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Boxoffice-July.29.1963

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JULY 29, 1963<br />

^<br />

*7^ TuAe e^ 'ine metjeft HctuM jrncLd^<br />

IlV^T' ' •.-•i'-»<br />

Celebrating its tenth anniversary, the Heart Drive-ln, Kansas City, Mo., this summer began a series of<br />

Sunday afternoon Swap and Shop "flea market" sessions on the drive-in parking area. The public is invited<br />

to bring "junk" from attics and basements and trade or sell it from 1 to 5 p.m. each Sunday afternoon. The<br />

Story on page 11.<br />

. .<br />

Heart attraction board advertising the start of the sale is shown in the photo above .<br />

Developments Stress<br />

Rise in Promotion<br />

Sttcond Clou pottoyc paid at Kanso* City, Mo.<br />

NATIONAL EXECUTIVE EDITION<br />

Including the Stctiwul Ncwi Pagri of All Editions<br />

On Local<br />

Level<br />

ji


QyfCtoiZt:<br />

DISTRIBUTOR CHAIRMEN<br />

ALBANY


y/ie7i(^oftA£^?/l&cn?^ictme/nduAh//<br />

rHE NATIONAL FILM WEEKLY<br />

Published in Nine Sectional Editions<br />

BEN SHLYEN<br />

Editor-in-Chief and Publisher<br />

30NALD M. MERSEREAU, Associate<br />

Publisher & General Manager<br />

lESSE SHLYEN Managing Editor<br />

HUGH FRAZE Field Editor<br />

\L STEEN Eastern Editor<br />

,. L. THATCHER Equipment Editor<br />

viORRIS 5CHL0ZMAN Business Mgr.<br />

Publication Offices: 825 Van Brunt Blvd.<br />

\ansas City 24, Mo. Jesse Shiyen, Maniglng<br />

Editor: Morris Schlozman, Business<br />

llanager: Hugh Fraze, Field BkUtor: I. L.<br />

I'hatdier. Editor Tile Modern Theatre<br />

iectlon. Telephone CHestmit 1-7777.<br />

Editorial Offices: 1270 Sixth Ave., Rockeeller<br />

Center. Nevi York 20, N. Y. Donald<br />

il. Mersereau, Associate Publisher &<br />

3ereral Manager; Al Steen. Eastern Edior.<br />

Telephone COlumbus 5-6370.<br />

;entral Offices: Edllorlal—920 N. Mlchgan<br />

Ave., Chicago 11, 111.. Frances B.<br />

:iow. Telephone Superior 7-3972. Adver-<br />

Jsing—5809 North Uncoln, Louis Dldler<br />

ind Jack Broderlck, Telephone LOngheach<br />

1-5284.<br />

Western Offices: Editorial and Film Adver-<br />

Islng—6362 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood<br />

!8, Calif., Syd Cassyd. Telephone HOllytood<br />

5-1186. Equipment and Non-FUm<br />

Xdvertlslng—New York Ufe Bldg.. 2801<br />

iVest Sixth St.. Los Angeles 57, Calif.<br />

Sob Wettsteln. manager. Telephone Dunkirk<br />

8-2286.<br />

London Office: Anthony Gruner. 1 Woodjerry<br />

Way. Finchley, N. 12. Telephone<br />

Hillside 6733.<br />

Tlie MODEKN THBATItE Section Is In-<br />

;luded In the first issue of each month.<br />

Mbany: J. S. Conners, 140 Stat« St.<br />

\tlanta: Mary Charles Watts, 205 Walton<br />

St., N. W.<br />

[{altimore: George Browning, 119 E.<br />

25lh St.<br />

Soston: Guy Livingston, 80 Boylston,<br />

Boston, Mass.<br />

larlotte: Blanche Carr, 301 S. Church.<br />

;;incinnati: Frances Hanford, UNlverslty<br />

1-7180.<br />

Cleveland: W. Ward Marsh. Plain Dealer.<br />

Columbus: Fred Oesti-elcfaer. 62 V& W.<br />

North Broadway.<br />

Dallas: Mable Guinan, 6927 Wlnton.<br />

Denver: Bruce Marshall. 2881 S. Cherry<br />

Way.<br />

Des Jlolnes: Pat Cooney. 2727 49th St.<br />

Detroit: H. F. Iteves. 906 Fox Theatre<br />

Bldg., woodward 2-1144.<br />

Hartford: Allen M. Wldem, CII. 9-8211.<br />

Indianapolis: Norma Geraghty, 436 N.<br />

Illinois St.<br />

Jacksonville: liohert Cornwall, 1199 Edgewood<br />

Ave.<br />

Manchester, N. H. : Guy Langley, P.O.<br />

Box 56.<br />

Memphis: Null Adams, 707 Spring St.<br />

Miami: Martha Lummus,' 622 N.E. 98 St.<br />

Milwaukee: Wm. Nlchol, 2251 S. Layton.<br />

Minneapolis: Paul Nelson, 3220 Park Ave.<br />

S.<br />

New Orleans: Mrs. Jack Auslet, 2268%<br />

St. Claude Ave.<br />

Oklahoma aty: Sam Brunk. 3416 N.<br />

Virginia.<br />

Omaha: Irving Baker, 5108 Izard St.<br />

Philadelphia: Al Zuraivskl, The Bulletin<br />

Pittsburgh: R. F. laingensmith. 516 Jeanette,<br />

Wllklnsburg. 412-241-2809.<br />

Portland, Ore.: Arnold Marks, Journal.<br />

St. Louis: Joe Ic Joan Pollack, 7335<br />

Shaftsbury. University City. PA 5-7181<br />

Salt Lake City: 11. Pearson. Deseret News.<br />

San Francisco: Dolores Barusch, 25 Taylor<br />

St., ORdvvay 3-4813; Advertising:<br />

Jerry Nowell, 417 Market St., YUkon<br />

2-9537.<br />

Wasliington: Virginia It. Collier, 2308<br />

Ashmead Place, N. W., DUpont 7-0892.<br />

In Canada<br />

Montreal: Room 314, 625 Belmont St.,<br />

Jules Larochelle.<br />

St. John: 43 Waterloo, Sam Babb.<br />

Toronto: 2676 Bayview Ave., Wlllowdale,<br />

Ont. W. Gladlsh.<br />

Van«ouvcr: 411 Lyric Theatre Bldg. 751<br />

Granville St., Jack Droy.<br />

Winnipeg: The Tribune, Jim Peters.<br />

Member Audit Bureau of Circulations<br />

Second Class postage paid at Kansas City,<br />

Mo. Sectional Edition, J3.00 per year<br />

National Edition, $7.60.<br />

JULY<br />

^<br />

S<br />

^<br />

OPERATION LOCAL-LEVEL


Terrell Voices Enthusiasm<br />

For New MGM Lineup<br />

NEW YORK— Optimism and enthusiasm<br />

are lunninL.. hjch at the Metro-Goldwyn-<br />

Maycr home office<br />

because of the lineup<br />

of strong attractions<br />

scheduled for<br />

the fall and winter<br />

seasons. In addition,<br />

Dan Terrell<br />

three current attractions<br />

are turning in<br />

big boxoffice grosses.<br />

Discussing the program<br />

this week, Dan<br />

Terrell, director of<br />

advertising, publicity<br />

and exploitation, said<br />

t h a t t h e "real<br />

Sleeper of the year was "Flipper " MGM<br />

toppers had regarded the film as a good<br />

family picture and ideal summer fare but<br />

Terrell said, it could have gone "either<br />

way." As an example of its drawing power<br />

he pointed out that in the first five days of<br />

a New England saturation in the first wave<br />

of 78 theatres, the picture grossed more<br />

than S325.000. There will be three waves<br />

of New England saturation engagements<br />

totalling 134 theatres.<br />

Other summer fare<br />

doing good business<br />

includes "Captain Sindbad" and "Tarzan's<br />

Three Challenges." he said.<br />

While MGM has been a little light on<br />

summer releases, the balance of the year<br />

and into February offer a bright view<br />

Terrell said the company's big fall entry<br />

wou d be -nie V.IP.S" starring Elizabeth<br />

Taylor and Richard Burton, plus seven<br />

other stars who must get equal billing<br />

NGC Suggesis Plan<br />

For Dislribufion<br />

HOLLYWOOLX- -We think we can distribute<br />

for a good deal less than the present<br />

antiquated and outmoded distribution<br />

system with its 150 salesmen and 31 exchanges,"<br />

Irving H. Levin, vice-president<br />

of National General Coi-p., told <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

