial up connection and the Ridgewood takes forever to open.)
I just added UA Court Street Stadium 12. You forgot to give me the amount of seats lostmemory. 50 dollars is kinda steep. Would anybody like to give me another free theatre to add? haha
Thanks a bunch lostmemory. I will get started right away on this theatre.
Thanks for the John Agar story, BklynJim. It was great how he came alive when you talked to him, but sad how he sank back into depression and dejection after you were done talking with him.
I’m reminded of what I noticed right away when my dad had to begin living in a nursing home in May 1997 : all the time that most of the residents there spend staring into space and DOING ABSOLUTELY NOTHING !
As with John Agar at that convention, what a waste of good memories, the wisdom that comes with age, and experience !
Oh, Lost… I snuck away hours ago! Slipped out the side entrance at the lunch bell and have been eating penny candies at the soda counter ever since.That egg cream sure was good!
Lost Memory, I vote “A” for Admirable (and “C” for “Crankshaft,” the guy in the comics). And a belated kudo for your informative Jimmy Hatlo history on some other theater page that I can’t find at the moment!
Peter, a brief John Agar story from the mid-‘90s: He was about 75 when I met him at his table the Hollywood Collectors Show at the Beverly Garland Hotel. No one was paying him any attention whatsoever. Agar looked totally lost and forlorn.
So when I started up a conversation with him about all his ‘50s films (including “Brain From Planet Arous,” “Revenge of the Creature” and all the others), the man came ALIVE! His eyes flashed and he talked a mile-a-minute! We had a ball swapping stories, and at the end of our chat, I got a handshake worthy of a former Marine, not an alcoholic in recovery.
Several hours later I passed nearby, and again, no one was paying the man any attention. He looked as depressed and as dejected as he did before we’d talked. I really felt bad for the guy.
Oh no I didn’t mean lostmemory was a crank. I apologize for the misunderstanding. I would like to add a theatre if anyone has an extra theatre that they could spare. It is becoming difficult to locate a theatre that isn’t already listed.
“BTW, in your honor last night, I watched the ubiquitous Whit Bissell AND John Agar in "Creature From the Black Lagoon” (‘54) and “Attack of the Puppet People” ('58), respectively. I ask you, good sir: What would all CT’s architectural triumphs and losers, all these grand palaces and “itch” dives, all these proverbial “Orchids and Onions” be without all the wonderful, scary, funny, sad, colorful, dark, amazing films to be viewed in? I suspect that they’d be extremely hollow and haunted…"
Thanks, BklynJim ! I AM honored, believe me ! I last saw “Creature” in Sept. 2000, but haven’t seen “Puppet People” since I first saw it on ABC’s “The Big Show”, sometime from fall 1963 to spring 1965.
You’ve seen John Agar in “Brain From Planet Arous” ?
Your rhetorical question, “What would theaters be without movies ?” reminds me of a similar question in “Famous Monsters Of Filmland”, “If theaters didn’t show movies, would people still go there to eat popcorn and drink Coke ?”
How about Whit Bissell as newspaper columnist Otis Elwell in CBS Playhouse 90’s “The Comedian”, original air date February 1957, written by Rod Serling, his third Emmy ?
Last night watched Ned Glass and Stanley Adams (Oh no ! Not them again !!!) in similar VHS of kinescope of the original “Requiem For A Heavyweight”. Not to mention Maxie “Slapsie” Rosenbloom !
What would theaters be without movies ? I recommend the Clive Barker short story, “Son Of Celluloid”, from “The Books Of Blood” (1987)for further exploration of this question.
That is such a great idea. it would avoid all the clutter that is in a theater like the Ridgewood, unrelated to the Ridgewood, and these kind of topics come up in many many theaters because people are starving for a place like that to discuss random mtheater information, but there’s no place to discuss it unless we use a theater. WHat’s happened in the Ridgewood section is that people use it because they know others check this theater often as it’s a popular theater to begin with, as most of the main members of the site congregate here too.
Sorry, Lost. I misread Mike’s comments. I see the big picture now. Crank. Cranky. How’d I miss that one? I’ll go stand in the corner now, for a bit.
Not that this discussion should continue to clutter this theater’s page, but since the damage is already done, let’s toss caution to the wind… Are you suggesting that someone add a single new “research” theater in order to create a single space here where folks can ask membership to help, say, identify a mystery theater? Or do you propose folks add a new “research” theater for each new mystery they wish to have solved? The latter would result in a lot of clutter with folks posting “new” mystery theaters before thoroughly searching the existing database and would result in a lot of “clean up” work for Bryan. But the former sounds like a very good stop-gap measure until a more ideal solution could be provided.
So a big “A” to our resident crank for a “great idea” and a nice shiny star as well, for good measure.
Sheesh that fella is a crank. I don’t fully understand this lostmemory but I also vote A. There should be a research page to avoid theatre clutter.
