Last week I took my kids to see a movie at the iconic Plaza Atlanta theatre (opened in 1939), and as we were sitting there in the dark, waiting for the show to start, I started thinking about my history with the place, and about how so many of my childhood memories are connected to the movies...
I remember my cousin, Harolene Mushegan Leguizamon, taking me and some of my other cousins to see both 'Swiss Family Robinson' and 'One Hundred and One Dalmatians' there, and how much fun that was for all of us...both flicks must have been in a second run (as Disney used to do back then), since they came out in 1960 and 1961, respectively, and I would have been too young to remember that far back...but it was definitely in the early 60's, and both occasions are great childhood memories for me...in the 70's The Plaza became a porn theatre for a few years, and I used to stand in front of it and preach on the sidewalk to get some of the patrons "saved"...(it was a different time, and that's a different story)...
I've often said that the first movie I really remember seeing at a theatre (our denomination frowned on going to the cinema, so we very rarely went, and only then if we were out of town so that church members couldn't see us) was the The Sound Of Music... but that can't be right, because it came out in '65, and I have vague memories of being in a back seat of a car at a drive-in with my parents, who were watching It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), and I would have been 4 or 5 years old then...but the Sound of Music was definitely my first experience at The Fox Theatre, and it made a huge impression on me, and really officially started my love for movies on the big screen that remains to this day...
One of my most favorite movie memories was with my other cousin, Janet Mushegan Watson, who is 3 years older than me...she and I were both major fans of the TV show Dark Shadows, and in 1970 the producers of that show made a movie called House of Dark Shadows that we REALLY wanted to see...and (amazingly) our moms let us go see it by ourselves! I would have been 12 then, and she would have been 15, so neither of us drove, and both of our moms were super protective, and the movie was pretty edgy to say the least, so I/we couldn't believe that they actually let us go see it...but sure enough I remember my Aunt Myrtle driving us to the theatre that used to be at Ansley Mall way back in the day (where Kroger is now), and dropping us off...the movie was terrifying and we loved it, and I don't think I had ever felt that grown up before...going to the movies without adult supervision, especially one that was that mature...well, that was huge...
Another great memory that I have was also from around that time... Gone with the Wind, which I had never seen, was in a re-release at the famed 'Leow's Grand Theatre' in '70 or '71 where it had actually premiered in 1939...my dad and I went to a matinee there and saw it, and that memory is a special Atlanta one for me because I was able to see the famous film in its theatre of origin, and because that theatre burned in 1978 and is there no more...my dad and I always had very different taste in movies, but we both liked movies about the war in Viet Nam (probably for different reasons), so we saw quite a few of those together over the years...
Then I have lots of shared movie memories with my friend Howard Blount...we weren't "allowed" to go to the movies at our Christian college, but somehow that never stopped us from seeing lots of things between the years 1976 and 1980...Grease, 'The Wiz', and many, many horror movies that shall remain nameless...even now when we go visit Howie at his cabin in the mountains, he always brings a big box of classic flicks, and we spend all of our indoor time devouring as many movies as we can...it's one of my favorite things to do...
To be continued...
No comments:
Post a Comment