We can visualize having five good salesmen<br />

cover the major outlets and then make<br />

arrangements with existing distributing<br />

groups to pick up bookings for the rest of<br />

the country, .something like the system used<br />

by Continental. Most Important of all<br />

"<br />

Levin added, "with our closed-circuit theatre<br />

boxoffice plan, these men will be kept<br />

occupied; there will be little deadwood in<br />

this type of operation."<br />

Levin .said that the plan NGC was presenting<br />

to top creative producers, directors<br />

and stars, to get top product, was based on<br />

the fact that the costs of distribution would<br />

not eat up the profits of the pictures Additionally,<br />

he .said. It made sen.se to the<br />

bankers, for It lowered the risk on any major<br />

Investment In motion picture properties<br />

because of the possible additional spread<br />

in profits.<br />

1<br />

under their contracts. Terrell said he had<br />

seen the picture in Rome and London at<br />

the recent foreign sales meetings and that<br />

it created considerable enthusiasm. Booked<br />

for Radio City Music Hall to follow Universal's<br />

"The Thrill of It All," "The<br />

V.I.P.S" is scheduled for September 26 release.<br />

It now has between 300 and 400<br />

domestic playdates and between 200 and<br />

300 in the foreign market.<br />

"Twilight of Honor" will be the big attraction<br />

for October, a month which also<br />

will have "The Golden Arrow" and "Tiko<br />

and the Shark" on its schedule. Dick<br />

Chamberlain is the star of "Twilight" and<br />

Tab Hunter heads the cast of "Arrow."<br />

"Tiko" has a Polynesian cast.<br />

Terrell said two big ones were scheduled<br />

for November: "Sunday in New York," with<br />

Rod Taylor, Jane Fonda and Cliff Robertson,<br />

and "The Wheeler Dealers," with<br />

James Garner and Lee Remick.<br />

MGM's Christmas picture will be "The<br />

Prize," which director Mark Robson currently<br />

IS shooting with Paul Newman Edward<br />

G. Robinson, Elke Sommer and Diane<br />

Baker in top roles.<br />

"Of Human Bondage," with Kim Novak<br />

and Laurence Harvey, and "Children of the<br />

Damned." with a British cast, will be the<br />

January releases. "Night Must Fall" has<br />

been slated for release in February.<br />

In addition, MGM will have a saturation<br />

picture in November, "Gladiator Seven."<br />

A meeting of MGM's field promotion<br />

staff has been set for August 2-3 in Chicago<br />

to discuss plans for the release of<br />

"The V.I.P.S," Terrell said.<br />

Oenoral Electric shipped technical peo-<br />

pie to the coast on July 26 for the first<br />

installation of the Talaria closed-circuit<br />

television system in the Village Tlieatre in<br />

Westwood. Due to some modifications in<br />

the equipment, this has delayed the test<br />

demonstrations which had been tentatively<br />

scheduled for late July, stated Levin. Pi-oductions<br />

are being mounted on tape by the<br />

group headed by Gower Champion," who<br />

also IS trying to develop properties.<br />

Cooper Foundation Ncanes<br />

Dickeson Acting G.M.<br />

LINCOLN, NEB.-Roger V. Dickeson has<br />

been appointed acting general manager of<br />

^rvxgm' Cooper Foundation, it<br />

*** ^y<br />

'^ announced by Erie<br />

\,:-4 Campbell, president.<br />

Dickeson, a partner<br />

"J<br />

• in the Lincoln law<br />

• ^^ m finn of Mason. Knud-<br />

^7 .sen. Dickeson & Berk-<br />

^ heimer, succeeds<br />

- Jf\ Kenneth E. Ander-<br />

Jjw^^ '^""'<br />

W^^^^H .signed to go into mo-<br />

^^ ^^^k tlon picture produc-<br />

^^^" tlon and dlstrlbu-<br />

\vho recently re-<br />

Roger V. Dickeson '^'°"' along with the<br />

general investment<br />

business in the Los Angeles area.<br />

Darryl Zanuck Named<br />

MP Pioneer of 1963<br />

NEW YORK-Darryl F. Zanuck. president<br />

of 20th Centuiy-Fox and the producer<br />

of "The Longest<br />

Day." has been<br />

selected as Motion<br />

Picture Pioneer of thi><br />

year 1963 by the Motion<br />

Picture Pioneers.<br />

Zanuck. who will be<br />

honored by the Pioneers<br />

at the annual<br />

dinner in New York<br />

November 25. was selected<br />

unanimously<br />

by the MPP board of<br />

directors "f o r his<br />

Darryl<br />

brilliant<br />

F.<br />

leadership<br />

Zanuck<br />

that has reinvigorated 20th Century-Pox<br />

• .<br />

and<br />

. for the vision and courage that<br />

have characterized his career as one of<br />

the world's foremost producers."<br />

Zanuck, whose career in the film business<br />

pre-dates the era of sound, succeeded<br />

to the presidency of 20th-Fox last August<br />

When the company's fortunes had ebbed<br />

perilously low. The company has since<br />

staged a remarkable recovery, returning<br />

to profitable operation— the result of prudent<br />

and vigorous management practices<br />

the Pioneers pointed out.<br />

Three of Zanuck 's productions were<br />

honored as best films, in their respective<br />

years, by the Academy of Motion Picture<br />

Alts and Sciences, namely "How Green<br />

Was My Valley" (1941.. "Gentlemen's<br />

Agreement" (1947). and "All About Eve"<br />

119501 "The Longest Day" was named<br />

best film by the National Board of Review<br />

in 1962 and received five "Oscarnominations.<br />

Zanuck was the first recipient, in 1937 of<br />

the Irving Thalberg Award from the Motion<br />

Picture Academy and he was selected<br />

lor the same honor twice more, in 1944 and<br />

1950. He was head of production for 20th-<br />

Pox for 25 years, starting in the mid-<br />

1930s, and he formed his own production<br />

company in 1956, remaining as an independent<br />

producer until being named president<br />

of 20th-Fox last year.<br />

The Motion Picture Pioneers came into<br />

existence in 1939 and. since 1947 has<br />

designated a Pioneer of the Year to be<br />

honored at its annual banquet. Last<br />

year's pioneer was Milton R. Rackmil. The<br />

first to be honored was Adolph Zukor<br />

Oscar A. Doob to Write<br />

Column on Retirement<br />

NEW YORK—Oscar A. Doob. former executive<br />

of Loew's Theatres and Metro-<br />

Goldwyn-Mayer. will write a weekly syndicated<br />

column for the North American<br />

Newspaper Alliance, starting Julv 28. "Joys<br />

and Jolts of Retirement" will be the title<br />

of the column.<br />

The column, dealing with the social and<br />

luiinnn interest aspects of retirement will<br />

bo ser\iced to 90 Sunday and dally newspapers.<br />

Doob. who began his career on the Cincinnati<br />

Enquirer, retired from Loew's several<br />

year.s ago and has made a hobby of<br />

writing on retirement.<br />

BOXOFTICE July 29, 1963


Columbia Sets 14 Features<br />

For Next Eight Months<br />

NEW YORK—Columbia Pictures will release<br />

at least 14 major films dui-ing the<br />

next eight months, it was announced<br />

Wednesday (24) by Rube Jackter, vicepresident<br />

and general sales manager during<br />

the opening session of Columbia's<br />

three-day sales meeting at New York's<br />

Savoy Hilton Hotel.<br />

Referring to the product as "the most<br />

important and impressive array of top<br />

features in any similar period in Columbia's<br />

history," Jackter outlined an extensive<br />

long range plan for "blue-chip" sales handling<br />

during the coming months.<br />

'GroGET' LEADS SCHEDULE<br />

Leading off the schedule of releases in<br />

August is Jerry Bresler's "Gidget Goes to<br />

Rome," which has its world premiere<br />

throughout the Pittsburgh territory in a<br />

120-theatre area break on July 31.<br />

Slated for September release is Irwin<br />

Shaw's and Robert Parrish's "In the<br />

French Style," featuring Jean Seberg and<br />

Stanley Baker. Also scheduled for September<br />

is Norman Maurer's "The Three<br />

Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze."<br />

October will see the premiere of Carol<br />

Reed's "The Running Man," starring<br />

Laurence Harvey, Lee Remick and Alan<br />

Bates. Also slated for October: William<br />

Castle-Hammer Films' "The Old Dark<br />

House," with Tom Poston, and "Maniac,"<br />

produced by Jimmy Sangster and directed<br />

by Michael Carreras, starring Kerwin<br />

Mathews.<br />

Columbia's November release will be<br />

"Under the Yum Yum Tree," starring Jack<br />

Lemmon and Carol Lynley, Dean Jones<br />

and Edie Adams.<br />

Otto Preminger's "The Cardinal" will<br />

have its world premiere on December 11 in<br />

Saxon Theatre, followed by New<br />

Boston's<br />

York's DeMille Theatre on December 12,<br />

both on a reserved-seat basis. It stars Tom<br />

Tryon, Romy Schneider, Carol Lynley and<br />

John Huston.<br />

Carl Foreman's "The Victors," which will<br />

have special' prerelease openings in December<br />

in New York and Los Angeles, will<br />

be nationally released in Februai-y- Its star<br />

cast is headed by Vincent Edwards, Albert<br />

Finney, George Hamilton, Melina Mercouri,<br />

Jeanne Moreau and George Peppard.<br />

EARLY 1964 RELEASES<br />

January releases are: "Dr. Strangelove<br />

or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and<br />

Love the Bomb," produced and directed by<br />

Stanley Kubrick with Peter Sellers, George<br />

Scott, Sterling Hayden and Keenan Wynn<br />

heading the cast; William Castle's "Strait-<br />

Jacket," starring Joan Crawford with<br />

Diane Baker and Leif Erickson.<br />

Set for early 1964 release are Fred Zinnemann's<br />

"Behold a Pale Horse" starring<br />

Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn and Omar<br />

Sharif; Robert Rossen's "Lilith," starring<br />

Jean Seberg, Warren Beatty and Peter<br />

Fonda; and "The Long Ships," produced<br />

by Irving Allen, starring Richard Widmark,<br />

Sidney Poitier, Rosanna Schiaffino and<br />

Russ Tamblyn.<br />

Norman Gluck Is Ncaned<br />

U Sales Coordinator<br />

NEW YORK—Norman E. Gluck, home<br />

office executive of Universal Pictures, has<br />

been named to the<br />

newly created post of<br />

sales coordinator of<br />

Norman Gluck<br />

the home office cabinet,<br />

according to<br />

Henry H. "Hi" Martin,<br />

vice - president<br />

and general sales<br />

manager.<br />

Gluck's activities<br />

will include supervision<br />

of the short<br />

subjects department,<br />

liaison between the<br />

sales department and<br />

advertising and publicity departments and<br />

assisting in the acquisition of outside pictures<br />

for theatrical distribution. He will<br />

continue to handle duties in connection<br />

with Universal's distribution agreements<br />

with Seven Arts and Screen Gems.<br />

Before joining Universal in 1946, Gluck<br />

had been associated with Skouras Theatres<br />

for 12 years. He left Universal in 1958 to<br />

join Screen Gems as vice-president of its<br />

TV commercial division and rejoined Universal<br />

in July 1960 on special assignments<br />

for president Milton R. Rackmil. He had<br />

been with RKO and independent circuits in<br />

the midwest and in upstate New York,<br />

prior to his association with Skouras<br />

Theatres.<br />

Skouras Planning Libel<br />

Action Against Wanger<br />

NEW YORK—Spyros P. Skouras, chairman<br />

of the board of directors of 20th<br />

Century-Fox Film Corp., has announced<br />

that legal proceedings will be instituted<br />

against Walter Wanger for libelous statements<br />

made about Skouras in Wanger's<br />

recently published paperback book about<br />

the production of "Cleopatra."<br />

The libel action will be included in a<br />

counterclaim to be filed in a suit brought<br />

by Wanger against 20th-Fox, Darryl F.<br />

Zanuck, Earl Wilson and Skouras.<br />

According to Skouras, the book is filled<br />

with inaccuracies, falsehoods and distortions,<br />

flatly contradicted by the record<br />

and contrary to Wanger's own statements<br />

in correspondence written during the production<br />

of "Cleopatra." Said Skouras: "Mr.<br />

Wanger's book contains a malicious and<br />

wholly groundless attack upon me as a film<br />

executive, and also as to my integrity and<br />

reputation as a man and I have referred<br />

the matter to my attorney, Mr. Louis<br />

Nizer, for appropriate action."<br />

Wolfe Joins Columbia<br />

NEW YORK—Joe Wolfe, a former associate<br />

editor of True Magazine, has joined<br />

the Columbia Pictui'es publicity department<br />

under Bud Rosenthal, publicity manager.<br />

Onepiece?<br />

Time was, this was called<br />

the one-piece bathing suit.<br />

Looks glued on, doesn't it?<br />

Notice how it goes in<br />

where it should go in?<br />

and how it twists<br />

where it should go out?<br />

Bertie Austin gets this swim<br />

suit when her husband<br />

buys her a swimming poolafter<br />

they've moved<br />

to the country.<br />

Bertie in her swim suit<br />

is a definite asset<br />

to the countryside.<br />

JANET LEIGH is<br />

Bertie Austin, one<br />

of the six stars of<br />

Wives<br />

ano<br />

L#veps<br />

i<br />

Your key<br />

^to big<br />

boxoff ice<br />

Mills<br />

TlOn<br />

BOXOFHCE :<br />

: July 29, 1963


National Screen Increases Its Program<br />

In Keeping With Exhibition Spark<br />

NEW YORK — Branch managers and<br />

home office executives of National Screen<br />

Service heard its president. Burton E. Robbins,<br />

declare that exhibition had embarked<br />

on an unprecedented promotion of feature<br />

product, at the opening session of a threeday<br />

meeting in the Savoy-Hilton Hotel.<br />

On that premise was the basis of a farreaching<br />

program detailed by Robbins during<br />

the sessions which opened Tuesday<br />

i23i.<br />

Robbins said that findings accrued from<br />

a market study, spanning several months.<br />

showed that exhibition and distribution<br />

would invest three times as much in the<br />

year ahead than in any prior 12-month<br />

period in promotional activities, including<br />

advertising and all other media utilized<br />

in patronage-building. He added that the<br />

NSS expansive program was in keeping<br />

with the exhilarated climate increasingly<br />

brightening the exhibition market.<br />

"The fact is," Robbins said, "that today<br />

exhibitors are in a fighting mood to<br />

attract that potentially last earnable dollar<br />

to their boxoffices. The availability of<br />

more product for every type of operation<br />

and the prospect of an uninterrupted flow<br />

of more product of mass-appealing stature<br />

have obviously Imbued exhibitors with an<br />

awareness of the opportunity to develop<br />

greater patronage.<br />

"Our findings reflect not only an industry-wide<br />

resurgence of extensive, masspenetrating<br />

showmanship but. importantly<br />

significant, that operators of both indoor<br />

and outdoor theatres will indulge in locallevel<br />

merchandising procedui'es unparalleled<br />

in exhibition annals. These not only<br />

take cognizance of changes in releasing<br />

patterns, but they should also more fruitfully<br />

conform with the housing and economic<br />

alterations time has effected in all<br />

territories."<br />

Branch managers attending the meetings<br />

were Charles P. Lester. Atlanta; Joseph<br />

Rossi. Boston: Robert Simril. Charlotte:<br />

Milton Feinberg. Chicago: William<br />

Bein, Cincinnati: Paul Short, Dallas: Jack<br />

Lustig, Denver: Ivan Clavet, Detroit: Jack<br />

Winningham, Kansas City: Fred Weimar,<br />

Los Angeles: Paul Ayotte. Minneapoli.s; L.<br />

Louis Boyer, New Orleans: Julius Fine,<br />

New York: Stanley Goldberg. Philadelphia:<br />

In-ing Marcus, Pittsburgh: Al Rothschild,<br />

St. Louis: Ray Richman. San Francisco,<br />

Kenneth Friedman, Seattle.<br />

From the home office were, in addition<br />

to Burton Robbins, Norman Robbins, Al<br />

Stefanic, Roger Ferri, S. E. Kasscl. Norman<br />

Kaplan and Anita Lucas.<br />

Herman Robbins Recuperating<br />

NEW YORK—Herman Robbins. chairman<br />

of the board of National Screen Service,<br />

is recuperating from a minor operation<br />

of the intestinal tract. The operation<br />

was said to have been a successful one<br />

and Robbins will return to his office after<br />

a short period of rest.<br />

'Wuthering Heights' Again<br />

NEW YORK—Samuel Goldwyn's "Wuthering<br />

Heights," winner of the New York<br />

Film Critics Award when it was originally<br />

released by United Artists in 1939, will be<br />

rerelea.sed nationally by Continental Distributing<br />

this fall. The picture, which is<br />

ba-sed on the famous Bronte novel, stars<br />

Laurence Olivier. Merle Oberon, David<br />

Niven and Geraldine Fitzgerald.


strong Product Boosts<br />

Grosses for Summer<br />

NEW YORK—What kind of a summer<br />

has it been for exhibitors so far?<br />

A checkup of circuits and independent<br />

operators revealed a variety of rephes,<br />

ranging from "beyond expectations" to "a<br />

little above average" among the circuits,<br />

while subsequent-run exhibitors reported<br />

that inability to get top quality product<br />

when needed had been detrimental to<br />

grosses.<br />

Among the circuits checked were RKO,<br />

Loew's, American Broadcasting-Paramount<br />

Theatres, Fabian and Walter Reade-Sterling,<br />

as well as Triangle Theatre Service<br />

which books for approximately 100 theatres<br />

in the eastern area.<br />

SUB-BUNS FIND FAULT<br />

The complaint among independent operators,<br />

as well as one major circuit, was<br />

that the distributors were trying to squeeze<br />

in top quality pictures into 12 weeks of<br />

summer, whereas those same pictures could<br />

have been spread over 30 weeks. The<br />

"gush" of important pictures made available<br />

for first runs for the July 4 period<br />

will not reach the sub-runs until August<br />

or even until about the time that children<br />

will be returning to school, according to<br />

operators of those theatres. It was charged<br />

that the distributors were showing no cooperation<br />

with the sub -runs in providing<br />

adequate productions in the midsummer<br />

span.<br />

One circuit chief said that the "lost<br />

ground" experienced during the bad winter<br />

and spring weather had been made up by<br />

early July and that further improvement<br />

was seen for the balance of the summer.<br />

"We are running ahead of last year," he<br />

said.<br />

Another circuit executive said that an<br />

upbeat had been noted starting in early<br />

July, but that he doubted that the lost<br />

ground of the winter and spring would be<br />

made up by the end of the summer. A few<br />

rainy days and weekends had been helpful<br />

because they had diverted beach and resort<br />

vacationers to the theatres.<br />

The Walter Reade circuit reported that<br />

the July 4 weekend was the biggest in both<br />

its<br />

drive-ins and four-wall theatres in the<br />

50 years of the company's operations and<br />

that the momentum was being maintained.<br />

MOST EXHIBITORS PLEASED<br />

An independent exhibitor said that it<br />

took a long time to convince distribution<br />

that the summer months were ideal for the<br />

release of the bigger pictures. When the<br />

he said,<br />

distributors woke up to that fact,<br />

it wasn't much help to the smaller operators<br />

who were unable to get the desirable<br />

pictures during that "lush" period.<br />

Product-wise, the summer fare has been<br />

strong, the theatremen said. There have<br />

been some surprises and disappointments<br />

as well.<br />

One circuit head, who was highly pleased<br />

with siunmer business, remarked that exhibition<br />

had only 18 weeks of a year in<br />

which theatres could depend on good patronage,<br />

the Christmas period, Easter,<br />

Washington's Birthday and the 13 weeks of<br />

summer. "The rest of the year you've got<br />

to dig," he said.<br />

UATC Stockholders<br />

Mapping Proxy Fight<br />

NEW YORK—A proxy contest among<br />

stockholders of United Artists Theatre<br />

Circuit, Inc., is in preparation, according to<br />

Joseph Flom, attorney representing the<br />

Stockholders Committee for Better Management<br />

of United Artists Theatres.<br />

The committee has announced that it is<br />

"unhappy" with UATC management, the<br />

absence of dividends and the net loss last<br />

year from operations and it also is concerned<br />

over the ratio of cuiTcnt assets and<br />

liabilities.<br />

Heading the committee are Maxwell<br />

Cummings, a director; Jerome Ohrbach,<br />

head of Ohrbach stores, and Walter Reade<br />

jr. Others on the committee are David<br />

May, head of the May department stores,<br />

and Alfred Bloomingdale of Diners' Club.<br />

Flom said it had been reported erroneously<br />

on the coast that Samuel Goldwyn and<br />

Mary Pickford were members of the stockholders<br />

committee. He said that, while<br />

they were not members, it was hoped that<br />

they would join in the action.<br />

Letters setting forth the committee's<br />

objections to management will be mailed to<br />

stockholders this week. It had not been<br />

determined whether to call a special meeting<br />

or wait until December for the annual<br />

meeting to bring the issues to a head. It<br />

was said that the committee members held<br />

substantial shares of stock in UATC,<br />

amounting to approximately 300,000<br />

shares.<br />

George Skouras is president of UATC.<br />

Arthur Mayer Will Head<br />

Hollywood Museum Board<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Arthur L. Mayer has<br />

been appointed chairman of the national<br />

advisory board of the<br />

Hollywood Museum.<br />

The list of advisory<br />

personnel of the<br />

Museum is being completed,<br />

and several<br />

new members are to<br />

be added to the advisory<br />

board in the<br />

east.<br />

Mayer, a veteran in<br />

Arthur L. Mayer<br />

the motion picture industry,<br />

has served with the War Activities<br />

Committee and the educational program<br />

of the Motion Picture Ass'n of America.<br />

He was president of the Independent<br />

Motion Picture Distributors of America<br />

1953-58 and is a former executive of the<br />

Council of Motion Picture Organizations.<br />

He recently was appointed to head the<br />

Association of Motion Picture Advertisers<br />

showmanship fund committee in New York.<br />

The $14,000,000 Museum will house historic<br />

items relating to motion pictures, television,<br />

radio and recording.<br />

Sexcess<br />

story?<br />

Bill Austin<br />

is a poor struggling<br />

novelist who<br />

suddenly<br />

strikes it<br />

rich.<br />

Success goes to<br />

Bill's head and<br />

he goes with<br />

his family<br />

to Connecticut.<br />

Interesting things<br />

beginning<br />

with a very sexy<br />

agent -start<br />

happening to him.<br />

VAN JOHNSON is<br />

Bill Austin, one<br />

of the six stars of<br />

Wives<br />

ano<br />

L#vers<br />

^ Your key<br />

to big<br />

boxoffice<br />

BOXOFnCE July 29, 1963


L<br />

,<br />

Plains<br />

UTO Implements <strong>Boxoffice</strong> Builders Kroger Babb Forms<br />

Plan; Darrel Presnell Is Coordinator New Disiribufing Co.<br />

KANSAS CITY — Darrel Piesnell has<br />

been appoititod coordinator for the Great<br />

Darrel Presnell<br />

<strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

Builders program of<br />

the United Theatre<br />

Owners of the Heart<br />

of America, it was<br />

announced by Paul<br />

Ricketts. president of<br />

the organization.<br />

Presnell. a veteran of<br />

20 years in show<br />

business. formerly<br />

was division advertising<br />

and publicity director<br />

for Pox Midwest<br />

Theatres. Startmg<br />

m the industry as an usher for Fox<br />

Midwest in Mt. Vernon. 111., he handled<br />

various assignments for the circuit.<br />

"<strong>Boxoffice</strong> Builders is a national outgrowth<br />

of the UTO idea." Ricketts said.<br />

"Starting with a small membership a few<br />

years ago. we have grown to where our<br />

members now number<br />

Ricketts describes<br />

in the hundreds"<br />

<strong>Boxoffice</strong> Builders as<br />

a showman's "common<br />

market." He<br />

said. "Taking note of<br />

the European venture<br />

of the same name<br />

and noting the economic<br />

success it has<br />

attained. UTO plans<br />

a similar bold stroke<br />

massive united selling<br />

in depth, total effort<br />

in the marketing<br />

of specific pic-<br />

Paul Ricketts<br />

tures, and campaigns that roll through<br />

the great plains like prairie fires, where<br />

overlapping advertising and publicity add<br />

to the effectiveness of the adjacent territory."<br />

Selection of at least eight to ten pictures<br />

a year for advertising treatment are<br />

called for in the initial plans. Every campaign<br />

will be specially tailored for prime<br />

appeal to the great plains market. Associate<br />

members, who pay an annual $15 membership<br />

fee, are eligible to accept as many of<br />

the campaigns as their situation calls for.<br />

The cost to the member for the sales kit<br />

will be only that amount needed for production<br />

and mailing expense. It is expected<br />

Rlch.iid<br />

technique<br />

Theatres<br />

that these changes will average $5 to $6<br />

each.<br />

Expanding on the "common market"<br />

theme, Richard Orear. UTO board member<br />

and Commonwealth<br />

president, said, "Today<br />

there Is great<br />

fmphasls on Individual<br />

enterprise — and<br />

this emphasis is not<br />

misplaced. But there<br />

i-s no denying that<br />

a mass effort, carefully<br />

conceived and<br />

fxecuted, can produce<br />

Oroar<br />

staggering results.<br />

The Great Plains<br />

hem<br />

<strong>Boxoffice</strong> Builders<br />

already been tested and<br />

LOS ANGELES — Studio 10.001, Inc.,<br />

the results of that testing have been Kroger<br />

almost<br />

sensational at times. Now. we enpany,<br />

has opened<br />

Babb's new film distributing comvision<br />

a common market of theatres, circuits<br />

and individual operations, banded<br />

9056 Santa Monica<br />

general offices at<br />

together for only one purpose, to sell<br />

Blvd., Beverly Hills.<br />

specific pictures to the public through a<br />

The company's first<br />

vast, combined effort of organized showmanship."<br />

Apple." starring Rue<br />

release, "The Rotten<br />

Also a continuing flow of other materials<br />

will be available to members. Spe-<br />

Leder and King<br />

McClanahan. Paul<br />

cial shows, holiday headers and advertising<br />

for combination programs are cur-<br />

Bnbb has completed<br />

Moody, is ready.<br />

rently in development. This will also be<br />

upwards of 50 research<br />

and test en-<br />

made available at production and mailing<br />

cost.<br />

Kroger Babb gagements and<br />

Among the participants so far in the<br />

screenings, while<br />

, , developing<br />

circuits as<br />

plan are such leading the<br />

National<br />

roadshow campaign.<br />

General Corp.. Commonwealth "The Rotten Theatres.<br />

Apple" will open Julv 31 in<br />

Minnesota Amusement Sero Corp.. Welworth<br />

Amusement circuit's 850-car Autorium<br />

Theatres. Video Theatres and<br />

Drive-In<br />

a Theatre,<br />

substantial<br />

Salt Lake Citv Other<br />

number of individual<br />

early<br />

independent engagements<br />

theatres.<br />

Boise. Twin Falls. Pocatello. Great Falls'<br />

include Albuquerque<br />

Presnell has sold<br />

Provo.<br />

his vacation<br />

Ogden. Grand<br />

resort<br />

Junction. Denver<br />

business at Table Rock many and<br />

in southwest smaller<br />

Missouri,<br />

which he operated from<br />

situations in those areas.<br />

Babb plans<br />

September<br />

a saturation play-off of<br />

1960 until recently Oklahoma<br />

to return in<br />

to Kansas<br />

September and October with<br />

City.<br />

the picture's star. Miss McClanahan doing<br />

personal appearances. Miss McClanahan<br />

26-year-old shapely blonde, is a native<br />

Samuel<br />

of<br />

Bronston to Ardmore.<br />

Make<br />

Okla., and a cum laude graduate<br />

of Tulsa<br />

Six More<br />

University,<br />

Films where she<br />

in Spain<br />

majored in<br />

dramatics and foreign languages. She<br />

MADRID. SPAIN _ Samuel Bronston<br />

speaks seven languages, which were employed<br />

producer of the current "55 Days at<br />

in<br />

Peking."<br />

distributed by Allied Babb<br />

the picture's trailer.<br />

Artists, has<br />

has moved Mrs. Charlotte Hiatt<br />

announced a production slate of six more<br />

from Wilmington, Ohio, to the west coast<br />

features, in addition to "The<br />

to<br />

Fall handle<br />

of the<br />

Studio 10,001 's auditing department<br />

and financial matters. Miss Racelle<br />

Roman Empire." just completed for release<br />

under his own banner in the Hellman<br />

spring<br />

of Hollywood has been employed<br />

of 1964.<br />

as executive secretary. Ray Finlinson<br />

Next on Bronston's schedule<br />

Teri-y<br />

w^ill be<br />

Branson and Ronald Sturgess have<br />

"Circus." a tentative title for the<br />

been picture employed as road agents. Babb said<br />

to be directed by Henry Hathaway, he plans starting<br />

in September, with John Wayne handling<br />

eventually to have some 12 agents<br />

David<br />

distribution of Studio 10 001 Inc<br />

Niven and Claudia Cardinale films starred. Paramount<br />

will release this.<br />

Altman. Toronto, who was associated with<br />

in various parts of the U.S. George<br />

Then will come "Nightrunners of<br />

Babb Bengal."<br />

a story of the Sepoy tions,<br />

in former years in Hallmark Produc-<br />

Mutiny<br />

will<br />

in India<br />

represent the fii-m in Canada<br />

during the 1950s, followed by<br />

supervising its<br />

"The Blue<br />

distribution organization<br />

and the Gray on the Nile."<br />

there.<br />

a historical Arthur<br />

tale<br />

Davis has been named to<br />

of veterans of the U.S. represent<br />

Civil War who<br />

the firm in Japan and Card<br />

fought for the Egyptian government. Mondor in<br />

"The<br />

Australia and New Zealand<br />

French Revolution" follows and<br />

Babb said<br />

"Paris<br />

Studio 10.001 will distribute<br />

1900." to be directed by<br />

for<br />

Vittorio<br />

various<br />

De Sica<br />

independent producers. He formerly<br />

will come next. The final picture operated<br />

of the<br />

Kroger Babb & Associates<br />

six will be "The Great Cyprus,"<br />

iKBA),<br />

from the<br />

production-distribution company.<br />

novel by Harold Lamb.<br />

Bronston will make all of his pictures<br />

in Spain, where he has his own studio and<br />

a<br />

Crown<br />

500-acre area<br />

Sets Three<br />

outside the<br />

Releases<br />

city.<br />

For August-September<br />

LOS ANGELES<br />

Embassy Names<br />

— Crown InU?rnational<br />

Zucker<br />

Pictures has set three features for release<br />

East-Central<br />

in the next<br />

Manager<br />

two months. It Is announced by<br />

president<br />

NEW<br />

Newton P. Jacobs.<br />

YORK— Lester Zucker. most recently<br />

"Madmen of<br />

Chicago<br />

Mandoras,"<br />

branch<br />

melodrama<br />

manager for Unlversal-Intornational.<br />

conquest of<br />

dealing with attempted<br />

has<br />

the<br />

been named eastcentral<br />

world through secret district manager<br />

weapon, is scheduled<br />

for Embassy Pictures<br />

for August 14 release in<br />

by Carl<br />

the U.S. It will<br />

Peppercorn, vice-president begin distribution<br />

and general<br />

abroad<br />

.sales<br />

September manager.<br />

1.<br />

Headquartering<br />

In an<br />

"The Skydlvei-s."<br />

Cleveland.<br />

exploitation thriller<br />

Zucker will supcn-lse the dealing with<br />

Cleveland,<br />

the deadly sport of<br />

Cincinnati<br />

free fall<br />

and Indianapolis from altitudes of<br />

territories<br />

20.000<br />

for Embassy.<br />

feet, will be released<br />

over Labor<br />

Among<br />

Lay.<br />

Zuckcr's pix'vlous posts was sci-v- "Sleeping<br />

Ing<br />

Partners."<br />

as Cleveland<br />

melodrama made In<br />

branch manager for Columbia<br />

Pictures.<br />

Brasilia with Jean Pierre Aumont starring,<br />

win be released September 18.<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


