Opening the next day at the Ohio Theatre were perennial Lorain favorites Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall and the Bowery Boys in Loose In London.
In this installment of the popular movie comedy series, the gang travels to London so that Sach (Huntz Hall) can claim his inheritance. Here's the movie trailer:
(I remember the first time I saw the Bowery Boys was in the early 1970s, when Channel 43 showed the old comedies on Sunday mornings, billing them as the Dead End Kids. My brothers and I were soon imitating Huntz Hall, wearing our baseball caps with the brim turned up as we shouted, "Hey, Chief!")For theater goers who preferred more mature movie fare, there was Gentlemen Prefer Blondes at the Tivoli with Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell. (Contrary to the movie title, and I'm probably in the minority, but I prefer Jane Russell to Marilyn, especially since Miss Russell made a lot of appearances in Westerns.)
Elsewhere on the movie page, we had Audie Murphy (another GRIT TV favorite of mine) in The Duel at Silver Creek (1952) playing at the Lorain Drive-in. It was a pretty good Don Siegel-directed movie – with Lee Marvin in it too! (BTW, during her last few years living at home, Mom was a real Audie Murphy fan too, watching all of his movies on GRIT.)
Linda Darnell was also playing at the Lorain Drive In.Island of Desire is a good 1950's style romance drama.Tab Hunter was in it also.Sadly,Darnell passed away in a house fire in the mid 1960's.Her career was on the skids and she fell asleep smoking a cigarette and was badly burned on over 90% of her body.She was a very popular pin up during WWII.Many of our boys died fighting for our country with her photo in their possession.
ReplyDeleteThey sure had a lot of movie theaters back then. I suppose it was one of the more popular forms of entertainment back then. I don't believe Lorain has any theaters today. What a shame, the largest city in the county without a movie theater. Even tiny little Amherst still has a theater.
ReplyDeleteTHE QUIET MAN is one of my favorites, one that I 've seen many times; Wayne and O'Hara were a force to be reckoned with.
ReplyDeleteIt did feel strange, to travel down Broadway, and think of where all the theaters used to be, and stranger still to think on the fact that it's been forty-six years since Broadway had a movie theater (the Palace being a "Civic Center", after all).
Spa fon, y'all!
I can't understand how people back then got along without horror films and comic-book spin-offs.
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