Photos favorited by Gerald A. DeLuca

  • <p>View of the stage from the main floor.</p>
  • <p>August 6, 1950</p>
  • <p>January 9, 1946. Russian film “Once There Was a Girl,” set during the German siege of Leningrad.</p>
  • <p>March 19, 1957</p>
  • <p>Advertised as Hindenburg (November 9th, 1932)</p>
  • <p>May 21, 1948.</p>
  • <p>February 4, 1959</p>
  • <p>September 23, 1954. “Napoli Milionaria.”</p>
  • <p>Kaywood Theatre box office at opening in 1945.</p>
  • <p>November 12, 1937.</p>
  • <p>October 19, 1952. After the New York banning, the restriction would ultimately be lifted when the Supreme Court decided that film is a form of free speech, protected by the 1st Amendment. Not only is this a great movie, it is an important one historically.</p>
  • <p>September 24, 1927</p>
  • <p>September 24, 1927. A John Ford film.</p>
  • <p>October 30, 1914 notice in The Olneyville Times. The new theatre had opened on Tuesday, October 27, 1914.</p>
  • <p>March 16, 1951. Re-opening ad.</p>
  • <p>July 13, 1957.  “Without Pity” (“Senza pieta'”)was a gritty neo-realist Italian melodrama directed by Alberto Lattuada.</p>
  • <p>April 8, 1950</p>
  • <p>May 1st, 1950 ad</p>
  • <p>In 1941.</p>
  • <p>1940s photo via Randall Friedrich‎.</p>
  • <p>April 21, 1955</p>
  • <p>December 15, 1957</p>
  • <p>Found ticket from the Mecca Theatre. Thanks to Instagram’s @closetarcheology</p>
  • <p>Lengthy entry of the B.S. Moss Theatre in 1928</p>