Ampa of New York Plans fo Expand<br />

Membership Across the Country<br />

NEW YORK—Associated Motion Picture<br />

Advertisers, which has been strictly a New<br />

Yorlc organization for 47 years, will expand<br />

its membership to include exhibitors in all<br />

parts of the country and, at the same time,<br />

will offer services to boost business in<br />

theatres.<br />

Plans for the revival of showmanship<br />

were presented to Ampa's officers and<br />

board of directors at a meeting here Tuesday<br />

(23) by Mel Gold, Ampa president.<br />

Gold said that Ampa's exhibitor service<br />

division would create a speakers bureau<br />

which would provide speakers for Lions and<br />

Rotary clubs and other civic organizations<br />

for the purpose of propagating, locally, an<br />

improved image of motion pictures and the<br />

industry.<br />

Gold said that Ampa would conduct<br />

showmanship forums for exhibitors and<br />

their managers; a press service, providing<br />

institutional publicity to local and regional<br />

publications; a celebrity service that would<br />

encourage distributors to increase personal<br />

appearances of stars, and the application<br />

of commercial theatre showmanship to art<br />

films.<br />

Gold said these services would be put into<br />

effect as soon as committee members could<br />

be appointed to handle respective activities.<br />

He told the officers that a membership<br />

campaign would be launched to bring exhibitors<br />

into Ampa because if the organization<br />

planned nationwide assistance, it<br />

must have the support of the entire industry.<br />

To do the job effectively, he said,<br />

Ampa needed members in all parts of the<br />

country to fill speaking engagements and<br />

to plant institutional publicity.<br />

The motion picture industry must concentrate<br />

on the marketplace if it is going<br />

to overcome the competition of television,<br />

'Those Who Think Young'<br />

First Techniscope for UA<br />

HOLLYWOOD—"For Those Who Think<br />

Young" will be United Artists' first film to<br />

be shot in Technicolor's new "Techniscope"<br />

system, it was announced by Howard<br />

W. Koch, executive vice-president of<br />

Sinatra Enterprises which is putting the<br />

teen themed Technicolor production before<br />

the cameras on August 12 at Paramount<br />

Studios. Hugh Benson will produce<br />

and Leslie Martinson direct the picture,<br />

which will star James Darren, Pamela Tiffin,<br />

Paul Lynde and Nancy Sinatra and<br />

introduce comedian Woody Woodbury.<br />

Techniscope is a widescreen process providing<br />

clear and sharp projection. The new<br />

process' two-perforation frame is printed<br />

vertically at a ratio of 1-2 providing a<br />

35mm anamorphic Technicolor positive<br />

print having the normal fom--perforation<br />

frame height. It is claimed that the process<br />

saves producers negative and negative<br />

processing costs by 50 per cent, doubles the<br />

length of time for camera shooting without<br />

reloading and allows for a wide variety of<br />

prints which may be manufactured from its<br />

negative (normal squeeze prints having an<br />

anamorphic ratio of 2-1, prints for spherical<br />

projection with aspect ratios of 1.75-1<br />

or 1.85-1, 16mm prints with either an anamorphic<br />

or spherical image and 35mm and<br />

free or pay, and product shortages. Gold<br />

asserted, adding that the marketplace was<br />

every community that had a motion picture<br />

theatre.<br />

Gold contended that local-level showmanship<br />

was the "crying need" of the business<br />

and that theatres must generate an<br />

air of excitement that would arouse patron<br />

curiosity and encourage steady patronage,<br />

adding that Ampa's first job was<br />

to get the patron out of the house and away<br />

from the television set. He said Ampa<br />

planned liaison with retail organizations<br />

and their tradepress to develop a cooperative<br />

effort in that regard.<br />

In addition to the exhibitor services<br />

division. Gold listed nine committees now<br />

being activated: Membership, Ampa<br />

awards, tradepress, bylaws, Ampa workshop,<br />

publicity, advertising, manpower<br />

development and showmanship fund.<br />

He explained that the advertising committee<br />

would be charged with the responsibility<br />

of seeking better advertising methods<br />

and design. The publicity committee would<br />

prepare institutional copy for dissemination<br />

nationally and locally, while the manpower<br />

development group would seek means<br />

of developing a competent pool of talent in<br />

the advertising-publicity crafts and would<br />

consider a theatre managers' school.<br />

Every Ampa member will be asked to<br />

work on one or more of the committees.<br />

Gold said the larger the membership the<br />

more effective the effort, concluding with<br />

the remark that "just a little work on the<br />

part of each member, in a well coordinated<br />

activity, could result in a powerful blast of<br />

showmanship that will be felt at boxoffices<br />

across the land."<br />

The luncheon meeting was held at Van's<br />

Beau Brummel.<br />

16mm prints for television).<br />

Technicolor announced its Techniscope<br />

process at this year's recent Cannes international<br />

film festival. Though several<br />

European, and one American, films have<br />

been, or are being, filmed in the new process,<br />

no film has yet been released in Techniscope.<br />

Saperstein, Bercovitch Buy<br />

'To Catch a Falling Spy'<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Hank Saperstein and<br />

Reuben Bercovitch have emerged victors in<br />

a spirited bidding race involving three major<br />

studios and two prominent independent<br />

companies for the motion picture rights to<br />

Nathaniel Benchley's best-selling novel,<br />

"To Catch a Palling Spy," published earlier<br />

this year by McGraw-Hill.<br />

Bercovitch, who will produce, has signed<br />

Benchley to adapt his book for the screen.<br />

The purchase of the book, which deals with<br />

espionage in a comedy vein marks the second<br />

major motion pictm-e project for<br />

Saperstein and Bercovitch. They recently<br />

bought the screen rights to Antony Trew's<br />

best-seller, "Two Hours to Darkness,"<br />

which Bercovitch is preparing for production<br />

from William Ludwig's screenplay.<br />

Saperstein is president of UPA cartoon<br />

studio.<br />

Suspense<br />

account?<br />

Lucinda Ford<br />

is an agent<br />

for actors and<br />

authors. She is<br />

also very pretty.<br />

Lucinda gets<br />

at least 10%<br />

of whatever<br />

you've got,<br />

including your<br />

married life.<br />

She is a very<br />

good agent.<br />

MARTHA HYER is<br />

Lucinda Ford, one<br />

of the six stars of<br />

Wives<br />

ano<br />

L#vers<br />

I<br />

Your key<br />

to big<br />

boxoff ice<br />

BOXOFHCE :<br />

: July 29, 1963


Jerry Lewis Hits Disunity<br />

Among Industry Branches<br />

NEW YORK^erry Lewis believes there<br />

Is a lack of unity in the film industry which<br />

could lead to its downfall.<br />

The comedian-producer-director- writer<br />

expounded some of his opinions in a<br />

double-deck Greyhound bus which was<br />

conveying him and his troupe to the Valencia<br />

Theatre in Jamaica, where he was<br />

to make a personal appearance in connection<br />

with his "The Nutty Professor."<br />

currently playing the Loew circuit.<br />

Lewis expressed his belief that there<br />

should be a "United Nations" of the film<br />

industry in which many common problem;;<br />

could be solved. "If the nations of the<br />

world can have an organization, why can'l<br />

the motion pictui'e industry?" he asked.<br />

"Ehsunity in the relationships between<br />

production, distribution and exhibition<br />

often is reflected in low grosses and the<br />

alienation of patrons."<br />

BADLY MANAGED THEATRES<br />

In his travels, he said, he observed<br />

that many theatres were badly managed<br />

and dirty, out-dated and poorly equipped.<br />

And those very houses, he added, frequently<br />

out-bid competitors for product,<br />

with the result that his pictures and those<br />

of other producers were forced to play in<br />

inferior theatres. He bemoaned the fadint;<br />

away of glamor in the industry, declaring<br />

that there was too much "greed" in all<br />

branches of the business.<br />

Lewis said he was contemplating the acquisition<br />

of a chain of theatres of his own.<br />

which would present pictures as they should<br />

be presented. He said he would like to discuss<br />

his ideas with exhibitors. Asked if he<br />

had been invited to speak at either of the<br />

upcoming national exhibitor conventions,<br />

Lewis said he had not. but he indicated<br />

that he might accept if he were asked.<br />

With more than 100 persons on his payroll.<br />

Lewis operates his enterprises on a<br />

friendly basis, he said, and he took a personal<br />

interest in each of his employes, paid<br />

salaries higher than those required by the<br />

unions and often had birthday cakes on<br />

the set when crew members had birthdays.<br />

He said the result was that, by spending<br />

an extra $5,000 here and there, the staff<br />

had saved him as much as $100,000 on a<br />

production.<br />

"Everybody in my crew has a smile on<br />

his face," Lewis said.<br />

TO DELAY PRODUCTION<br />

Although Paramount had announced<br />

that Lewis' next picture would be "The<br />

Disorderly Orderly," Lewis said on the bus<br />

trip that he wasn't sure he would make<br />

another picture, at least not In the immediate<br />

future. He said he wanted to rest.<br />

He and his band and personal staff had<br />

been on the personal appearance tour slnco<br />

June 1 and had given more than 400 performances<br />

In 46 situations.<br />

Samuel Goldwyn usually had been considered<br />

the only truly Independent producer<br />

Inasmuch as he financed his own<br />

pictures. But Lewis placed himself In that<br />

catogory. Patting his trou.ser pocket with<br />

his hand. Lewis said his production money<br />

came from right there, meaning that he<br />

had no need for bank financing.<br />

%.<br />

THE FOSTORIA STORY — J. W.<br />

"Bill" Cosby, left, marketing manager,<br />

arc carbon products, and C. J. Chapman,<br />

vice-president, marketing, greet<br />

Frank Leyendeckcr of BOXOFFICE,<br />

third from left, at the F'ostoria plant<br />

of National Carbon Co., a division of<br />

Union Carbide Corp. with Phil H.<br />

Freeman, sales manager, arc carbon<br />

products, at extreme right.<br />

Joseph Hummel Dies at 64;<br />

Was Executive of WB<br />

NEW YORK—Joseph Hummel, who retired<br />

as continental sales manager of Warner<br />

Bros, in 1960. died in Palma on the<br />

Spanish island of Majorca on July 18. He<br />

was 64 years old and had been living in<br />

Paris since his retirement. Death was<br />

caused by a coronary attack.<br />

Born in New York City. Hummel started<br />

in the film business in 1916 as a studio<br />

messenger boy in Brooklyn after studying<br />

accounting at Pace Institute. A year later,<br />

he became auditor of Vitagraph which<br />

ultimately was acquired by the Warners<br />

and rose to be assistant to the general sales<br />

manager and foreign sales manager.<br />

Before the end of World War II. he returned<br />

to liberated Prance and Italy to revive<br />

distribution of American films.<br />

His wife, the former Leona Schwartz,<br />

survives.<br />

Albert<br />

Leonard<br />

NEW YORK— Funeral services were held<br />

Wednesday i24i for Albert Leonard, vicepresident<br />

in charge of foreign sales for<br />

Magna Pictures Corp.. who died in Parkway<br />

Hospital. Forest Hills, on Tuesday.<br />

Leonard, who was 50 years of age. had<br />

been with 20th Century-Fox In the Middle<br />

East during World War II and was in<br />

charge of the Venezuela offices from 1947<br />

until 1956 w^hen he joined Magna.<br />

Charles B. Paine<br />

NEW YORK—Charles B. Paine. 73. who<br />

had been active In motion picture financial<br />

affairs, died In New Rochelle Tue.sday (23 p.<br />

Paine was treasurer of Unlver.sal Pictures<br />

and general manager of the company's<br />

theatres In the 1920s. He .served with various<br />

Independent companies and later was<br />

as.soclaU'd with RKO Radio and 20th Centui-y-Fox<br />

In financial capacities.<br />

Show Tradepress How<br />

Arc Carbons Are Made<br />

By FRANK LEYENDECKER<br />

FOSTORIA, OHIO—For the first time,<br />

the motion picture tradepress was given<br />

a behind-the-scenes look at how arc carbons<br />

are made, a part of motion picture<br />

facilities which is almost unknown to the<br />

ticket-buying public but which gives the<br />

patron a high-quality picture on the<br />

screen. At the plant of National Carbon Co.,<br />

division of Union Carbide Corp..<br />

the trade<br />

paper representatives w^ere given a tour of<br />

the production facilities at the Fostoria<br />

plant, the development laboratory and.<br />

later, the company's research laboratories<br />

at Parma. Ohio, all under the guidance of<br />

J. W. "Bill " Cosby, marketing manager,<br />

and Philip H. Freeman, sales manager of<br />

arc carbon products for National Carbon.<br />

"Ever since the motion picture industry's<br />

inception. National Carbon has been a<br />

leading supplier of arc carbons." Cosby<br />

said following the tour. "We have always<br />

prided ourselves on providing the industry<br />

with the finest screen light available<br />

through the production of quality arc carbons<br />

but, until now. we have never revealed<br />

to the industry, through its own<br />

press, just how w-e are able to consistently<br />

manufactm-e arc carbons that can be relied<br />

on to give theatre patrons what they<br />

have paid their money to see.<br />

"Of all<br />

the products used by the motion<br />

picture industry, arc carbons are possibly<br />

the most complex and yet the least understood,"<br />

Cosby concluded. That is why he<br />

felt "The Fostoria Story" should be told.<br />

Starting from the Union Carbide Building<br />

on Park Avenue in New York, National<br />

Carbon picked up representatives of the<br />

leading tradepapers. including <strong>Boxoffice</strong>,<br />

Film Daily, Greater Amusements, the Exhibitor<br />

and the Independent Film Journal,<br />

and flew them to Ohio via the company's<br />

private luxury plane. A toui- of the National<br />

Carbon plant at Fostoria was followed by<br />

a cocktail party and dinner at the Fostoria<br />

Country Club.<br />

The next day, the factory visit was followed<br />

by a trip to Parma, outside Cleveland,<br />

where the trade representatives saw<br />

the laboratory and the carbon research<br />

theatre.<br />

All in all, a most infomiative torn-, this<br />

story of Fostoria know-how, and Parma research,<br />

an insight into the manufactuie of<br />

arc carbons at the National Carbon Co.<br />

The visit of the tradepress to Fostoria<br />

was followed by several days of sales meetings<br />

for the National Carbon Co. marketing<br />

personnel and arc carbon products sales<br />

engineers. In addition to Cosby. Dr. Spry.<br />

StoUcnmeyer and Kemp, others on hand<br />

included C. J. Chapman, vice-president,<br />

marketing: P. H. Freeman, sales manager,<br />

arc carbon products; P. D, Ries. manager,<br />

engineering services, and W. R. Kraft, staff<br />

assistant, arc carbon products.<br />

• Detailed report of the process of making<br />

National carbons will be published In Tlie<br />

Modern Tlieatre Section of <strong>Boxoffice</strong> in<br />

next week's Issue.)<br />

Stanley Warner Dividend<br />

NEW YORK<br />

A dividend of 30 cents per<br />

.share on the common stock has been declared<br />

by the board of directors of Stanley<br />

Warner Corp., payable August 23 to stockholders<br />

of record on August 9.<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29. 1963


Sunday<br />

I see<br />

Swap and Shop' Operation a Business Builder<br />

Brings New Patrons and Increases Concessions Sales at Kansas City Drive-ln<br />

KANSAS CITY—A Swap and Shop "flea<br />

market," designed for idle people on lazy<br />

summer Sunday afternoons, is becoming a<br />

budding enterprise and a big businessbuilder<br />

for the Heart Drive-In Theatre<br />

here, located on the eastern edge of the city<br />

and plagued for many months by the construction<br />

of a new cross-state freeway and<br />

its metropolitan interchanges.<br />

As described by Manager Hank Wigman,<br />

the idea is an adaptation of one presented<br />

in the March 21, 1956, issue of <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

Showmandiser. It's a simple invitation to<br />

the public to bring the "junk" from their<br />

basements and attics to swap or sell on the<br />

drive-in parking lot.<br />

"I thought this was a good idea when I<br />

first read about it in <strong>Boxoffice</strong>," Wigman<br />

said. "But at that time, I thought our<br />

management, our location, were too sophisticated<br />

to go for it. Times change, though.<br />

Back then, there were only a couple of<br />

drive-ins in the area. Now, there are 15.<br />

We didn't have the Kansas City Athletics.<br />

Today, too, the Starlight Theatre (Swope<br />

Park municipal summer theati-e) continues<br />

to improve its programs. We've got to meet<br />

the competition."<br />

The idea apparently is paying off in new<br />

patronage. "There are a lot of new people<br />

coming into the Heart," Wigman said.<br />

"They're strangers—at least to this drivein.<br />

We can tell that in the concessions<br />

stand, because they stand around and ask,<br />

'Where are the straws?' or 'Where's the<br />

cream?' showing they've never been here<br />

before."<br />

There are many ways to present a Swap<br />

and Shop sale and there is an apparent upsurge<br />

in interest in the plan, as evidenced<br />

by the many requests to <strong>Boxoffice</strong> this<br />

year for the original Swap and Shop article.<br />

In that story, California theatre manager<br />

Al Dumont announced he made $10,000 a<br />

year on his 35-cent-per-car charge for admission<br />

and concessions sales at his Swap<br />

and Shop sessions.<br />

The Heart, however, is not going out for<br />

such big stakes. It's building for theatre<br />

patronage, not for a merchandise mart.<br />

The first Swap and Shop sale was held<br />

at the Heart on June 16. It was preceded<br />

with news stories in the suburban and<br />

«w «""»isir<br />

.IT I'AZ «--<br />

HEART DRIVE-IN THEATRE<br />

Whether you have a ^^ or some used ^<br />

moms old^_^_D an electric<br />

^<br />

'<br />

along to our Swap! Jl^T<br />

SUNDAY AFTERNOOH-JUNE IGTH-l PM TIL 5 PM!<br />

All ill tl s taciiii<br />

ful snack ai the relteshmcni center The<br />

playground while mom and dad da a t<br />

I' Qiing a picntc lunch, or enjoy a dclight-<br />

:an swing and play on our b


. . Jeffrey<br />

. . . Dan<br />

. . Tom<br />

. .<br />

. . Monica<br />

. . Richard<br />

. . George<br />

^oUifcw^ ^eftont<br />

DOBERT WISE and David Miller checked<br />

onto the 20th-Fox lot. Wise will produce<br />

and direct "The Sand Pebbles," best-selling<br />

novel by Richard McKenna. for which<br />

Robert Anderson is writing the screenplay.<br />

. . .<br />

Miller has "The Praying Mantises" as his<br />

chore. The Inner Sanctum Mystery Award<br />

winner by Jubert Monteilhet is being<br />

scripted by Keith Wat«rhouse and Wiliis<br />

Hall. Botli Wise and Miller have coproduction<br />

deals between their personal production<br />

companies and 20th Century-Fox<br />

Lee Yeary, a 24-year-old "unlcnown,"<br />

has been signed by William Castle to play<br />

opposite Joan Crawford, as her murder<br />

Carl Reiner,<br />

victim in "Strait-Jacket" . . .<br />

who is achieving new stature as a scenarist,<br />

is also using his selling ability as a comedian<br />

to put across his script and picture,<br />

"The Thrill of It All." He wrote and<br />

starred in the trailers to be used for TV<br />

and in theatres,<br />

Franklin Schaffner has lined up "The<br />

Whistle Blows for Victory," by purchase of<br />

the John Starr film treatment for filming<br />

by Gilchrist Productions. Schaffner is one<br />

of the creative group springing from television<br />

background, who is the epitome of<br />

diversification. He is working on "The Best<br />

Man." a feature, also a CBS pilot and on a<br />

Broadway stage play. Pat B. Rooney (not<br />

I will film two in the South<br />

the dancer<br />

Pacific area and starts on his Paramount<br />

release, "Satine," shortly . . . Bill Asher,<br />

who has come up with a "hot one" in AIP's<br />

"Beach Party" which he directed, has<br />

signed a second directorial contract for the<br />

sequel to be called "Muscle" or "Bikini<br />

Beach," depending on which one fills out<br />

first.<br />

Gordon W. Wiles has formed Cannon<br />

Productions to film two color productions<br />

in Indonesia for showing at the New York<br />

World's Fair next year. Wiles, a producerdirector,<br />

win use facilities of Farlda Films<br />

In Indonesia . . . Columbia producer Robert<br />

Cohn has signed John Rich to direct "The<br />

New Interns," scheduled to start In October.<br />

The screenplay comes from Wilton<br />

Schiller with Michael Callan and Stefanle<br />

Powers .set for parts. Success of "The Interns,"<br />

costing a reported $1,300,000, caused<br />

Immediate plans for a sequel . . . Pearlayne<br />

Productions, with youthful Gene Taft and<br />

Stephen Bernhardt, son of Curtis Bernhardt,<br />

announced "Me and My Brother,"<br />

"Henrietta." "President" and "No Dice.<br />

Warden" as their list of productions. No<br />

release deals have been announced.<br />

Principal casting on "My Fair Lady" was<br />

completed with the signing of Jeremy<br />

Brett for the role of Freddy Hill. Others<br />

In the George Cukor picture arc Audrey<br />

Hepburn, Rex Harrison, Gladys Cooper,<br />

Wilfrid Hyde White . Hunter<br />

has been chosen as the fifth star to Join<br />

the eight-star cast of "The Long Flight,"<br />

super- id venture Warner picture to be produced<br />

by Bernard Smith and directed by<br />

John Ford. He joins Spencer Tracy, James<br />

•By SYD CASSYD<br />

. . .<br />

Stewart, Richard Widmark and Carroll<br />

Baker Another Warner production,<br />

. . .<br />

"Dead Ringer," starring Bette Davis and<br />

Karl Maiden, has Jon Lormer, George<br />

Chandler, Estelle Winwood, The St. Charles<br />

Boys' choir, Rt. Reverend Monsignor<br />

Fldenclo Esparza, Philip Carey and Edward<br />

Colmans ... "4 for Texas," the Sam Production<br />

for Wanier Bros., starring Frank<br />

Sinatra, Dean Martin. Anita Ekberg and<br />

Ursula Andrcss. with Bob Aldrich producing<br />

and directing and Howard W. Koch as<br />

executive producer, has signed Mike Raga,<br />

Fritz Peld. Virginia Christine, Michelle<br />

Moneau, Bill Walker and William Washington<br />

The Troy Donahue-Suzanne<br />

Pleshette Technicolor film for Warners has<br />

added Larry Ward and Judson Pratt to the<br />

group, which Raoul Walsh is directing<br />

Richard Arlen returned to<br />

.<br />

Paramount to<br />

play in "Law of the Lawless." western<br />

drama . . . John McKee has a nice role In<br />

"The Carpetbaggers." coproductlon film<br />

with Joe Levine's Embassy Pictures and<br />

Paramount. David Bailey also has been<br />

signed for a role as the youngster.<br />

Rochelle Hudson, in her first Hollywood<br />

film role in 20 years, has joined the cast of<br />

"Strait-Jacket" . Lowell has been<br />

signed by Joe Levine for "The Carpetbaggers"<br />

role, taking over Tony Bill's assignment,<br />

with the latter having conflicting<br />

commitment . . . Georgia Hayes<br />

gets a role in MGM's "A Global Affair,"<br />

Bob Hope starrer by Hall Bartlett in association<br />

Lee Patrick<br />

with Seven Arts . . . joins "The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao." which<br />