I vote ‘A’ and I had the same idea, but due to a computor failure over the past 5 days…..you beat me to it! lol
Bway, I should’ve noted that the link was 4th from bottom on my profile list. Wish I could’ve saved you some unnecessary work. Sorry.
I just posted on the July link about adding something to CT the ideas you fellows espoused for an “Inquiry” or “Research” page. Am inviting anyone here to piggyback on it in the hopes that the powers-that-be will consider employing it in the near future.
Here’s the link for that news item. It took a while to find it.
She’s right.
http://cinematreasures.org/news/14430_0_1_160_C/
Before I bail out and head over to the refrigerated and frozen food aisles of my local supermarket (to keep cool in this atrocious heatwave!), thought I’d call attention to the 7/15 entry by Betsy Rae in the “Ridgewood Theatre to close” news item posted by Patrick Crowley back in March. A very heartfelt essay. Hope we hear more from Ms. Betsy on this page in the near future.
PK, tried to access the “SubTalk” section the other day, as you recently suggested, but it only seems to go back 10 pages' worth. Can you recall the exact subject title or provide a way to delve back further? Appreciate it!
BTW, in your honor last night, I watched the ubiquitous Whit Bissell AND John Agar in “Creature From the Black Lagoon” (‘54) and “Attack of the Puppet People” ('58), respectively. I ask you, good sir: What would all CT’s architectural triumphs and losers, all these grand palaces and “itch” dives, all these proverbial “Orchids and Onions” be without all the wonderful, scary, funny, sad, colorful, dark, amazing films to be viewed in? I suspect that they’d be extremely hollow and haunted…
Thanks for the photos, Lost Memory.
Yes, BklynJim, “Unifing The Subways” is an excellent book. It contains a few errors of photo captioning and identification, but, then again, nothing and no one is perfect.
I may have posted at length about the theater I had in mind on “SubTalk” of www.nycsubway.org, or perhaps sent a private e-mail to Bway, who may be of further help.
You sure you don’t feel like Whit Bissel? Check out the Cinart page. I dropped some tawdry clippings there and verified that theater’s address as 102 Court.
Lab coat. Goggles. Mouse. Feel like Clint Eastwood in “Revenge of the Creature.”
Info sounds great, Ed, and is greatly appreciated! Will utilize it once I’m back in NY or if I befriend some lady PC guru here in La La Land. Will let you know if and when it flies…:)
BrooklynJim… If you have a computer with a DVD player, you should be able to pause the image at the right moment and then capture the screen shot (on a Windows PC it is CTRL+Print Screen buttons). You should then be able to paste that image into your photo editor and can then crop away any extraneous information (say your desktop background or whatever) and… voila!
Sounds easy enough, right? Most theories do until you try to put them into practice! Anyway, can’t hurt to try. See how it works out. The most primitive jury-rig solution would be to take a digitial photo of your TV screen while the DVD is paused. It would work best on an LCD or Plasma screen, but you can experiment. Get out the lab coat and goggles and have a go!
No need to be more specific, PKoch, as it was I who was somewhat vague when I wrote that I was “looking for the Boro Hall Theatre.” I meant as a CT page. The Cinart, also on Court St., is listed without a number. Boro Hall was 102 Court. It is a bit unclear to me if this was, in fact, a later version of the old BH.
BTW, the book you cited by Frederick Kramer is excellent, as are all his others. I shipped my copy back to NY earlier this year. I’ll try to have a friend scan and post a number of pix from it and other sources in the fall or early winter. I wish I knew how to freeze-frame a DVD or VHS shot to capture it for CT readers. Aaarrggghhh! The BH marquee, although visible for only a second or three, is crystal-clear in its clarity and composition. (The color scenes with the Ridgewood and RKO Madison Theaters are somewhat grainy and, as they were filmed late in the day, not quite as well-lit as the B&W scenes of the Farragut and BH Theaters, but certainly no less enjoyable and equally well-documented for historians, current film/theater aficianados, and future generations of movie-goers.)
BklynJim, I think I may have once posted on CT about the Boro Hall Theater, having seen it in a photo in a book titled “Unifying The Subways”, that showed part of the Myrtle el near the Sands St. Terminal over a part of Myrtle Avenue, west of Jay Street, that no longer exists. Sorry I can’t be more specific.
Due to MetroTech center in downtown Bklyn, Myrtle Avenue now only exists west of Flatbush Avenue extension as a pedestrian mall.
For what it’s worth, I vote with KenRoe, Bway and Lost Memory for some kind of “Research” or “Inquiry” CT page. It makes a ton of sense, rather than having us inquiring mind-types continually chasing leads on busy and/or popular pages such as the Ridgewood’s.
Until then, however, I’ll add here that I’m presently looking for the Boro Hall Theatre, formerly located at 102 Court St. in downtown Brooklyn. I’m not certain that the Cinart, which is CT listed, was actually a later incarnation of the Boro Hall, mentioned in my 7/18 post. Ayudu, anyone?