Drive-in Theaters

They date back to 1933


June 7, 2012 (Thursday)
”picdrive%20in.jpgYesterday Google’s logo on its search page was a reminder that June 6, 1933 was the date of the first drive-in theater (near Camden, New Jersey). It was the brainchild of Richard M. Hollingshead, Jr., who advertised, “The whole family is welcome, regardless of how noisy the children are.”
I used to drive to the outdoor theaters in Houston with my younger siblings, and, as I recall, we had some good times together. Before the in-car speakers were introduced, we had to make the best of a less-than-perfect situation with loud speakers mounted on or near the screen. Sometimes it was difficult to hear. Then there were those nights in Houston when the fog rolled in, and you had difficulty seeing as well as hearing. Also in Houston, there were the ever-present mosquitoes, and sometimes there were swarms of them that drove the patrons back to their homes. There were no “Off” products, only oil of citronella, the odor of which sometimes filled the entire area as car after car made use of it. Gulfspray was not very successful, because the car windows were usually open — going to drive-ins was mostly a summertime activity.
When Wanda and I first married, we enjoyed movies in the regular theaters, but after our children were born, it was always the drive-in theater that got our business. There were play areas there for the children and concession stands filled with goodies. Before moving to Rockport, we never lived in areas frequented by hordes of mosquitoes, as in Houston, so it was a nearly ideal place to go with the kids. We saw movies outdoors in Austin, Fort Worth, Waco and Dallas.
Nearly every town, including Rockport, had a drive-in theater. I remember in the Seventies, while I was on a trip to Dallas for some kind of church-related meeting, Wanda took the kids to the drive-in in Rockport to see “Fiddler On the Roof.” Wesley Morgan was the projectionist at the theater, a part-time job for him because his main job was delivering mail door to door in the daytime.
Ah, those were the days.