George Pal is shooting at Metro-Goldwyn-<br />

Mayer . . . John Conte bagged a role in<br />

"The Carpetbaggers," marking his first<br />

feature role since his long TV triumphs<br />

"Soldier in the Rain." Martin Jurow's<br />

. . .<br />

Jackie Gleason-Steve McQueen epic, now<br />

has Jeannle Dawson, niece of producerdirector<br />

George Seaton in the cast, which<br />

Includes Rockne Tarkington, Adam West,<br />

Ed Nelson, Lew Gallo, Austen Jewell,<br />

Lewis Charles, Dick Crockett and Greg<br />

Norris.<br />

Frank Bracht has been given the editorial<br />

assignment on "The Carpetbaggers"<br />

Frazer, New York acting coach, is<br />

working as dialog director on "Soldier in<br />

the Rain" after working with Ralph Nelson<br />

on "Requiem for a Heavyweight" . . . Jerry<br />

Fielding has been signed by producer Hugh<br />

Benon to score and compose "For Those<br />

Who Think Young," the Frank Sinatra Enterprises<br />

production rolling August 12 for<br />

United Artists release. Les Martinson<br />

directs.<br />

Reed Hadley Is recording the narration<br />

on "Gunflght at Comanche Creek," the<br />

Allied Artists Audie Murphy starrer . . .<br />

Henry Manclnl will .score "Soldier in the<br />

Rain," the Blake Edwards production for<br />

AA . . . Frank De Vol is composing and<br />

conducting the musical .score for David<br />

"<br />

Swift's "Good Neighbor Sam for Columbia<br />

release , . . Armand Acosta will prepare<br />

titles for Roger Gorman's "The Haunted<br />

Palace," American International summer<br />

release . . . Robert Bagley has purchased a<br />

book by Gretchen Travis, "She Fell Among<br />

Thieves," and is doing a screenplay based<br />

on the mystery story with Mitch Hamllburg<br />

repplng the writer Fielder<br />

.<br />

starts a writing stint on "Street Corner."<br />

Thomas Manklewlcz, son of Joseph L.<br />

Mankiewicz, who graduated from Yale several<br />

weeks ago. has been assigned as executive<br />

assistant to Stuart Millar and Larry<br />

Turman. and will work with Franklin<br />

Schaffner in New York .<br />

Tomasini.<br />

who worked with producer-director<br />

George Pal on "Houdini" and "The Time<br />

Machine," has been assigned as film editor<br />

on Pal's new production for MGM,<br />

"The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao,"<br />

Gene Kelly, producer of "Robin and the<br />

7 Hoods," at Warner Bros., is in the middle<br />

of preproduction plans at the studio . . .<br />

Johnny Green, who will compose and conduct<br />

the score of MGM's "Twilight of<br />

. . . Peter<br />

Honor," has reported to producers William<br />

Perlberg and George Seaton<br />

Nero<br />

for<br />

pre-recorded<br />

work in<br />

the picture<br />

the musical number, "Hell," his original<br />

composition for Seven Arts-MGM "Sunday<br />

in New York" after composing the musical<br />

score for the picture and playing in it.<br />

Prank London, dialog director on "The<br />

Carpetbaggers," doubles as an actor in the<br />

picture . . . Arthur Weiss has worked up a<br />

rewrite of MGM's "Rhino" . . . "For Those<br />

Who Think Young," the Sinatra-UA release,<br />

being shot at Paramount, will have<br />

Dean Martin's daughter, Claudia, in the<br />

picture for her screen debut. She joins<br />

Nancy Sinatra in the kickoff of her first<br />

picture role . . . Hal Wallis, In London,<br />

of<br />

signed Sir John Gielgud to play the role<br />

Louis VII, King of France, in the Paramount<br />

release, shooting in the north of<br />

England . . . Universal assigned Richard<br />

Fielder to the writing on "Street Comer,"<br />

the George Golitzen feature based on taped<br />

interviews with Boston juvenile delinquents.<br />

»<br />

Martin Ritt, producer-director of "Hud,"<br />

has assigned veteran screen writer Guy<br />

Trosper to prepare the script for "A Spy<br />

Who Came in From the Cold," for Paramount<br />

release. Both go to Holland, England,<br />

Denmark and Germany for the scouting<br />

of possible locations on the spy story.<br />

Ernest D. Glucksman<br />

Trosper's most recent filmplay was "Birdman<br />

of Alcatraz" has assigned Paul Jones as . . .<br />

producer<br />

of the newest Jerry Lewis-starring production<br />

for Paramount. The "Disorderly<br />

Orderly" is a York Pictures-Jerry Lewis<br />

Enterprises Production, based on a Norm<br />

Liebmann and Ed Hass original.<br />

f<br />

Margaret Lelghton has been set by producers<br />

Stuart Millar and Lawrence Turman<br />

to play Henry Fonda's wife In "The Best<br />

Man" for United Artists release. Cliff<br />

Robert.son costars .<br />

Henreid. 20-<br />

year-old daughter of Paul Henreid. has<br />

been cast In Warner Bros.' "Dead Ringer."<br />

which her dad Is dli-ecting. She Is not a<br />

novice In films, having acted In television<br />

and. as a singer-dancer, has appeared at<br />

the Statler-Hllton.<br />

BOXOmCE July 29. 1963


LETTERS<br />

A Boost for<br />

Audience Awards<br />

Last week, the annual referendum film<br />

prizes, the Victoires, considered the French<br />

"Oscars," were handed out in Paris. Two<br />

sets are given, via patron and exhibitor<br />

voting.<br />

The movie patrons selected "Sundays<br />

and Cybele," as "best French film" of the<br />

year; "West Side Story" was named "best<br />

foreign film" of the year.<br />

Here's a very interesting point: This<br />

year our Academy in Hollywood also chose<br />

"Sundays and Cybele," as "best foreign<br />

film." Last year, the Academy chose "West<br />

Side Story," as "best film." The same selections<br />

in reverse. The moviegoers in<br />

France recognized real quality, just like<br />

the Hollywood experts and film creators.<br />

For many years, Robert Selig, general<br />

manager of National General Theatres,<br />

has been trying to get industry support to<br />

initiate his Audience Awards plan in<br />

which movie patrons in American theatres<br />

vote for their favorite films and stars. This<br />

would be staged in the fall of the year, so<br />

it wouldn't conflict with the annual Academy<br />

show on television.<br />

Although Mr. Selig has many supporters,<br />

the opposition feels that the moviegoers<br />

haven't the know-how and ability to make<br />

the right selections, which might conflict<br />

with their annual Academy show.<br />

If given the opportunity, American<br />

moviegoers might surprise some of the opposing<br />

Hollywood filmmakers and select<br />

the right films, just like it was done in<br />

France. If the Academy and many others,<br />

who are not cooperating to help Mr. Selig<br />

in furthering his plan, are afraid of competition<br />

from a public poll, it doesn't show<br />

strength in their own manner of selecting<br />

the winners.<br />

Mr. Selig's plan wouldn't affect the annual<br />

show. Actually, it would stimulate<br />

more interest in it, and the public would<br />

be looking forward to see what the Hollywood<br />

experts select. A straw vote never<br />

prevented a dedicated and honest politician<br />

from getting into office, when the<br />

final election votes were counted.<br />

Let's hope Mr. Selig gets all the support<br />

necessary to put his plan across.<br />

Herb Rosener Theatres,<br />

San Francisco, Calif.<br />

ED HARRIS<br />

Turning the Tables on TV<br />

I have noticed that quite a few of your<br />

subscribers have written in complaining<br />

about how late motion pictures being shown<br />

on prime time on TV have cut down their<br />

business to the point of where it has become<br />

unprofitable for many of them to<br />

continue operating.<br />

Now, one way of possibly remedying the<br />

situation would be to reverse the procedure<br />

and to have theatres play second-run as<br />

featurettes, along with a main feature,<br />

dramatic shows on various TV playhouses<br />

that turned out to be unusually good and<br />

won critical praise after it was too late for<br />

anyone to see them. If this were done,<br />

second-run and small-town houses would<br />

profit tremendously, as everyone who had<br />

missed the show on TV could go to the theatre<br />

to see the attraction along with a<br />

regular motion picture. Not only that, but,<br />

if people knew that, when they missed<br />

something really good on TV, they could<br />

catch it later on in a motion picture theatre<br />

as the second feature, they would not<br />

keep their nose in the TV every night in<br />

the season, but would get out and get to a<br />

movie oftener. It's the thought that they<br />

might miss something "priceless" that they<br />

will never get a chance to see that keeps<br />

people in front of their TV sets. After all,<br />

they can always see any particular movie<br />

again later on, if they miss it now ;<br />

if some<br />

theatre doesn't bring it back later on, TV<br />

will. A good TV show, once presented, is<br />

usually gone forever.<br />

As for there being a market for secondrun<br />

TV attractions, I would like to point<br />

out that "Days of Wine and Roses" was<br />

presented twice as a one-and-one-halfhour<br />

TV show by Playhouse 90 and, when<br />

Warner Bros, made it into a movie, it still<br />

was a blockbuster. Filmed quality entertainment<br />

always has a ready-made audience<br />

waiting for it, after the word-of-mouth<br />

has been passed along. Of course, there<br />

are a few technicalities that would have to<br />

be cleared before these featurettes could be<br />

shown in theatres. But that could be<br />

worked out and the prints could be blown<br />

up to theatre film size. The TV featurette<br />

"Hollywood—The Golden Era" was shown<br />

on the Fox Theatre screen here in San<br />

Francisco as the farewell feature on the<br />

theatre's closing night and showed up quite<br />

well on their huge screen.<br />

DAN JAY<br />

1365 Chestnut St.,<br />

San Francisco 23, Calif.<br />

C. V. I.<br />

Announce the Following Pictures for September -October Release<br />

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SEE YOUR INDEPENDENT DISTRIBUTOR I PRINTS AVAILABLE<br />

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SOMETfflNG BIG IS COMING<br />

INTERNATIONAL CORP<br />

5907 West Pico Blvd.<br />

Los Angeles 35, California<br />

President:<br />

EMANUEL BARLING<br />

BOXOFHCE :<br />

: July 29, 1963<br />

13


ER- 'Cf^<br />

BOXOFFICE BAROMETER<br />

soo<br />

Thij chort records the performance of current ottrocfions in the opening week of their first runs in<br />

the 20 key cities checked. Pictures with fewer than five engogements arc not listed. As new runs<br />

arc reported, ratings ore odded and averages revised. Computation is in terms of percentage in<br />

relation to normal grosses as determined by the theatre managers. With 100 per cent as "normal/<br />

the figures show the gross rating above or below that mark. (Asterisk * denotes combination bills.)<br />

BR \ B /wli


N.Y. Allied Convention<br />

Has Overflow Crowd<br />

KIAMESHA LAKE, N.<br />

Y.—An overflow<br />

attendance of exhibitors and distribution<br />

executives is expected here today (Monday)<br />

when Allied Theatre Owners of New York<br />

State will open its annual convention in<br />

the Concord Hotel. Attendance has been<br />

pegged at close to the 500 mark. The guest<br />

unit will be Allied Theatres of New Jersey.<br />

Scheduled speakers at the four days of<br />

sessions are Jack Armstrong, national Allied<br />

president; Charles E. McCarthy, executive<br />

vice-president of the Council of<br />

Motion Pictui'e Organizations; Milton London,<br />

executive director of Allied, and<br />

Hem-y H. "Hi" Martin, vice-president of<br />

Universal Pictui'es.<br />

Sidney J. Cohen, president of the New<br />

York unit, said there would be additional<br />

speakers, to be announced. All rooms set<br />

aside for the convention had been taken<br />

at the weekend, he said.<br />

A new board was elected Wednesday (24)<br />

at an Allied meeting at the Buffalo Variety<br />

Club quai'ters as follows: Harry Berkson,<br />

Buffalo; Sidney J. Cohen, Buffalo; Charles<br />

Pinnerty, Jamestown; Myron Gross, Buffalo;<br />

Joseph Harmon, Niagara Falls; Sylvan<br />

Leff, Albany; Charles V. Martina, Albion;<br />

Dewey Michaels, Buffalo; Joseph<br />

Miller, Albany; Leonard L. Rosenthal, Albany;<br />

Morry Slotnick, Rochester; Jake<br />

Stephano, Orchard Park; Samuel Sunness,<br />

Binghampton; George Thornton, Saugerties;<br />

Joseph Warda, Lancaster, and L.<br />

Wright, Chippewa Bay. The directors will<br />

meet during the convention to elect officers.<br />

Theatre Tax Exemption<br />

Rejected at Harrisburg<br />

HARRISBURG — The house debated<br />

whether taxes or the quality of films was<br />

hurting attendance at motion picture theatres<br />

in Pennsylvania. But it did turn down,<br />

for the second time this session, a proposal<br />

that the theatres be exempt from<br />

admission taxes. The vote was 107-78.<br />

The debate on the measui'e was divided<br />

between proponents who said lifting of<br />

the tax would help the industry and those<br />

who blamed television, or poor offerings,<br />

for declining attendance at the theatres.<br />

Pittsburgh legislators also opposed the<br />

measure on the ground the city's schools<br />

needed the estimated $400,000 annual<br />

revenue they obtain from the levy.<br />

MGM Orders 600 Prints<br />

Of 'V.I.P.S' by Sept.<br />

NEW YORK—MGM has ordered more<br />

than 600 prints of "The V.I.P.s" to be delivered<br />

worldwide by the end of Septembei<br />

at a cost of more than $500,000, the largest<br />

print order for any picture in MGM's<br />

history.<br />

"The V.I.P.s" will have its world premiere<br />

at the Radio City Music Hall September<br />

12 and, by the end of September, more than<br />

400 prints will be on the screens in every<br />

major city in the U.S. The other 200<br />

prints are for foreign dates set on the<br />

Elizabeth Taylor-Richard Burton picture<br />

for September, October and November.<br />

Cecil Beaton has designed 20 gowns for<br />

Audrey Hepburn to wear in WB's "My<br />

Fair Lady."<br />

AT PHILADELPHIA'S NEW 61ST ST. DRIVE-IN—Seen enjoying the opening;<br />

night cocktail party and buffet at the 61st Street Drive-In Theatre, Philadelphia,<br />

opened recently by Claude J. Schlanger and Budco Theatres are: Dick<br />

Dougherty, Mori Magill of Buena Vista, William Hutchins of National Theatre<br />

Supply, C. A. McCrork of Altec Theatre Service, Jack Jazlow, Leon Cohen of<br />

Vine Street Screen, and Ben Biben of RCA Theatre Service. At the rear is Stanley<br />

Goldberg of National Screen.<br />

U. S. World Film Festival<br />

Commission Proposed<br />

WASHINGTON—A bill for the establishment<br />

of a United States World Film Festival<br />

Commission to participate in a World<br />

Festival of Film, scheduled for 1965 in<br />

Washington, D.C., has been introduced in<br />

the House of Representatives by Congressman<br />

James C. Gorman.<br />

The joint resolution calls for a ninemember<br />

commission consisting of two senators,<br />

two congressmen and five presidential<br />

appointees. The committee would<br />

be authorized to cooperate with the Motion<br />

Picture Ass'n of America, United States<br />

Board of Trade, the City of Washington,<br />

D.C., and various patriotic and historical<br />

organizations in developing and executing<br />

plans for the Festival.<br />

The bill also provides that all countries<br />

having diplomatic relations with the United<br />

States be invited to exhibit films of special<br />

merit, and enables the commission to make<br />

awards of appropriate recognition.<br />

The resolution has been referred to the<br />

Committee on Foreign Affairs.<br />

Drive-In Charges Blasts<br />

Forced It to Lock Up<br />

ALBANY—State supreme court justice<br />

Herbert D. Hamm was to hear arguments<br />

in special term Friday (26) on a motion<br />

for a temporary injunction restraining<br />

Altantic Cement Co. of Ravena from touching<br />

off "heavy explosions" in the mining<br />

of limestone near Albano's Drive-In. Sylvester<br />

J. Albano and his sons John S. and<br />

Michael J., who operate the automobiler,<br />

seek damages of $200,000.<br />

An affidavit by the elder Albano, justice<br />

of peace in the town of Coeymans, charges<br />

that last year the explosions damaged theatre<br />

equipment, disrupted performances,<br />

caused patrons to leave and forced the<br />

di'ive-in to close. The Atlantic cement<br />

plant near the airer reportedly cost more<br />

than 30 million dollars.<br />

The injunctive case will be tried before<br />

action on the claim for damages.<br />

Reade to Build House<br />

Of Unusual Design<br />

NEW YORK — Walter<br />

Reade-Sterling<br />

will build an 800-seat theatre, of revolutionary<br />

design, in Eatontown, N. J., adjacent<br />

to the circuit's drive-in theatre at<br />

the Route 35 Eatontown Traffic Circle. An<br />

early-1964 opening is planned.<br />

Walter Reade jr., chairman of the board,<br />

reported that the theatre would consist of<br />

an elliptical parabolic shell with reinforced<br />

concrete tilt-up walls, capped by a geodesic<br />

dome. Entrance will be at the screen<br />

end of the building, instead of the normal<br />

rear auditorium access, which, he said,<br />

would result in a spectacular visual approach<br />

to the interior. The exposed undulating<br />

folds of the roof shell will converge<br />

toward the screen.<br />

The theatre was designed by B&G Constructors,<br />

Inc., of Oklahoma City and<br />

Reade, personally. Reade said it would be<br />

the prototype of similar theatres to be<br />

built by the circuit. Although adjacent to<br />

the Eatontown Drive-In, the new theatre<br />

will operate as a separate unit.<br />

Reade said the new theatre would be in<br />

addition to the company's current $5,000,-<br />

000 construction program, announced a<br />

year ago, and which had resulted in the<br />

building of three Manhattan theatres, one<br />

on Long Island and one in southern New<br />

Jersey. The company also has acquired<br />

the 12-theatre Ai'cadia circuit on the New<br />

Jersey shore and another Long Island<br />

house in the last six months.<br />

'Escape' at Taormina<br />

TAORMINA, ITALY — John<br />

Sturges'<br />

"The Great Escape" was invited for special<br />

presentation at the International Film<br />

Festival, where the United Artists release<br />

was shown at the Greek Theatre here Friday<br />

( 26 ) . Although the festival is noncompetitive,<br />

each pictui'e selected by the<br />

committee receives a reproduction of a<br />

gold "Carridi" statue by Montorsoli.<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963 E-1


other<br />

'<br />

j<br />

"Bye<br />

end,<br />

I<br />

I<br />

opened<br />

i<br />

; ^<br />

'<br />

BALTIMORE—<br />

'<br />

°"^<br />

j<br />

. . 130<br />

'<br />

'<br />

!^<br />

"<br />

Cooler Weather Boosts B'wav Runs- Universal s charade set<br />

/ •»/<br />

For Xmas at Music Hall<br />

Sporting Lite Big in Two Spots ^2." in its fourth week at the new<br />

"°<br />

Loe'aTTa?^Mutint on' .riouSfy ,mgm)<br />

^"^ Grant, "Charade" will be his 26th<br />

Festival Theatre on 57th street and the 36fh wk of two-o-doy<br />

'<br />

130 Picture to play the Music Hall his previous<br />

Embassy in Times Square, and "Women of No"mo'nd?c;l^ariiynT20.h%oT '^*'°'"' '" *' Universal pictuie, "That<br />

l^o<br />

Touch of Mink."<br />

the World, in its third week at the Forum Poromount— Hud (Poro), 8th wk 125 having set the theatre's all-time boxoffice<br />

in Times Square and the small Guild The- "" prj;a-''Doe;5";;d°usS (Conti'^'isrl *'• '''"'°"^ ^"''"^ '^^ ten-week run<br />

