Turnpike Indoor/Outdoor Theatre
Route 18 and Tices Lane,
East Brunswick,
NJ
08816
Route 18 and Tices Lane,
East Brunswick,
NJ
08816
2 people favorited this theater
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Circa 1960 marquee photo added credit Vintage East Brunswick Facebook page.
Final night of operation for the drive-in was September 3, 1984 with “Bachelor Party” and “Porky’s”
I was raised mostly in East Brunswick so I remember this theater well.. I did ride on that train when I was very young. Our family needed money for a while so my dad got a night job working in the sit down theater for a few months. Another story: My brother and I and some neighbor friends walked into the place one Saturday morning from the woods behind it. We were basically trespassing. I guess it was the manager or someone drove up to us and asked what were we doing. We didn’t know, we were just wandering around, far from home. We asked him for some free passes. He said no but somehow we worked out a deal where if we cleaned up all the trash that people threw out their car windows the Friday night before. He’d give use some free tickets. Looked like acres of trash. It seemed like it took forever but we picked up all the trash and we got free tickets to one movie. We kept showing up for a few weeks after that each Saturday morning and got free tickets each time. I recall one movie we saw with those tickets. It was Hard Days Night. One time the guy fronted us the tickets because we came late and the trash was already picked up. He told us to come on Sunday morning instead. We didn’t show! He thought we burned him. We showed up the following Saturday and made good on it. Another story:As we go older and in High School, we used to hide people on the floor in the back of the car and sneak them in. Another story: My buddy JB had this Pontiac Lemans, I think that’s what it was. It was a convertible, red. He’d pull in with the top down and buy a ticket. This was a huge car with a giant trunk. We were able to hide 5 guys in that trunk. They weren’t at all suspicious. Another story: I had a date one night and we were watching “Night Of The Living Dead”. I had to go and use the bathroom. She locked all the doors. After I was done I sneaked up to the car and shook it. She was so scared, she peed on the front seat. I don’t know if I stayed on topic or not. I figure someone might get a kick out of reading this. Shoots. I turn 67 in a couple of weeks. It might be the last time I get to tell any of these stories.
March 3rd, 1978 grand opening ad for the indoor twin cinema in the photo section.
November 20th, 1963 grand opening ad for the indoor theatre also in the photo section. The indoor theatre seated 1,000 and the drive-in had room for 1,600 cars. Must had up to 5,000 people on a busy night.
This opened on March 19th, 1958. I uploaded the grand opening ad in the photo section.
Aerial photo uploaded showing the separate parking area for the indoor theatre.
Hi Guys. I remember riding that train. I remember the loop up by rt. 18 but I can’t remember how far back it went. I don’t think it made it all the way to tice’s lane. I’ve often wondered what ever happen it. The oldest I would have been was 10 or 12 I think. So it ran until at least 66 but more like 1970 or so. It sat in that little shed for the whole time that the drive in was open I guess. Thanks for the memory. Those tall thin steel cans of “yoohoo” and paper drinking straws. thanks again…..Gary
Joe, that is a great article! Thanks for posting. It seems to confirm something I have long suspected: that the chain of NJ “U/A” Drive-ins were not actually built by U/A, but were acquired as a chain at some point during the decline of drive-in popularity. In my experience U/A certainly did not seem to take a lot of interest in maintaining them.
I wonder how many theaters the Appleman family built to this general design? I know of The Turnpike Drive-In, The Plainfield-Edison Indoor/Outdoor Theatre, The Somerville Drive-in, and I was always told that the now demolished “Birch Hill” nightclub near Old Bridge NJ had been a U/A Drive-in at one time. I am assuming these were all built by the same people (presumably the Applman family) because they share a similar look.
Appeal for information: the Turnpike Drive-In had a large-scale miniature railroad that ran in a big figure “8” around the grounds near the marquee. It would have been visible from the major roadway that runs past the theatre. I would like to hear from anyone who has memories of this train ride actually operating. A scan of a photo would be a great find.
You see, my family managed to save a little piece of the Turnpike Drive-In. About 1988 we answered an ad from a scrap metal dealer that ran in The Paper Shop. The advertiser sold us the remains of the passenger cars from this little train; apparently this was the scrapper who had been contracted to tear down the theater for redevelopment.
One of these days I’d like to rebuild the cars to the way they looked when new at the Turnpike Drive-in. I know what the bodies looked like, but a photo would be tremendously helpful in recreating the original paint scheme and lettering.
Does anyone know when this kiddie train concession stopped running? I visited the Turnpike Drive-in while it was still showing movies indoors and out (late 1970s/early 1980s) but by that time the train was rusting inside a wooden shed, and the shed roof had actually collapsed on the train in places. There was not much left to buy from the scrapper – but we saved what we could.
If you have a memory or photo to share of the train ride at the Turnpike Drive-In please feel free to drop me an email:
ray59 @ pa.metrocast.net (remove the spaces first)
thank you, Rick
Cool idea.
The Turnpike Drive-In was nearing completion when Boxoffice published this article about it in their issue of March 3, 1958. The indoor theater, though planned from the beginning, was built after the drive-in had opened. The architect for the entire project was Drew Eberson.
I saw The Deep and The World According to Garp here.
My friend’s mom worked in concessions there. I remember getting in for free, getting free food and drinks and just hanging out there.
Then there were the deep fried hamburgers we “cooked” up…guess with enough beer/weed they were edible enough…
This was always such a bizarre concept – paying as you drove into the complex and then parking in what was bascially the parking spaces for the drive-in. The theatre always seemed rather dumpy and was never a favorite of mine. I remember seeing THE EVIL DEAD at the drive-in, or rather trying to see the EVIL DEAD, as a thick fog rolled in and made the already dark movie hard to see or comprehend. So my friend made up her own interpretation of what happened in the plot, which made the experience quite enjoyable.
I worked there in late 70s…Yes great sound system for certain movies…Drive-in was a zoo, $4 a carload so the place for punks to drink unmolested for hours, not always fun for workers…
The showing of Sylvester Stallone’s Nighthawks that I saw with my father was marred by rumbling Sensurround effects from Battlestar Galactica next door in Theater 1 . I think Theater 2 was the rear half of what was once a single screen auditorium. I never attended the drive-in theater here.