I20<br />

last sumatre.<br />

and three of the foui- two-a-day films. "ko Paioce— a Gotherir>9 of Eagles (Umv), mer. Grant's previous 25 films including<br />

These were: ^'Cleopatra." close to ca- "°<br />

rko '23rd'st -a<br />

Universal's<br />

Gothering "Operation Petticoat,"<br />

of Eagie, -(Univ)<br />

which<br />

pacity in Its sixth week at the Rivoli; "Law- 2nd wk played during<br />

.<br />

the Christmas season in<br />

rence of Arabia," practically capacity in """ ^^^^' ^'"''^ '"""<br />

''°fparo)"'pkls"s'tagc";;;^"'7th'°rk^°'" "P ^ '^°'^^' °^<br />

i6S<br />

^9 ^eeks at<br />

its 31st week at the Criterion, and "How Rivoii-cieopotro (20th-Fox), 6th wk. of two-o-doy 19S the Music Hall, a record for anv star. Many<br />

the West Was Won," near-capacity in its<br />

°^<br />

|"4rh'^"r°rt-Vh*irs;o^iTg^life'''c:nti) ^''^ Hepburn's films, including "The<br />

200<br />

1 an week at Loews Cinerama. Only Toho<br />

'.'.'.'.'.<br />

Cmemo— Sonjuro iToho), 11th wk .\05 Nun s Story" and "Funny Face." have also<br />

"Mutiny on the Bounty" was way off in ^' ^°^*~* Gofhering of Eagles (Univ),<br />

2nd<br />

played the<br />

'"''wk<br />

Music Hall.<br />

Its 36th week of two-a-day at Loew's Trons-Uux 52nd st—PT 109 (wb), 4th wk. ! i?o<br />

With the "Charade" booking. Radio City<br />

State and will be followed by "Jason and ^^"^ ^' "'''''* Longest Day (20th-Fox), Music Hall is booked<br />

'''Tih^^k<br />

for the rest of 1963,<br />

the '^^<br />

Argonauts" at continuous run early in Victona^-Greenwich village story (shown)<br />

including the next booking. Universal's<br />

'<br />

Au^^twornt-PT<br />

109 ,wBr4th wk<br />

!?t<br />

°^ " ^11," to Open later in<br />

'"^^"^ '^^''"<br />

In addition to "This Sporting Life," at World— vioioted Paradise (Victoria),'<br />

-^"'-V'<br />

6th' wkV ::::: uo followed by MGM's "The V.I.P^" in<br />

two art houses, and "8'2" and "Women of September. Warner Bros.' "Mary, Mary"<br />

the World, British<br />

" or foreign pic- and MGM's "The Wheeler Dealers," both<br />

tures which held up well included "Mur- 3''d Great Week for "Irma' booked for later in the fall.<br />

der at the Gallop. in<br />

"<br />

its fourth good week At Two Buffalo Theatres<br />

at the Beekman: "The L-Shaped Room." BUFFALO - "Cleopatra" continues to 'Irma' tO Open in 23<br />

hold up well here,<br />

.<br />

reporting a 300 for its M y fl-c»


V. C. Raceway Event<br />

To Be Held Sept. 11<br />

NEW YORK—Variety Club Tent No. 35<br />

has set September 11 as the date for its<br />

second annual "A Night at the Races" at<br />

Yonkers Raceway. Tables seating 1,400<br />

persons have been set aside and Charles<br />

Smakwitz, general chairman, said he was<br />

certain that every seat will be sold.<br />

Last year, on July 24, 1,000 table seats<br />

were sold and present indications are that<br />

the reservations this year will reach, and<br />

possibly go beyond, the 1,400 goal. The<br />

tent received 200 reservations before tickets<br />

went on sale, Smakwitz said.<br />

The $15 charge includes admission to the<br />

track, a full course roast beef dinner in the<br />

clubhouse and all gratuities. The track<br />

can be seen from every table. Tables will<br />

accommodate parties of four, six, eight<br />

and ten. Smakwitz pointed out that the<br />

cost of the ticket was tax deductible.<br />

Chairmen for the big night have been<br />

appointed by Smakwitz who has named<br />

Charles Alicoate, chief barker, and George<br />

Waldman as cochairmen. Salah Hassanein<br />

will serve as chairman of the distributors<br />

committee, with Leonard Lightstone<br />

as cochairman. Herman Schleier will head<br />

the arrangements committee and Irving<br />

Dollinger is chairman of the booking combine<br />

committee. Lee Koken, Charles Okun<br />

and Edward Finneran are the concessions<br />

chairmen.<br />

Harold Zeltner is in charge of tickets and<br />

Joseph Rosen is chairman of the circuit<br />

committee. William Reddick has been<br />

named chairman of the affiliated industry<br />

companies and David Holtzman is chairman<br />

of the legitimate theatre committee.<br />

Al Steen and Mort Sunshine will handle<br />

publicity. The telephone contact squad<br />

will be headed by Mrs. Harry Pimstein,<br />

chief barkerette, and Mrs. Al Steen.<br />

Proceeds from the event will go to<br />

the Variety Club Foundation of Tent 35.<br />

Barkerettes to Entertain<br />

Allied Members' Wives<br />

NEW YORK—The Barkerettes of New<br />

York Tent No. 35 will serve as hostesses at<br />

a preview of the World's Fair for the benefit<br />

of wives attending the annual convention<br />

of Allied States Ass'n here in October.<br />

On October 24, the women will be entertained<br />

at a luncheon at the glass-enclosed<br />

"Top of the Fair" of the Port Authority<br />

Bldg. A tour of the World's Fair facilities<br />

as they near completion is scheduled.<br />

Prominent officials will participate.<br />

A helicopter will transport the Barkerettes,<br />

show business personalities and some<br />

of the Allied members' wives from New<br />

York to the scene. The program for the<br />

luncheon now is being prepared. On October<br />

23, the ladies will dine in the delegates<br />

dining room of United Nations.<br />

Normandie, Little Carnegie<br />

Bought by Ely Landau<br />

NEW YORK—Ely Landau, producer of<br />

"Long Day's Journey Into Night," concluded<br />

agreements which transfer ownership<br />

to him of both the Normandie and<br />

Little Carnegie theatres on West 57th St.<br />

He signed the contract with Richard<br />

Brandt, president of Trans-Lux Corp. Both<br />

theatres will be renovated and renamed.<br />

BROADWAY<br />

QHARLES BOASBERG, Paramount general<br />

sales manager, went to Madrid to<br />

join George Weltner, executive vicepresident<br />

for meetings with Samuel Bronston<br />

on "Circus," which Paramount will release.<br />

Weltner left earlier and stopped in<br />

London for meetings with Hal Wallis,<br />

whose "Becket" is filming there. Joseph<br />

Friedman, executive assistant to vice-president<br />

Martin Davis, is back in New York<br />

after accompanying Jerry Lewis on his personal<br />

appearance tour. * * * Maurice "Red"<br />

Silverstein, president of MGM International<br />

and vice-president of MGM, left for<br />

Hollywood Thursday ( 25 ) to join Robert H.<br />

O'Brien, president, and Robert M. Weitman,<br />

studio head, on production conferences.<br />

* • • William Zimmerman, Embassy<br />

vice-president and production supervisor,<br />

left Tuesday (23) for Elurope to screen<br />

rough cuts of "Three Penny Opera" and<br />

"A Ghost at Noon" in Rome.<br />

•<br />

Richard Brandt, president of Trans-Lux<br />

Corp., is doubly proud of twin boys, born<br />

to Mrs. Brandt, the former Lois Livingston,<br />

in Doctors Hospital Tuesday ( 23 ) . The<br />

Brandts have two other children, Claudia,<br />

11, and David. 8. * • * Phillip P. Fried,<br />

formerly with Blowitz, Thomas and Canton,<br />

where he worked on campaigns for<br />

"The Birds" and "Sparrows Can't Sing,"<br />

has joined the staff of John Roney and Associates,<br />

as an account executive of the<br />

public relations firm. * * * Universal<br />

brought newspaper critics and writers from<br />

13 cities for a special screening of "The<br />

Thrill of It All" Wednesday (24) and to<br />

interview James Garner at a cocktail party<br />

and dinner the same day. » * * Robert R.<br />

Weston, Embassy vice-president in charge<br />

of advertising, publicity and exploitation,<br />

postponed his scheduled trip to the coast.<br />

•<br />

Ted Albert, TV-radio and column contact<br />

for Paramount Pictures for the past two<br />

years, has joined the publicity staff of 20th<br />

Century-Fox as TV-radio contact, working<br />

under the supervision of Mort Segal, publicity<br />

manager. * * * Philip Gerard, Universal<br />

eastern advertising and publicity director,<br />

accompanied by Herman Kass, in charge of<br />

national exploitation, went to the west coast<br />

for a week of conferences with David A.<br />

Lipton, vice-president, on plans for forthcoming<br />

releases. Also at Universal, Alice Lee<br />

"Boaty" Boatwright, eastern talent representative,<br />

is visiting eastern summer theatres<br />

in Maine and Massachusetts seeking<br />

new talent. • * * Fima Noveck Productions<br />

has been engaged by Colorama as technical<br />

consultant on its foreign imports, including<br />

"Rita" and "I Prefer My Wife."<br />

•<br />

James Garner, costarred in Universal's<br />

"The Thrill of It All," came in from<br />

Hollywood Sunday (21) for a few days of<br />

advance promotion for the picture, which<br />

opens at the Radio City Music Hall August<br />

1. Garner then went to Chicago for two<br />

days of promotion Friday and Saturday<br />

(26, 27). Arlene Francis, who attended<br />

the "Miss Universe" beauty pageant at<br />

Miami Sunday (21) returned to New York<br />

to do radio and syndicate interviews for<br />

the same Universal picture, in which she<br />

is featured. • * * Cindy Carol, who makes<br />

her film debut as the new Gidget in Columbia's<br />

"Gidget Goes to Rome," also arrived<br />

from the west coast for promotion<br />

before starting on a ten-city personal appearance<br />

tour for the film while Annette<br />

Funicello, one of the stars of AIP's "Beach<br />

Party," went to Atlantic City for the opening<br />

of the film on the Steel Pier July 21.<br />

Fredric March has completed his final<br />

scenes for his role as the President in<br />

Paramount's "Seven Days in May" and<br />

returned to his home in Com ecticut. • •<br />

Harve Presnell, who was in New York to<br />

cut his first album for MGM Records, returned<br />

to Hollywood Saturday ( 27 ) to start<br />

rehearsals for "The Unsinkable Molly<br />

Brown," in which he will play his original<br />

Broadway role. Peter Gennaro, Broadway<br />

choreographer who created the musical<br />

numbers in the show, has been signed by<br />

MGM to serve in the same capacity for the<br />

picture, which will start shooting with<br />

Charles Walters directing July 29.<br />

•<br />

( 22 ) , left<br />

Harry Saltzman, producer of "To Russia,<br />

With Love" for United Artists, is in New<br />

York from England for meetings with UA<br />

executives. • • * Ely A. Landau, who returned<br />

from Europe Monday<br />

Wednesday (24i for Knoxville, Tenn.,<br />

where his current production of "The Fool<br />

Killer" is completing location filming. • * *<br />

June Wilkinson, who closed in "Pajama<br />

Tops" on Broadway, flew to Miami for the<br />

opening of her film, "Rage Within," which<br />

was made in Mexico by Myron Gold with<br />

both EInglish and Spanish sound tracks.<br />

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BOXOFHCE July 29, 1963 E-3


. . . Yoko<br />

number<br />

. . Jonas<br />

. . Carl<br />

0d


. . Nicholas,<br />

Cartoons Brighten Ads<br />

Of Interboro Circuit<br />

NEW YORK—Inclusion of cartoons in the<br />

newspaper ads of the 17-theatre Interboro<br />

Circuit has created new reader interest,<br />

MOVIES! FAMILY FUN<br />

FOR EVERYONE!<br />

LAUREL<br />

Lonf Beach<br />

GE 2 0079<br />

LIDO<br />

Long Beach<br />

GE. 2 0056<br />

LAURELTON<br />

Laurelton<br />

LA 7 2647<br />

FREE WHITE<br />

AND 21<br />

AND MIND BENDERS<br />

WRONG ARM OF<br />

THE LAW<br />

AND BILLY BUDD<br />

FREUD<br />

CARRY ON TEACHER<br />

Flicker Snickers'^<br />

"Well, you ain't<br />

Richard Burton either!"<br />

AIR CONDITIONED<br />

INTERBORO THEATRES<br />

according to M. O. Strausberg, circuit president.<br />

The "Flicker Snickers" cartoons are<br />

incorporated in Interboro's newspaper theatre<br />

directory which was revamped by the<br />

Cole Fischer Rogow agency when it took<br />

over the Interboro account.<br />

Strausberg said readers looked for the cartoons<br />

every day. He said there was a clearcut<br />

connection between the ads and increased<br />

boxoffice at all Interboro theatres.<br />

This was indicated, he added, by the number<br />

of patrons who made a point of telling<br />

personnel how much they liked the ads.<br />

The captions range from ribbing of theatre-going<br />

mores to irreverent nudging of<br />

the industry.<br />

Mel Heymcmn Dead; Was<br />

With MGM Since 1926<br />

ISTEW YORK—Melvin Heymann, veteran<br />

member of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's homeoffice<br />

publicity department, died at University<br />

Hospital in Baltimore on July 19,<br />

reportedly of cancer. Heymann had been<br />

with the company since 1926 and had<br />

served as business manager of the department<br />

for several years. Survivors are his<br />

wife, two daughters and six grandchildren.<br />

Trans-Lux Film Booked<br />

NEW YORK—"The Burning Coui-t," a<br />

French film directed by Julien Duvivier,<br />

which Trans-Lux Distributing is releasing<br />

in the U. S. will open at the Trans-Lux<br />

East Theatre July 31, following the new<br />

theatre's cuiTent and second picture, "A<br />

Gathering of Eagles." Nadja Tiller, Jean-<br />

Claude Brialy and Perrette Pradier are<br />

starred in the film.<br />

ALBANY<br />

Toe Saperstein, long a familiar industry<br />

figure here, was in town on a visit<br />

from Florida. The former Fabian short<br />

subject booker and onetime manager of<br />

the old Grand reminisced with Palace<br />

manager Bill With, stage manager Jim<br />

Blackburn and others about "the old<br />

gang." Since his retirement, Saperstein has<br />

lived in Sarasota . . . Clark Sheldon's son<br />

now operates the Galli Curci in Margaretville,<br />

Delaware County. Theatre is named<br />

after the famed diva who maintained a<br />

summer home there . son of<br />

Nick Googin, owner of Town Theatre in<br />

Cazenovia and a visitor with his dad on<br />

Filmrow, will enter the sophomore year<br />

at Le Moyne College in Syracuse in September.<br />

Herb Gaines, Warner manager, called<br />

at the Kallet Theatres offices in Oneida . . .<br />

John Serustino, Paramount salesman,<br />

. . . Strand ushers<br />

called on area accounts dm-ing a trip<br />

wore<br />

from Buffalo<br />

summer white Navy uniforms, with "PT<br />

109" printed on the front of upturned<br />

sailor hats for two weeks before the opening<br />

Wednesday (24) at the Strand. Cashiers<br />

also sported the caps. Arrangements<br />

for the uniforms were made through the<br />

Navy and Navy Reserve.<br />

Dick Hayes, Paramount booking manager,<br />

had 17 prints working for the initial<br />

breaks in this exchange district of "Come<br />

Blow Your Horn." Kallet Theatres, which<br />

first showed the comedy at the Olympic<br />

in Utica, rebooked it for a fortnight at<br />

the Utica in the same city . . . The Capitol<br />

in Ballston Spa has gone dark until September.<br />

The fall-through-spring season was<br />

extended this year into June . . . The Rex<br />

in Keesville employs a distinctive style of<br />

type, signature and layout for advertisements<br />

in the Plattsburgh Press-Republican.<br />

Paul Maicus operates the theatre on<br />

lease from Fred Pelky, who does the buying-booking.<br />

Pelky also works as a printer<br />

. . . Dick Weber, Knickerbocker News reporter,<br />

wrote a series of stories on the<br />

operation of the Strategic Air Command<br />

while "A Gathering of Eagles" held the<br />

screen at Strand. Weber was among the<br />

newsmen who were flown to Omaha, Neb.,<br />

to observe in action that powerful arm of<br />

U. S. defense.<br />

Sylvan Leff plucked one of the choicest<br />

plums from the product tree, "Irma La<br />

Douce" — for his first-run Town at Watertown.<br />

The presentation there was one of<br />

the first for the UA comedy in the Albany<br />

territory. The Stanley Warner Strand,<br />

Albany, will play it in August . . . William<br />

Morgan's Northway Drive-In at Champlain<br />

charged $1 for adults during the engagement<br />

of "The Longest Day." Newspaper<br />

copy stressed "Admission price is for this<br />

picture only."<br />

Cheering news on a sizzling day was the<br />

word from New York that Bernie Myerson,<br />

Fabian chief buyer, would join Loew's<br />

Theatre as executive vice-president in September.<br />

Branch managers and local theatre<br />

friends of Myerson expressed delight at his<br />

move-up . . . Bob Friedman, who sold in<br />

Albany for Universal a decade ago and who<br />

now directs the United Artists operations<br />

in Buffalo, stopped by the Warner branch,<br />

to greet booker Al Marchetti. Marchetti<br />

was chief date-setter for U in those days<br />

... A new account recently was added<br />

to Albany distributor books with the opening<br />

of the Spa Drive-In at Richfield<br />

Springs. Carl Gaylord owns the ozoner,<br />

reported to have a capacity of 325 cars.<br />

Ed Horning, an ex-Schine employe, manages<br />

it. Last year, Gaylord opened a restaurant<br />

in front of the automobiler. A<br />

side entrance makes the restaurant available<br />

to theatre patrons.<br />

Approximately 1,000 fans viewed the<br />

closed-circuit telecast of the Liston-Patterson<br />

bout at Fabian's Palace Monday<br />

night. The charge was $5, tax included.<br />

Considering the briefness of that clash, and<br />

the "downbeat" note of writers on the<br />

possibility the second match would go<br />

much longer, the turnout was good. Siu--<br />

prising was the number of younger women<br />

present with male escorts. The heaviest<br />

Palace applause was for Lucius Cassius<br />

Clay, heavyweight contender, who entered<br />

the ring before the opening bell. Adrian<br />

Ettelson, Fabian district manager, supervised<br />

the special show, with Manager Bill<br />

With and assistant Stanton Patterson in<br />

direct charge. George Lourinia, manager of<br />

Fabian's Mohawk Drive-In, worked the<br />

"out" door. A lobby sign directed patrons<br />

to "Keep Your Ticket Stubs." The policy<br />

of refusing "passouts" was again followed<br />

—uniformed policemen being on hand to<br />

enforce it.<br />

. .<br />

. .<br />

Ralph Ripps, MGM manager, returned<br />

from a vacation during which he toured<br />

Montreal and Quebec . Jim Blackburn,<br />

Palace stage manager, has planned a trip<br />

to the same area of Canada . The new<br />

Carrier air conditioning plant at the State,<br />

Schenectady, makes the house "delightfully<br />

cool," according to Fabian city manager<br />

Phil Rapp . . . The Scotia Art Theater<br />

reopened July 25 after a brief closedown<br />

for putting in new air conditioning<br />

equipment. Val Ritchey operates the<br />

Scotia.<br />

'Lord of the Flies' Is Set<br />

For Tower East Aug. 20<br />

NEW YORK—"Lord of the Flies," the<br />

Peter Brook production adapted from the<br />

William Golding novel, which was filmed<br />

on location in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean<br />

with a cast of 32 non-professionals,<br />

will have an invitational world premiere<br />

at Loew's Tower East August 19, according<br />

to Continental Distributing, which is<br />

releasing the British film. The regular<br />

continuous run will start August 20. The<br />

opening was originally set for the same<br />

theatre August 6.<br />

Quick Seti^ice<br />

Isn't Jn>t A Slogan With Fifanack<br />

It's A Tradition - For Be»t Service<br />

Send Filmack Your Next Order For<br />

Special Ttailef^<br />

1327 S. Wabash<br />

Chicago/ Illinois<br />

BOXOFHCE July 29. 1963 E-5


. . The<br />

BUFFALO<br />

prank J. A. McCarthy, assistant general<br />

sales manager for Universal who died<br />

recently, was in the distribution business<br />

In Buffalo more than 30 years ago, when he<br />

managed the First National exchange in the<br />

Film building at 505 Pearl Street and later<br />

in the Warner Bros, building at 470 Fianklin.<br />

Among those associated with McCarthy<br />

In those days were Ray Powers and Bert<br />

Kemp, the latter now a member of the Warner<br />

staff at 100 South Elmwood Avenue.<br />

. . . There was a big crowd of barkers at<br />

the entertainment industry's golf outing<br />

sponsored by the Variety club Monday i22)<br />

at the Erie Downs Golf Country Club over<br />

in Canada. Following the golf part of the<br />

day's activities there was a full steak dinner.<br />

Business is holding up well on "Cleopatra"<br />

at the Center Theatre, according to Manager<br />

Ben Dargush. The boxoffice was helped a<br />

bit by an editorial in the Evening News<br />

which emphasized "those who don't see 'Cleopatra.'<br />

will miss a great deal!" ... A change<br />

In ticket policy for the Granada Theatre<br />

and its "Lawrence of Ai-abia" has gone into<br />

effect. Manager Joe Garvey has cancelled<br />

the reserved seat policy and all tickets are<br />

being sold on a general admission basis with<br />

reduced prices for children and students.<br />

Continuing are two shows daily at 2 and 8<br />

pjn.<br />

Buffalo's Dick Shawn, star of screen and<br />

stage, who was in town recently to star in<br />

the Melody Fair production of "Do Re Mi,"<br />

said. "I've been hovering on the brink of<br />

TV comedy for some time and it's possible<br />

that I'll take the plunge come series changing<br />

time in January." . industry has a<br />

new aspirant for honors and the brass ring<br />

of boxoffice success who names Rochester<br />

as his native city. He's James B. Doherty,<br />

son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Doherty. Jim,<br />

as producer and codirector, recently completed<br />

a picture titled "The Man in the<br />

Water" for a newly organized producing<br />

company in Florida, the Key West Film Co.<br />

Distribution of the picture is now being<br />

arranged with a major company, according<br />

to Jim's brother, who recently left the Regent<br />

Theatre in Rochester where he served<br />

as assistant manager.<br />

Frank Bassett, city manager for the Schine<br />

theatres in Rochester, and his wife Betty<br />

are settling their new home on Rocket<br />

. . .<br />

street. Frank, faced with a whole new set<br />

of outdoor chores, wants someone to teach<br />

him how to trim a hedge to make it a thing<br />

of beauty. Organ enthusiasts will have<br />

a chance to hear once more one of Buffalo's<br />

fine old movie organs. Leonard MacClain of<br />

Philadelphia, who started his playing career<br />

as piano player for the silents, has recorded<br />

several numbers on the Roosevelt theatre's<br />

Marr & Colton four-manual organ. The<br />

music, ranging from "pops ' to Debussy<br />

ENDLESS<br />

BURNS THE tNTIRf<br />

POSITIVE ROD<br />

Soy» Corbon Coit<br />

lAJT COAST THEATRE SUPPLY<br />

S321 Kenwood Ave.<br />

Baltimore, Morylond<br />

with Victor Herbert for good measure, will<br />

be part of organist MacClain's 50th anniversary<br />

album, along with recordings made in<br />

Rochester and other cities. Ralbar Productions<br />

of Pottstown. Pa., recorder of railroad<br />

sounds, will distribute the MacClain album.<br />

A persistent fellow is Donald Smith of<br />

Lackawanna. As president of the Jane Powell<br />

Club 12 years ago. he greeted the actress<br />

on her arrival in Buffalo for a theatre appearance.<br />

The event, pictuied in the<br />

Courier-Express of Oct. 12, 1951, was duplicated<br />

the other day at Melody Fair. When<br />

the star arrived to rehearse for "The Unsinkable<br />

Molly Brown" at the North Tonawanda<br />

tent theatre, there was Smith. He's<br />

still president of the club. He presented<br />

Miss Powell a bouquet of roses and was<br />

greeted warmly by the actress. Both he and<br />

Jane agreed that each had changed a little<br />

in 12 years.<br />

Mrs. Murl J. Morse, who started in<br />

exhibition as an usherette at Loew's State<br />

here, now the Century, and later was<br />

cashier at Shea's Court Street. Shea's<br />

Bailey and Shea's Kensington (holding the<br />

post at the latter house 17 years >. and who<br />

for the past tw'o years has been selling<br />

reserved seats at the Teck Theatre, died<br />

July 19. Mrs. Morse was the mother of<br />

Mrs. Velma M. Prentice.<br />

Current film operations in Hollywood were<br />

discussed by producer Herman King the<br />

other evening in the Studio Theatre. He<br />

and his brothers Maurice and Frank entered<br />

the motion picture business in 1942. Their<br />

latest film, "Captain Sindbad," is scheduled<br />

for Shea's Buffalo later this summer.<br />

Coloroma Retitles Italian<br />

Film to 'Rita' for U.S.<br />

NEW YORK—Colorama Features has retitled<br />

the Carlo Ponti Italian production of<br />

"Letters of a Novice" to the name of the<br />

leading character. "Rita." for its American<br />

relea.se in the fall of 1963. "Rita." which<br />

was directed by Alberto Lattuada. stars<br />

Pascale Petit in the title role and Jean-<br />

Paul Belmondo.<br />

Colorama has also sold the Italian distribution<br />

rights to "The Girl Hunters,"<br />

starring Mickey Spillane. to Euro-International<br />

Films of Rome, according to Dino<br />

Fazio, president of Colorama. The picture<br />

is now being dubbed into Italian for a<br />

simultaneous opening in August in Rome,<br />

Milan. Genoa. Turin. Venice, Florence,<br />

Naples and Palermo.<br />

John M. Wall Dies<br />

SYRACUSE—John M. Wall. 82. who conducted<br />

the John M. Wall. Inc.. motion<br />

picture camera manufacturing center in<br />

Syracuse until his retirement in 1958. died<br />

Ttiesday i23i at a nursing homo after a<br />

long illness. Wall developed the single<br />

track sound system on film. His last camera<br />

creation was the three-eyed Cinerama<br />

camera. His cameras were used by March of<br />

Time. Movietone News. Pathe News. Warner<br />

Bros., the U. S. Air Corps and various<br />

state governments.<br />

The John M. Wall camera Is still a Syracu.se<br />

Industry. He sold his patents and<br />

machinery In 1958.<br />

Lincoln Center Picks 3<br />

For N.Y. Film Festival<br />

NEW YORK-Throe new foreign films,<br />

one by Argentina's Lcopoldo Torre Nilsson<br />

and two from Italy, have been selected to<br />

be siiown at the first New York Film Festival,<br />

to be held at the Lincoln Center and<br />

the Mu-seum of Modern Art September 10-<br />

19. according to William Schuman. president<br />

of Lincoln Center of Performing Arts.<br />

Nilsson's "La Terraza" was also shown at<br />

this year's Berlin Film Festival while the<br />

Italian films are "II Mare"<br />

i<br />

iThe Sea directed<br />

by Giuseppe Patroni Griffi. and<br />

"RoGoPag." directed by four directors,<br />

Roberto Rossellini, who did the "Virginity"<br />

episode: Jean-Luc Godard. who directed<br />

"The New World" episode: Pier Paolo<br />

Pasoiini. who did "The Cream Cheese"<br />

epi-sode, and Ugo Gregoretti. who directed<br />

"The Grubbing Chicken" episode. "H Mare"<br />

was shown at last year's Venice Fiim<br />

Festival.<br />

Previously announced to be shown at<br />

the New York Film Festival are Ermanno<br />

Olmi's Italian film. "The Fiances." Roman<br />

Polanski's Polish picture. "Knife in the<br />

Water." Chris Marker's French film. "Le<br />

Joli Mai." Takis Kanelopouli.s' Greek film.<br />

"The Sky" and Glauber Rocha's "Barravento."<br />

This makes a total of eight foreign pictures<br />

selected out of 20 new features to be<br />

shown at Lincoln Center, in addition to<br />

the year's best short subjects.<br />

Trencher to Head Sales<br />

For 20th-Fox Records<br />

NEW YORK—Irving Trencher, sales and<br />

promotion specialist in the music field,<br />

has been appointed sales manager for 20lh<br />

Century-Fox Records, effective immediately,<br />

by Norman Weiser, vice-president in<br />

charge of operations.<br />

Trencher first became affiliated wuth the<br />

business in 1953. when he joined Southern<br />

Music Publishing in a top promotional<br />

capacity. Subsequently, he held important<br />

sales and promotion positions with Top-<br />

Rank Records. MGM Records and. most<br />

recently. Mercury Records.<br />

Prior to the music field, Trencher w'as<br />

associated with the film industry, serving<br />

for many years in the executive echelon of<br />

Brandt Theatres, New York.<br />

New Seven Arts TV Post<br />

NEW YORK— Stanley R. Jaffe, with<br />

Seven Arts for the past .year, has been<br />

named to the newly-created post of executive<br />

assistant to Thomas D. Tannenbaimi,<br />

vice-president in charge of television<br />

production and pnckaging. Jaffe will<br />

operate out of the New York office and will<br />

develop new talent in acting, directing and<br />

writing in the Seven Arts video production<br />

plans.<br />

Film Course for Teachers<br />

NEW YORK—A six-week workshop devoted<br />

to film appreciation in schools Is<br />

being conducted at Fordham University's<br />

Lincoln Square Campas. The course, which<br />

started July 3 and ends August 14. is designed<br />

for teachers Interested in organizing<br />

programs for motion picture appreciation<br />

through film clubs, film festivals and film<br />

courses with .school and community groups.<br />

E-6 BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


. . The<br />

. . The<br />

PHILADELPHIA<br />

"The two stars of "Beach Party," Philadelphia's<br />

own Frankie Avalon and Annette<br />

Punicello, presented a trophy to the<br />

winner of the "Beach Party" purse last<br />

Thui'sday il8) at Liberty Bell Park, the<br />

new harness raceway in this city. It was<br />

all part of the film promotion . U. S.<br />

Department of Labor has filed suit against<br />

the American Guild of Variety Artists in<br />

an effort to force it to terminate its trusteeship<br />

over the Philadelphia branch of<br />

AGVA. The suit was filed by Labor Secretary<br />

W. Willard Wirtz, It charges that<br />

the parent body has been running all the<br />

affairs of the branch since the trusteeship<br />

was imposed in October 1959. This, the<br />

suit contends, is a violation of the labormanagement<br />

reporting and disclosure act<br />

in that the trusteeship is not necessary for<br />

a pm'pose allowable under the act.<br />

The air ccnditioning unit on top of the<br />

Benson Theatre in West Philadelphia exploded,<br />

scattering debris in the area. The<br />

hood on top of the unit was blown off<br />

and landed in the street, striking a car.<br />

The cause of the explosion was not determined<br />

. The leukemia children's wing<br />

. .<br />

of the City of Hope National Medical Research<br />

Center and Hospital benefited from<br />

the grand opening of the new 61st Street<br />

Drive-In north of Passyunk avenue. Claude<br />

J. Schlanger, president of Budco Quality<br />

Theatres, made the announcement of the<br />

July 2 event.<br />

The producers of the prize-winning<br />

"David and Lisa," Eleanor and Prank Perry,<br />

are back in Philadelphia making another<br />

motion picture here. The title is to be<br />

"Lady Bug, Lady Bug." It is being shot<br />

in the Main Line area. "David and Lisa"<br />

was filmed in the same general area on<br />

the Wynnewood estate of the Clothier<br />

family, which is the former home of the<br />

Agnes Irwin School. Fourteen children are<br />

appearing in the film.<br />

Benjamin Borowsky, a retired theatre<br />

owner and furniture dealer, died recently<br />

in Hahnemann Hospital. He was 72 and<br />

lived at 8056 Temple Rd. He formerly<br />

owned a chain of Philadelphia motion picture<br />

theatres and later owned a store in<br />

South Philadelphia. His wife Mamie, two<br />

sons, a daughter, five sisters, seven grandchildren<br />

and a great-grandchild survive.<br />

Colodzin Heads SIB<br />

NEW YORK—Robert S. Colodzin has<br />

been named president of SIB Productions<br />

of New York. Colodzin was formerly TV<br />

production supervisor at Benton & Bowles<br />

Advertising Agency.<br />

Considered a leading specialist in the<br />

production of filmed television commercials,<br />

Colodzin was also a pioneer in the<br />

use of video tape for TV commercials. SIB<br />

Productions has executive offices and editing<br />

facilities in New York and is affiliated<br />

with SIB Productions, Paramount Studios,<br />

Hollywood.<br />

JonnAi^<br />

BOONTON, N. J.<br />

Death to Dinty Moore<br />

At Pittsburgh Home<br />

PITTSBURGH — F. D. "Dinty" Moore,<br />

longtime distributor who in recent years<br />

operated a booking-buying business, died<br />

at his home Monday (22) from lateral<br />

sclerosis which had afflicted him the last<br />

two years.<br />

His tissues disintegrated and his strength<br />

constantly waned, but Moore kept active<br />

right to the end. His corn-age won the<br />

admiration of all members of the film and<br />

theatre business in this area. Only in recent<br />

weeks had he moved his office from<br />

the Atlas Theatre Supply building to his<br />

home, where he continued to buy and book<br />

for the Manos circuit and the Comuntzis<br />

theatres in Morgantown. He started wearing<br />

leg braces a year ago, later added arm<br />

crutches and finally he was confined to<br />

a wheelchair at his home.<br />

Moore, 63, was a native of Huntingdon<br />

County, and entered exhibition at Robertsdale-Orbisonia.<br />

Back in 1927 or 1928, Roy Haines, then<br />

manager here for First National Pictures,<br />

bought a car from a car salesman in the<br />

Hill district named Benny Kalmenson, although<br />

he already had one and didn't have<br />

any need for another. The upshot was that<br />

Haines offered Kalmenson a film sales<br />

job, and Benny's first assignment was to<br />

sell F. D. Moore at Robertsdale. The latter<br />

two became fast friends, and Moore came<br />

to Pittsburgh to join Warner Bros, when<br />

Kalmenson was moving up in that company.<br />

Moore finally became New England<br />

division manager for WB.<br />

He operated his Pittsburgh Theatre Service<br />

Corp. the last ten years. Sm-vivors include<br />

his wife Sarah, a son Forrest of<br />

Scottsdale, Ariz., and five grandchildren.<br />

90-Minute TV Spectacular<br />

To Cover World of Films<br />

NEW YORK—A 90-minute television<br />

spectacular devoted to the world of motion<br />

pictm-es is being prepared for showing on<br />

the NBC network on March 24, 1964. To<br />

be titled "Inside the Movie Kingdom—<br />

1964," the program will be produced by<br />

Sextant, Inc., in association with the editors<br />

of Life Magazine.<br />

Milton Fruchtman will be the producer<br />

of the spectacular which will be based on<br />

the yearend double issue of Life devoted<br />

to motion pictui-es. It will be sponsored by<br />

Colgate-Palmolive, Best Foods division of<br />

Corn Products Co. and P. Lorillard Co., all<br />

represented by the Lennen & Newell<br />

agency.<br />

Sextant, Inc., is an independent television<br />

and motion picture production company,<br />

of which Robert D. Graff is president<br />

and Robert Emmett Ginna and<br />

Fruchtman are vice-presidents. The company<br />

announced that its first featm-e film,<br />

"Young Cassidy," based on the autobiography<br />

of Sean O'Casey, would be produced<br />

next spring.<br />

Large Core<br />

Greater Crater Area<br />

mean%<br />

MAXIMUM LIGHT<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

Cam Fleishman of the Regent Square<br />

Theatre in Edgewood and Ken Winograd<br />

of the Rochester-Beaver Falls theatres<br />

can recite from memory the titles,<br />

casts, release years, etc., of films for many<br />

years back . . . John Liebich of Monroeville<br />

is manager of the newly opened Associated<br />

Films Co. at Oakmont, distributing<br />

16mm . . . Ernie Stern of Associated<br />

Theatres reports the Monroe Theatre in<br />

Monroeville will open August 1. Associated<br />

opened its new Canal Road Drive-In in<br />

Cleveland on the 25th. S. R. "Red" Clayman,<br />

former Warner shipper in Cleveland,<br />

manages the 1,100-car airer in the Cuyahoga<br />

Heights section, which also has 400<br />

seats in two auditorium sections in the<br />

concession building.<br />

John Coussoulis has been named buyerbooker<br />

by the Manos circuit. John has been<br />

assisting Dinty Moore, who died recently,<br />

for the last year in booking Manos film . . .<br />

Max Arnold, who has operated the Maple<br />

Drive-In for years, also is a furniture<br />

manufacturer representative new<br />

.<br />

Will Rogers Hospital drive trailer was<br />

screened at a meeting of distributor representatives.<br />

Mary Dery Johnston, owner of the State<br />

Theatre, 425-seater at Kittanning, reopened<br />

the house last week after it was<br />

closed by Thomas Callas, who had operated<br />

it since 1954. Two weeks ago. without advance<br />

notice, he locked up and went to<br />

his home in Weirton, W. Va. Mrs. Johnston<br />

is the daughter of the late Charles Dery,<br />

who had spent some 20 years in the theatre<br />

business at Kittanning. For a week<br />

or more Kittanning was without at least<br />

time<br />

one theatre in operation for the first<br />

in more than half a centm-y.<br />

Eugene Tunick, United Artists Eastern<br />

and Canadian division sales manager, arrived<br />

here Tuesday il6) for the opening<br />

of Stern Brothers' new Forum Theatre.<br />

Sugar and McNabb Head<br />

Fox Conference in NY<br />

WASHINGTON—The fourth and final<br />

in a series of 20th-Fox regional sales meetings<br />

detailing merchandising plans of the<br />

release program for the second half of<br />

1963 and early 1964 was held here last<br />

Wednesday and Thm'sday. Joseph M.<br />

Sugar, vice-president in charge of domestic<br />

sales, and R. C. McNabb. eastern<br />

division manager, presided over the sessions,<br />

attended by sales managers from<br />

branches in Boston, Washington, Philadelphia,<br />

Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Cincinnati and<br />

Cleveland.<br />

As in the meetings previously held in<br />

Milwaukee, Seattle and Atlanta, plans for<br />

forthcoming important product were set<br />

forth, and president Darryl F. Zanuck addressed<br />

the group via a recording in which<br />

the revitalizing progress of the company<br />

was highlighted.<br />

Blumberg Bros., Inc., 1305 Vine Street, Philadelphia—Walnut 5-7240.<br />

Notional Theotre Supply, Philadelphia— Locust 7-6156<br />

Superior Theatre Equipment Compony, Philodelphia— Rittenhouse 6-1420<br />

Notional Theatre Supply Co., 500 Pearl Street, Buffolo, N.Y.—TL 4-1736<br />

Chorleston Theatre Supply, 506 Lee Street, Charleston 21, West Virginio—<br />

Phone 344-4413<br />

^^fen\y Distributed _<br />

BOXOFHCE :<br />

: July 29, 1963 E.7


WASHINGTON ll'^JTJ^IZ^<br />

f"<br />

will tHonimr owrWTXi<br />

omhin-a<br />

BALTIMORE


attorney<br />

19<br />

NEWS AND VIEWS THE PRODUCTION CENTER<br />

HoQjnoood Office—Suite 320 at 6362 floliywood Blvd.<br />

Hollywood Museum<br />

Ceremony on Oct. 24<br />

HOU-YTJTOOD—Ground -breiU-i.i.<br />

monief. lor the Hollj-wood Museum will<br />

:•:.<br />

btheld<br />

October 24. Sol l>saier. president ol<br />

the HoUj-«'ood Museum Associates, dKclcned<br />

at a meetlne m the Beverly Hills<br />

Hotel AssociaK* will run th«- museum for<br />

when<br />

the Los AngeJes County supen-isors<br />

the S6. 000.000 building l of the UriJversltj of Oallfomla<br />

at Los Angeles has been appointed<br />

U) ad%-ise on the selection<br />

The moHink property' will be leased to a<br />

rorporattOB irtdt^ will handle the erection<br />

of tte «piiW*"r and flotauon of any bonds<br />

neaama. and sublease it to the Hollywood<br />

Associates which will operate It, according<br />

to Ernest Debs. Los AngeJes Countj' supervisor<br />

and father of the project.<br />

Recentlj- COMPO and other groups dlscussMl<br />

posslbllitj' of industry poll of patrons<br />

to ue in with year-to-year financing<br />

of the museum operation.<br />

The museum will help project a voildu'lde<br />

image of Hollywood as a major coromunicauons<br />

center with facilities to cross<br />

laruniHge barriers through films<br />

95th Players Directory<br />

HOLLYWOOD— T^e ft.SUi Players Dlrectorj'<br />

issue of the Academy of Mntion<br />

Picture Arts and Scierices contains a list of<br />

S^&O artists m the 1.146 pages of tbe two<br />

voliune edition About SOC agency ctaBVH<br />

have taken place since the last nAtton. and<br />

2,000 new picture* not contained in former<br />

issues are iricluded in the new volumes.<br />

Rereleosing Xeagrues^'<br />

HOl^l-WDOD — Ficrc.'-UKf<br />

"21 lej U:idc! tlK- Sea' ts pianrieci<br />

foi .- . .<br />

;• ; iri tlie Los AngclJrs area witti<br />

the rest of tne country foUowUig iii atiout u<br />

month, ii was announced here bi' the Disney<br />

atudloft,.<br />

Tommy Sonda Fonns Company<br />

NFW YORK— Tommy SancU tihj<br />

U>ynu-ci<br />

Sands F»roducuotLS for tlie d(-vt-i[>;>ni!-;.', ,.:<br />

mntion picture and T^' pro;iertles witli his<br />

managej-, Ted Wict as partner in tiie new<br />

campazD' The first proieci w.ll tie "The<br />

Jasmine True," based en-, an original by<br />

Sands and he hopes to Htar iKtth<br />

Poiuer m the film<br />

22 Locals to Ballof Wiihin a Month<br />

On NAACP 'One Negro to Crew' Plan<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Approval of a demand<br />

'<br />

!''.V V.'-^K >:.:.. • •<br />

'.r l^ir<br />

were which out<br />

Slg:' "Ki^.i- :.. v:v L ,i;<br />

ticeshlp programs will continue to be<br />

that a Negro be added to each production stressed by the NAACP Flaherty maintained,<br />

on the other hand, that programs<br />

crew involved in the mafcmg of theatrical<br />

and TV motion picture films was announced<br />

by George Flaherty, L^TSE in-<br />

training alread.v are open to Negroes,<br />

of the locals which have apprenticeship<br />

ternational vice-president, at a P:uday ><br />

Cappy DuVal, Propmen's Local 44 business<br />

meeting here with representatives of the reprtrseniiative, told Hill 11 was his understanding<br />

National Ass'n for the Advancement of<br />

that Painters Local 75S, Costum-<br />

Colored People,<br />

ers Local 705 and Makeup Local 706, the<br />

Flaherty instructed the 22 business thrtH- HolLvwoiJd locals with such programs,<br />

agents of industry locals, who were present<br />

at the meeting, to submit the "one- Hill indicated that the "Haae!" TV show-<br />

alreadj' have Negrotrs enrolled<br />

Negro" proposal to their membf^rs for approval<br />

sponsored by Ford Motor Co would be the<br />

or disapproval It if. exp«'Cted that first specific production against which the<br />

the voting machinery of the locals on the NAACP would direct arv,v pressure action. IT<br />

proposition will require about a month It felt that integration progress in the<br />

Meanwhile, no more m«»etings between crafts unions is not advancing at the desired<br />

pace.<br />

NAACP and the uruon repnrsentatives arc<br />

expected until the result of the locals' balloting<br />

Is known<br />

Rounding Out Production<br />

TRIO RETRESENTS NAACP<br />

Unit for The Best Man'<br />

Herbert Hill. NAACP national labor «icretarv'<br />

. Thomas G Neusom<br />

HOLL.'V'WOOD — Ha-sfcei: W'cxler has<br />

of<br />

been signed as cinomatographer and L.vle<br />

the NAACP and the tTnited CJvU Rights<br />

Whf-elet as productm for "Th„.i;-.-.<br />

•OXCffTICE Jdty 2B. tsa W-1


BACKSTAGE WITH CASSYD<br />

H ARON ROSENBERG is a bread-andbutter<br />

producer who likes to take a<br />

gamble occasionally. Back in 1950, he<br />

worked out the first actor participation<br />

deal which started a revolution in Hollywood's<br />

top talent circles. Finding that<br />

name actors were reluctant to work with<br />

new, young producers like himself, Rosenberg<br />

figured they, like himself, would like<br />

to take a gamble for top money Instead of<br />

signing for their regular fee. and he made<br />

a deal with James Stewart to star in<br />

"Winchester '73" for 50 per cent of the<br />

profits. Rosenberg credits the idea to Lew<br />

Wasserman. Bill Goetz and Leo Spitz, saying<br />

he merely carried it out. Today, of<br />

course, such actor partnership in production<br />

is common.<br />

The freedom from "front office" interference<br />

enjoyed by today's independent<br />

producers is not an unmixed blessing.<br />

Rosenberg feels. "We all want and demand<br />

rights—script rights, editing rights—but<br />

there are many creative people in this<br />

business who shouldn't have those rights."<br />

he says.<br />

He doesn't feel the major producers are<br />

deliberately cutting down their production<br />

to create a scarcity of pictures: he blames<br />

a lack of good picture material and capable<br />

people, saying the writers simply are not<br />

putting out enough original material. But<br />

the writers are not to blame, he emphasizes:<br />

they faced a limited market for their<br />

work during the past ten years and simply<br />

stopped writing, resulting in the present<br />

drouth of original stories.<br />

Part of the scarcity blame can be laid<br />

at the door of the exhibitors, the producer<br />

points out. since they never want to take<br />

a chance on new names, new people, newideas.<br />

This forces the producers to concentrate<br />

on big name, high cost pictures<br />

there's no market for any other kind. If<br />

exhibitors want quantity they will have<br />

to prove there is a market for "quantity"<br />

pictures, he reasons.<br />

Producers today are developing a new<br />

concept of their part in merchandising<br />

product. Rosenberg gave 20th-Pox as<br />

an example of how studios are building in<br />

production ideas even before the film<br />

product is finished. He said radio and<br />

television must be used more extensively<br />

on a basis of cost per thousand people<br />

reached.<br />

Asked about the directors he likes to<br />

work with, he mentioned Lament Johnson.<br />

Sid Pollock and Norman Jewison. As for<br />

the young stars coming up. he vehemently<br />

stated that "stars are not created by the<br />

studios but by the public." He wished<br />

there were more young ones like Sandia<br />

Dee, Ann-Margret. Carol Lynley, Pamela<br />

Tiffin. Paula Prentiss, Joan Blackman,<br />

Tuesday Weld and Hayley Mills.<br />

James Garner has more audience-demand<br />

potential to be a Gary Cooper or<br />

Gary Grant than any actor on the horizon,<br />

said Rosenberg. He knows how to play<br />

comedy, and has had a tremedous schooling<br />

in more than 100 films for television<br />

and featui-es.<br />

Rosenberg concluded on the note that<br />

the majors must survive and grow if there<br />

is to be a major industry in motion pictures.<br />

With completion of a Doris Day-James<br />

Garner starrer, he will start work on<br />

"Shock Treatment." with director Denis<br />

Sanders, a UCLA graduate who is on the<br />

way up.<br />

'Mr. Pulver and Captain'<br />

Will Star Tommy Sands<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Snigt-r-aclor Tommy<br />

.S;mds has been signed by Jack L. Warner<br />

for a starring role in "Mr. Pulver and<br />

the Captain," which Joshua Logan produces<br />

and directs for the studio.<br />

Sands, rated one of the country's top<br />

recording stars and entertainers, portrays<br />

the dramatic role of John Bruno,<br />

Navy radio operator, who goes berserk<br />

when denied permission by the ship's captain<br />

to attend the funeral of his infant<br />

daughter.<br />

In "Mr. Pulver and the Captain." which<br />

Logan wrote with Peter S. Feibleman,<br />

Sands joins a strong cast headed by Robert<br />

Walker. Burl Ives and Walter Matthau.<br />

It goes before Technicolor-Panavision<br />

cameras in Acapulco. Mexico, August 1,<br />

continuing at Warner's Burbank studios<br />

September 1.<br />

McQueen Named Best Actor<br />

At Moscow Film Festival<br />

MOSCOW—Steve McQueen, one of the<br />

stars of John Sturges' "The Great Escape,"<br />

the Mirisch-Alpha production for United<br />

Artists release, was voted "best actor" at the<br />

third International Film Festival for his<br />

role in the film. The picture was the<br />

American entry at the Moscow fete.<br />

official<br />

Federico Fellini's "8^2." Italian film being<br />

released in the U.S. by Embassy Pictures,<br />

was voted "best film" by the jury, composed<br />

of 20 filmmakers and critics from 12 countries,<br />

including Stanley Kramer, who was the<br />

U.S. representative.<br />

American pictures shown out-of-competltion<br />

at the Moscow Festival were "West Side<br />

Story." also a Mirisch picture for UA; "Some<br />

Like It Hot." another UA release, and Darmy<br />

Kaye's "Knock on Wood," distributed by<br />

Paramount.<br />

$100.00 Canteen Grant<br />

To Hollywood Museum<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Bette Davis, president,<br />

announces the largest contributions ever<br />

made in the history of the Hollywood<br />

Canteen Foundation, successor to the<br />

famed Hollywood Canteen that entertained<br />

and fed free millions of servicemen during<br />

World War n.<br />

Miss Da\'ls reported a grant of $100,000<br />

has been made to the Hollywood Museum<br />

for the establishment of a replica of the<br />

original Hollywood Canteen. A second<br />

grant of $100,000 was made to apply on<br />

the construction and equipment of the<br />

Jules Stein Eye Institute at the Medical<br />

center of the University of California in<br />

Los Angeles, particularly for the benefit of<br />

veterans and their families.<br />

The latter pledge was promptly matched<br />

by an additional $100,000 by Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Jules Stein In honor of the Hollywood<br />

Canteen.<br />

Additional contributions exceeding a<br />

total of $25,000 were granted to the American<br />

Legion, the Portals House, the 52<br />

AsK'n of Southern California and the John<br />

Tracy Clinic.<br />

MiRs Davis waa proud to dlsclo.se that<br />

contributions In excess of $400,000 have already<br />

been made to dale from the Hollywood<br />

Canteen Foundation funds, including<br />

more than 250 television sets or other<br />

sound equipment to every veteran's hospital<br />

in the United States.<br />

The original canteen fund of $525,000,<br />

which was turned over to the foundation<br />

trustees at the end of World War II, now<br />

approximates $1,100,000 after excluding<br />

the $400,000 in contributions as well as<br />

operating costs averaging approximately<br />

$7,500 annually.<br />

The present grants, exceeding $225,000,<br />

will be payable over a few years since the<br />

trustees of the Hollywood Canteen Foundation<br />

have voted to retain a capital fund of<br />

a million dollars from which future income<br />

and any .surplus will be distributed annually.<br />

Other trustees of the Hollywood Canteen<br />

Foundation are Ralph Clare, B. C. "Cappy"<br />

DuVal, Baron Morehcad, Jules C. Stein,<br />

John teGroen and Lew Wasserman. Bertram<br />

Llnz Is coun.sel and the Union Bank is corporate<br />

trustee.<br />

A 'Corridor' Book Version<br />

HOLLYWOOD Bt-linoiit Publications in<br />

AuKu.st will publish a paperback edition of<br />

"Shock Corridor." authored by Michael<br />

Avallone and based on producer-director<br />

Samuel Fuller's .screenplay of the .same<br />

title. The film Is the fir.st of five which<br />

Loon Fromke.ss Is to make for Allied<br />

Artists dl.strlbutlon. AA will join the publishing<br />

firm In the national promotion of<br />

the book.<br />

Para. Signs Stella Stevens<br />

For Seven-Year Contract<br />

HOLL-YWOOD—Stella Stevens, who had<br />

been under an exclusive multiple-picture<br />

contract to Paramount Studios, has been<br />

given a new pact by the studio under which<br />

she will do one film a year for the next<br />

seven years. The pact also gives Miss<br />

Stevens all outside film rights.<br />

The first outside film under the new<br />

contract is her starring role with Glenn<br />

Ford in MGM's "Company of Cowards,"<br />

which George Marshall cuiTently is directing<br />

for producer Ted Richmond. Miss<br />

Stevens was signed by Paramount in 1959<br />

when she starred in "Li'l Abner." Her<br />

recent film.s include "Girls! Girls! Girls!"<br />

"The Courtship of Eddie's Father" and<br />

"The Nutty Professor."<br />

Herman Cohen Back Home<br />

After Long Tour for 'Zoo'<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Producer Herman<br />

Cohen returned Wednesday (24i from six<br />

weeks in Europe where he promoted his<br />

"Black Zoo," an Allied Artists release. He<br />

showed the film as an out-of-competltlon<br />

entry at the Berlin film festival. He visited<br />

Germany. Prance. England. Denmark.<br />

Sweden and Switzerland. His trip followed<br />

.^cvernl weeks spent In the east where, accompanied<br />

by a lion and a tigress, he met<br />

press, radio and television folk to exploit<br />

"Black Zoo.<br />

W-2 BOXOmCE July 29. 1963


. . Bernie<br />

. . Henry<br />

LOS ANGELES<br />

H Imost every exchange on Filmrow was<br />

represented at the gala opening in San<br />

Diego by Fred Stein's Statewide Theatres<br />

of the de luxe Cinema 21 Theatre. Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Stein hosted a chartered plane junket<br />

to the three-day affair. Fallowing the<br />

ribbon-cutting at the Cinema 21 and a<br />

subsequent dinner, the guests were taken<br />

to Tijuana for the races and jai lai games.<br />

Among the guests, most of them with their<br />

wives, were:<br />

Abe Swerdlow<br />

Harold Wirthwein<br />

William Marriott<br />

M. J. E. McCarthy<br />

Mark Tenser<br />

Morris Sudmin<br />

Harry Levinson<br />

Al Grubstick<br />

William Wasserman<br />

Ward Pennington<br />

Normon Jackter<br />

Arnold Shartin<br />

Milt Cherness<br />

Herb Benecke<br />

William Daveny<br />

Chuck<br />

Rheo Miller<br />

Newman<br />

Morris Lefko, MGM vice-president, and<br />

Lou Pormato, flew from New York to attend<br />

the Cinema 21 opening in San Diego.<br />

Marvin and Irving Mirisch and their wives<br />

attended from Hollywood . Lockhart,<br />

Western Amusement Co., became<br />

father of a baby son . Jaffe, former<br />

Continental and Warner salesman,<br />

and wife became parents of twin sons.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Filbert jr. of Filbert<br />

Bob<br />

Supply were at Lake Tahoe . . . Berken, Ken Theatre, San Diego, was in<br />

to book . . . Ernest Sturm, FWC Theatres,<br />

San Diego-Arizona district manager, was<br />

in Beverly Hills for conferences . . . William<br />

Thedford, NGC's Pacific coast chief,<br />

and J. Walter Bantau, construction head,<br />

were back from a tour of Evergreen theatres<br />

in Seattle and Portland.<br />

Isadora H. Prinzmetal, motion picture<br />

lawyer who lives in Beverly Hills, has been<br />

appointed a member of the panel of state<br />

inheritance tax appraisers of Los Angeles<br />

County.<br />

Joel, Frankenheimer Pay<br />

$175,000 for 'Seconds'<br />

HOLLYWOOD^A $175,000 purchase of a<br />

new novel, "Seconds," by David Ely, has<br />

been made by Kirk Douglas' Joel Productions<br />

and John FYankenheimer. Edward<br />

Lewis will produce and John Frankenheimer<br />

will direct the property, starting in<br />

March 1964. .<br />

Publication of the novel in September<br />

will be backed by a record promotional<br />

campaign. This high price for a novel before<br />

publishing is said to be something of a<br />

record. Irving Lazar represented the<br />

author in negotiating the movie rights.<br />

A Son to Kenneth Herts<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth<br />

Herts announce the birth of a son, whom<br />

they have named Glen. The young man<br />

weighed 8 lbs.. 7 oz. and made the youthful<br />

president of Herts-International Pictures<br />

a proud papa for the second time.<br />

NEW THEATRE AT WHITTIER—This is the artist's conception of Bruen's<br />

Whittier Theatres' new ^Miittwood Theatre, on which construction will start soon<br />

in the Whittwood Shopping Center at Whittier, Calif. The theatre will be stadiumtype,<br />

seating- 960, with interior decor in white and gold, luxury type seating by Heywood-<br />

Wakefield, latest projection and sound equipment and a screen 50 -feet wide.<br />

The stage will accommodate fashion shows, kiddy programs and current events.<br />

The building will have refrigerated air conditioning. The attraction board, 30x12<br />

feet, will be located above the left side of the canopy. The parking area surrounds<br />

the theatre building.<br />

43 LA Theatres Book<br />

'55 Days' for July 31<br />

HOLLYWOOD—The biggest Los Angeles<br />

mu'tiple booking for any Allied Artists release<br />

has been set for Samuel Bronston's<br />

production of "55 Days at Peking," which<br />

opens July 31 in 43 theatres, a greater<br />

number than for "El Cid," according to<br />

Harold Wirthwein, western division sales<br />

manager.<br />

Among the theatres are 14 drive-ins operated<br />

by Pacific Drive-In Theatre Corp.,<br />

which also booked the film in two of its<br />

hardtops, including the Pix in Hollywood<br />

and the Orpheum, in downtown Los<br />

Angeles, operated by Metropolitan Theatres<br />

Corp.<br />

Other circuits participating in the booking<br />

include Fox-West Coast, Stanley Warner<br />

Management Corp. and the Fred Stein<br />

circuit.<br />

The opening will follow a nine-week exclusive<br />

run at the Beverly Hills Theatre,<br />

Beverly Hills.<br />

Lawford in 'Dead Ringer'<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Peter Lawford has been<br />

signed by Warner Bros, to star with Bette<br />

Davis and Karl Maiden in "Dead Ringer."<br />

Lawford will enact a lover of one of the<br />

twin sisters played by Miss Davis in a dual<br />

role assignment. He reports for work immediately.<br />

Paul Henreid is directing the<br />

melodrama and William H. Wright is<br />

producing.<br />

To Exploit 'Greatest Show' TV Series<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Television is<br />

following<br />

the pattern of theatrical film exploitation.<br />

Cleary-Irwin-Strauss & Goodman, experienced<br />

practitioners of the art of tubthumping,<br />

have been signed by Desilu to<br />

exploit the new color TV series, "The<br />

Greatest Show on Earth," in 30 key cities.<br />

SAN FRANCISCO<br />

The Embassy on Market street switched<br />

to first run with "Donovan's Reef,"<br />

which opened simultaneously at the El Rey<br />

and Geneva drive-ins . . . William Garren,<br />

owner of the Tahoe Drive-In, and his wife<br />

were seriously Injured m an auto accident<br />

on the highway between Placerville and<br />

Tahoe . . . Masaichi Nagata, president of<br />

the Daiei Motion Picture Co. of Tokyo<br />

which produced "Buddha," sends a note of<br />

appreciation to <strong>Boxoffice</strong> for coverage of<br />

the opening of the film at the Stage Door<br />

Theatre. He hoped the time would come<br />

soon when Japanese pictures are familiar<br />

on San Francisco screens.<br />

Myron Hopkins, shipper for Allied Artists,<br />

was vacationing . . . Mark Ailing, RKO<br />

division manager, was in from Los Angeles<br />

for the "title bout" at the Golden Gate<br />

Theatre (22) ... In booking and buying<br />

were Tony Bou, Mary's Drive-In, Mendota;<br />

Bob Smith, Garberville Drive-In, Garberville;<br />

Marvin Martinez, Skyview at Santa<br />

Cruz; Harry Hayashino, Lincoln Theatre,<br />

and Emil Palermo, Star at Stockton.<br />

The screenplay for Warners' "The Undefeated"<br />

was written by Casey Robinson<br />

and Stanley L. Hough.<br />

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BOXOFTICE :<br />

: July 29, 1963 W-3


'<br />

!<br />

"<br />

:<br />

. . John<br />

. . Gene<br />

. . Eugene<br />

Summer Vacationists<br />

Aid Business<br />

On LA 'Main Stem'; 'Women' 350<br />

LOS ANGELES— 'Women of the World"<br />

did a 350 per cent landslide business in its<br />

first week on Hollywood boulevard. "Cleopatra"<br />

and "How the West Was Won,"<br />

along with "Lawrence of Arabia," still are<br />

leading the hard-ticket offerings. Among<br />

the newer good grossers are "8 '2," "The<br />

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Coliseum— wk 125<br />

King Kong vs Godiitia lUniv) 120<br />

M J''"' !.,. n'"'""'v- I,'"'<br />

'""P" l^-^)' 3rd'wk.'::i30<br />

Music Box— Cattle King (MGM), Flipper (MGM),<br />

^na wk. nn<br />

Orphcum— Summer Magic<br />

The (BV)<br />

weather is turning hot and smoggy Poromount— 2OO<br />

but<br />

Bye Bye Birdie<br />

'<br />

(Col)V 3rd wk, :!.:;. 1 30<br />

vacation crowds crowua continue to sweU "main<br />

stem" audiences.<br />

(Avcroge Is 100)<br />

DENVER<br />

^"rmT (Pora)"' °""''^"'"' P'X' Wilterr^Donovon's<br />

rh^n»^^^*'°''°r' •' ''•'''ng' JAA),' sth' wk. :;.••• 1°5<br />

r^jr. tr'""" ^" S""" "J'*'). 3rd wk ^r.<br />

Crest, Howaii— Bye<br />

245<br />

and Mrs. Paul .McCalmon Bye Birdie<br />

again are<br />

(Col)<br />

El '' 4th<br />

Rey—Hud wk ""<br />

fX<br />

(Poro), 3rd wk<br />

operating Paul's<br />

,|n<br />

Drive-In. Powell, Wyo.<br />

They were<br />

rine Arts—<br />

the original BVi (tmbassy), 2nd<br />

owners prior wk<br />

to<br />

910 selling to "" Craig<br />

•" **"<br />

and<br />

**"*""<br />

Ann<br />

"-opeVi),<br />

Jones at the beginning<br />

of the year<br />

2nd wk<br />

Knll!Z:°°3' i""''-^-"' 109 (WB).' .<br />

Vitale. booker<br />

srd' wk. : ;<br />

'as at Paramount, has a new short<br />

V^,T 5fh'Tk""'~''°"'' ^""' ^'"" """<br />

subject^a<br />

baby daughter<br />

, . . Howard ^"'*'"' ^'"'°9^'


'Summer Magic' Pulls<br />

Top Gross in KC<br />

KANSAS CITY—Heavy attendance of<br />

family audiences registered 300 per cent<br />

at the Uptown and Granada for Walt Disney's<br />

"Summer Magic" with second run<br />

Disney featui'es. Still going strong in its<br />

third week was "Bye Bye Birdie" at the<br />

Plaza, scoring 265. "Lawrence of Arabia,"<br />

in its third week of moveover at the Kimo,<br />

chalked up 225 while "A Gathering of<br />

Eagles" at the Uptown was slightly under<br />

with 215. Most of the first runs did above<br />

average business despite the soaring temperatures<br />

in the 90s.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Avenue Come Blow Your Horn (Para), 2nd wk. 200<br />

Brookside A Gathering of Eagles (Univ), 3rd<br />

wk.; 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ) 215<br />

Capri SS Days at Peking (AA), 4th wk 100<br />

Crest, Riverside, Boulevard The Young<br />

Racers (AlP), plus assorted second run features 100<br />

Empire— How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cinerama), 1 6th wk 1 25<br />

Kimo Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 3rd wk. of<br />

moveover 225<br />

Paramount Spencer's Mountain (WB), 4th and<br />

final week 200<br />

Parkway One and Two, Fairway The Great<br />

Escape (UA), 2nd wk., plus assorted 2nd run<br />

features 1 80<br />

Plaza Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 3rd wk 265<br />

Roxy Come Blow Your Horn (Para), 2nd wk 200<br />

Saxon—Closed temporarily.<br />

Uptown and Granada Summer Mogic (BV),<br />

plus assorted 2nd runs 300<br />

'Come Blow Your Horn' 210<br />

For Chicago Inaugural Week<br />

CHICAGO— "Come Blow Your Horn"<br />

had a big opening at the Woods. Holdovers<br />

which again gladdened the hearts of<br />

Loop theatre managers were "Bye Bye<br />

Birdie" in the fifth week at the Chicago<br />

and "The Great Escape" in the third week<br />

at the Oriental. Children on school holiday<br />

and visiting the city were largely responsible<br />

for swelling the boxoffice of the Loop<br />

Theatre, where "Flipper" was in its fourth<br />

week, and also at the Roosevelt, showing<br />

the combination of "Summer Magic" and<br />

"Yellowstone Cubs" for the second week.<br />

"The Longest Day" was once more an outstanding<br />

grosser for the various neighborhood<br />

theatres showing it on its outlying<br />

run.<br />

Capri Searching for Venus (SR); Murder Cose<br />

(SR), 2nd wk 130<br />

Chicago Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 5th wk 200<br />

Cinema The Wrong Arm of the Law (Cont'l),<br />

3rd wk 1 25<br />

Cinestage Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 28th<br />

Esquire The Mouse on the Moon (Lopert),<br />

wk. 155<br />

2nd wk 150<br />

Loop Flipper (MGM), 4th wk 195<br />

McVickers— How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cineramo), 22nd wk 90<br />

Monroe Mr. Peters Pets (SR); Affairs of a<br />

Model (SR), 2nd wk 1 25<br />

Oriental The Great Escape (UA), 3rd wk<br />

Roosevelt Summer Mogic (BV); Yellowstone<br />

200<br />

Cubs (BV), 2nd wk 190<br />

State Lake Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 4th wk 250<br />

Surf Mondo Cane (Times), moveover 145<br />

Todd Women of the World (Embassy) 1 70<br />

Town The L-Shoped Room (Col), 4th wk 125<br />

United Artists Irmo Lo Douce (UA), 7th wk 170<br />

Woods Come Blow Your Horn (Para) 210<br />

World Playhouse The L-Shaped Room (Col), 5th wk. 140<br />

'Summer Magic,' 'Birdie'<br />

Over 200 in IndianapoUs<br />

INDIANAPOLIS—All attractions are doing<br />

well here this week and some of them<br />

very well. The big ones are "Cleopatra"<br />

and "How the West Was Won," continuing<br />

roadshow runs. "Summer Magic" and "Bye<br />

Bye Birdie," among the week's new attractions,<br />

are displaying exceptional vigor.<br />

Circle Summer Mogic (BV) 250<br />

Esquire Days of Wine and Roses (WB),<br />

return run 115<br />

Indiana—How the West Was Won (MGM), 6th wk. 200<br />

Keith's Bye Bye Birdie (Col) 225<br />

Loew's Tarzan's Three Challenges (MGM);<br />

Square of Violence (SR) 1 25<br />

Lyric Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 4th wk 275<br />

Committees Appointed<br />

By St. Louis WOMPI Head<br />

ST. LOUIS—The WOMPI standing committees<br />

have been appointed by Marge Collins,<br />

new president. She announced them<br />

at a barbecue dinner held at the home of<br />

Grace Engelhard, Realart. They are:<br />

Publicity—Grace Engelhard, chairman,<br />

Pauline Wrozier, and LaDonna Pruitt, sustaining<br />

member.<br />

Program—Pauline Wrozier, Grace Engelhard,<br />

Dorothy Dressel and Gladys Shy.<br />

Membership—Joyce Becker, Carol Rogers<br />

and Carol Seago.<br />

Social—Marcella DeVinney, Eve Wassem,<br />

Charlotte Murphy and Sheila DeLoach.<br />

Extension and bylaws—Charlotte Murphy,<br />

Helen Todd, Jean Daniels and Gladys<br />

Katz.<br />

Service projects—Ann Martz, Joyce<br />

Becker and Eve Wassem.<br />

Finance—Sheila DeLoach, Charlotte<br />

Murphy and Marcella DeVinney.<br />

Bulletin—Carol Rogers, Ann Martz and<br />

Joyce Crowell.<br />

Historian—Eve Wassem.<br />

Also named at the meeting were the<br />

delegates to the Dallas convention—Carol<br />

Rogers and Marge Collins, with alternates<br />

Gladys Shy and Ann Martz. Planning to<br />

attend in addition to the above are Pauline<br />

Wrozier, Sheila DeLoach and Carol Seago,<br />

and three sustaining members, Marie<br />

Taves, May Madelaine and Sadie Caffrey.<br />

Guests for the evening's festivities were<br />

Sandy Ross, brought by Mrs. Wrozier, and<br />

Helen Abernathy, brought by Mrs. Engelhard.<br />

Herbert B. Herrick Dies;<br />

Former Assistant Manager<br />

SPRINGFIELD, ILL.—Herbert B. Herrick,<br />

81, former assistant manager of the<br />

Senate Theatre, died recently at Memorial<br />

Hospital. In addition to his former exhibition<br />

industry affiliations, Herrick served as<br />

president of the First National Bank of<br />

Litchfield and was a real estate broker until<br />

he retired from business in March 1961.<br />

Surviving are his wife Oma; his son. Dr.<br />

George Herrick, Van Nuys, Calif.; a<br />

brother, Alfred, Riverside, Calif., and two<br />

sisters, Mrs. Lora Schoenherr of Rockford<br />

and Eva Herrick of Girard.<br />

James Garner in Chicago<br />

For Universal's 'Thrill'<br />

CHICAGO—James Garner, as part of<br />

Universal's all-out promotional campaign<br />

on "The Thrill of It Ail," spent two days<br />

here following his four-day advance promotion<br />

in New York. Garner is costarred<br />

with Doris Day in the Ross Hunter-Arwin<br />

Production.<br />

"The Thrill of It All" is to open at the<br />

United Artists Theatre here Friday, August<br />

9. Its New York premiere is set at Radio<br />

City Music Hall for Thursday, August 1.<br />

ST.<br />

LOUIS<br />

The Sunset Drive-In at Paducah was closed<br />

the 16th and is being dismantled . . .<br />

Howard Hessick is no longer buying and<br />

booking for the Towne Theatre, New<br />

Athens, 111., which is operated by the<br />

Lions Club. Ronald Karber is theatre<br />

chairman for the organization.<br />

Jules and Lou Jablanow held a Christmas<br />

in July party recently for all their employes.<br />

Watches were presented to some of<br />

the long time employes . . . Girls from the<br />

MGM and Buena Vista offices helped celebrate<br />

Hana Gorelick's birthday recently.<br />

Mrs. Gore'ick, at Crest Films, was presented<br />

a birthday cake.<br />

Universal did very well with "King Kong<br />

vs. Godzilla," which played in 17 theatres<br />

locally. "The Thrill of It All" from Universal<br />

opened in 15 theatres Wednesday<br />

. . . Marie O'Brien, Universal, returned<br />

from a vacation . . . Seen on the Row recently<br />

from Illinois were: Howard Hessick,<br />

New Athens; Clyde Patton, Christopher;<br />

Joe Goldfarb, Upper Alton; Mrs.<br />

Ira Dyer, Pleasant Hill; Doc Lowe, Lebanon;<br />

Fred Benzel, Staunton; Charles<br />

Mitchell, Salem, and Louis Odorizzi, Staunton<br />

. From Missouri came Paul Durbin,<br />

. .<br />

Bowling Green, and Russell Armentrout,<br />

Louisiana.


. . Al<br />

• Brenkerti<br />

. . Vacationers<br />

. . Dan<br />

. . Phil<br />

. . Harris<br />

CHICAGO<br />

Wometco Continues<br />

i<br />

^ave Friedman was in Iowa. Missouri and<br />

Nebraska to set up openings of "The<br />

Bloodfeast." a film which was produced<br />

by Stanford Kohlbcrg. Dave Friedman and<br />

Herschel Lewis . Dui-en. sales manager<br />

for Warner Bros, in Chicago until he<br />

went to Cincinnati as branch manager,<br />

was back on a visit . . . Charles Ruggles<br />

stopped here on the way to Traverse City,<br />

Mich., to appear in "Not in the Book" at<br />

the Cherry County Playhouse.<br />

The equipment of the Dallas Joines Film<br />

Studios, valued between 50 to 75 thousand<br />

dollars, will be sold at auction July 30. The<br />

organization was dissolved following income<br />

tax problems ... A photographic exhibit<br />

by Curtis Mitchell, a TV cameraman<br />

with National Broadcasting Co., is being<br />

given in the Little Gallery of the Esquire<br />

Theatre.<br />

. . .<br />

John Semadalas and his wife Ellen like<br />

the singers and dancers at the Athens cafe<br />

Frank Casey of Warner Bros, is working<br />

on a campaign for the August 9 openings<br />

of "Spencer's Mountain" in neighborhood<br />

theatres. The film will run with<br />

"Island of Love" . . . Milton Feinberg, NSS<br />

manager, attended a conference in New<br />

The Hillside has been doing<br />

York City . . .<br />

capacity business with "The Nutty Professor."<br />

This theatre, which schedules offand-on<br />

stage programs, has booked a<br />

Punch and Judy show by the George Cregan<br />

Puppeteers.<br />

Oscar Granqulst of the State at Rockford:<br />

Louis Kerasotes. Nick Kerasotes and<br />

Russell Hurt of the Kerasotes circuit;<br />

David Wallerstein, president of B&K;<br />

Jean Schoenstadt of the Schoenstadt circuit;<br />

Harry Lustgarten of B&K: Ralph<br />

Smitha, general manager of the Essaness<br />

circuit, attended an MGM screening of<br />

Peter Rosian, regional sales<br />

"V.I.P.s" . . ,<br />

manager for Universal, and Mi Martin,<br />

vice-president and general sales manager,<br />

headed meetings attended by the Chicago<br />

and Milwaukee sales staffers.<br />

Sol Horu'itz of Allied Theatres of Illinois,<br />

who paints as an avocation, has been invited<br />

to exhibit at the Rush Street Art<br />

Lee ARTOE DELUXE<br />

REPLACEMENT PARTS<br />

PEERLESS<br />

MAGNARC<br />

.... Poiittv* Carbon Guide. Port No. 2274, 2751<br />

Poiilive Clomp Shoe & Pin, Port No. 2369<br />

2.49<br />

79<br />

Poiitive Corban Holder. Port No. 27S0, 2807 4.99<br />

. .<br />

Ncgotivc Corbon Guide. Port No. 2098 1.69<br />

Gloii. Door Port No. LH-18 1.09<br />

Permonent Mognot. Port No. 2810 6.99<br />

Pcrmontnl Mognef Holder. Port No. 15315 .... 7.19<br />

Rt^LtCTOR 13 31/32". Lee Arto« Deluie .... 19.99<br />

OTHER PARTS PRICES ON REQUEST<br />

940 BELMONT AVE. CHICAGO 14<br />

.<br />

. . . Mrs.<br />

Fair . included David Evans,<br />

assistant at the Metropolitan Theatre:<br />

Lonnie Louis, manager of the Oakland<br />

Square; G. D. Hutchcon, office manager<br />

and head booker for Warner Bros., and<br />

Betty Bruggeman of the Warner publicity<br />

Elaine Korose of the Abbott Theatre<br />

staff . . .<br />

Equipment office, left on a six-week<br />

trip to Greece Dudelson of<br />

Buena Vista: Harry Goldman, United<br />

Artists: Jack Rose of Manta


. . Doug<br />

Floyd BIoss Company<br />

Buys Division Airer<br />

From Mideast Edition<br />

DETROIT—The 700-car Division Drive-<br />

Grand Rapids has become the first<br />

in at<br />

acquisition by Price Busters Shopping<br />

Centers, headed by Floyd Bloss, to be announced<br />

in this ten-itoi-y. The Division<br />

was formerly operated by Jack Ochs' Ochs<br />

Management Co. The name of the theatre<br />

is being changed to the Stardust Drive -In.<br />

Price Busters Shopping Centers was incorporated<br />

in Detroit a little over two years<br />

ago, with L. J. Wint as principal and with<br />

plans for national expansion in the combined<br />

center-drive-in theatre field. In association<br />

with the Fullerton Construction<br />

Co., the plans call for acquisition of drivein<br />

theatres, as well as amusement parks,<br />

with the construction of shopping centers<br />

on the surplus area in these projects.<br />

Two Tosto Brothers Lease<br />

Theatre in Goulds, Fla.<br />

From Soutlneast Edition<br />

GOULDS, FLA. — Goulds Theatre has<br />

been leased for three years by brothers<br />

Bill and Jim Tosto from Jules Gessin of<br />

Perrin, the Tostos' lease carrying an option<br />

to buy. Jim Tosto will act as booker<br />

of films, merchandise buyer and manager<br />

until his brother can assume direction of<br />

the operation. After Bill becomes manager,<br />

Jim will be in charge of projection.<br />

The brothers will reopen the theatre<br />

August 11 with a 2 p.m. matinee showing<br />

of "Flipper" and "King Kong vs. Godzilla."<br />

Their policy calls for double features<br />

on their regular programs, with three<br />

changes weekly and matinees on Saturday<br />

and Sunday only.<br />

The theatre, seating 300 in a town with<br />

a population of 7,000, has a fine widescreen<br />

and the projection equipment is in firstclass<br />

condition, Jim Tosto told <strong>Boxoffice</strong>,<br />

in a letter subscribing for the magazine.<br />

"We will continue to use <strong>Boxoffice</strong>,"<br />

Tosto said. "Without it, I'd be lost."<br />

Iselin Circuit Purchases<br />

Bradenton, Fla., Airer<br />

From Soutlneast Edition<br />

BRADENTON, FLA.—Purchase of the<br />

Suburban Drive-In here by Iselin Theatres<br />

of Albany, N. Y., has been announced by<br />

Alan V. Iselin, president of the circuit.<br />

Iselin Theatres also owns the Trail Drive-<br />

In of Sarasota and the Gainesville Drive-<br />

In, Gainesville.<br />

"We are very happy to be expanding in<br />

Florida," Iselin told the Bradenton Morning<br />

Call, "and I am optimistic concerning the<br />

future of the Suburban Drive-In." His circuit<br />

will invest about $35,000 in improvements<br />

at the Bradenton drive-in.<br />

Wayne Riddlemoser is acting as manager<br />

at the Suburban Drive-In, while John<br />

Lawsha doubles as Iselin district manager<br />

and manager of the Trail Drive-In.<br />

Johnny Johnston to Disney<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Walt Disney has appointed<br />

Albert "Johnny" Johnston as eastern<br />

story editor for his company. Johnston<br />

held the same post with Columbia for ten<br />

years.<br />

KANSAS<br />

^^<br />

CITY<br />

Leo Colvin and Ralph Roberts of the<br />

Strand Theatre, Emporia, Kas., were<br />

in town last week enthusiastically booking<br />

for the fall season in anticipation of the return<br />

of students to Emporia State and College<br />

of Emporia. At the present time the<br />

Strand is operating Thursday, Friday.<br />

Saturday and Sunday. During the off days<br />

Colvin and Roberts personally are redecorating<br />

and refurbishing the theatre.<br />

Already completed is the redecorating of<br />

the Lobby Shop. Some new remodeling<br />

also has been done and new equipment<br />

added. Colvin has noted a fantastic increase<br />

in concession business since taking<br />

over the Strand in March. Roberts, who<br />

joined the staff in April, hails from Topeka,<br />

where he worked with Colvin for the<br />

Dickinson chain.<br />

. . . Paul Kelly of<br />

George and Gus Kopulos of Regal Poppers<br />

Supply report that their parents, Mr.<br />

and Mrs. Louis Kopulos, and granddaughter<br />

will go on a Mediterranean<br />

one month. They expect to<br />

cruise<br />

leave<br />

for<br />

Kansas<br />

monwealth<br />

City August. Phil Blakey of Com-<br />

17 . . .<br />

Theatres was on a three-day<br />

trip to<br />

camp . Lightner, Commonwealth's<br />

Dallas, where his daughter is at<br />

general manager, plans to vacation with<br />

his family in Denver<br />

Dickinson Theatres is spending his vacation<br />

with the Air Force Reserves . . . Bud<br />

Truog of United Artists vacationed at<br />

Branson, Mo.<br />

. . .<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gould were on the<br />

Row last week. Now residing in St. Petersburg,<br />

Fla., the exhibitor and his wife are<br />

traveling around the country in the interest<br />

of the Will Rogers Memorial Hospital.<br />

They also visited Arnold Gould,<br />

Herman's brother, who is city manager for<br />

Durwood Theatres in Jefferson City<br />

Also in town were Mr. and Mrs. Dennis<br />

Montee, Hutchinson, Kas.; Art Pugh and<br />

grandson, Steve, Arkansas City, Kas.; Paul<br />

Ricketts, Ness City, Kas.; Woody Barritt,<br />

Wichita; Joe Ghosen, Warsaw; Jim Cook,<br />

Maryville; Elmer Bills and son, Salisbury;<br />

A. E. Jarboe, Cameron, and Frank Weary<br />

jr., Henrietta.<br />

Goldie Woerner, president of the WOMPI<br />

Kansas City chapter, announces that the<br />

annual collections for the Will Rogers<br />

n 2 years for $5 D<br />

THEATRE-<br />

STREET ADDRESS<br />

D Remittance<br />

SGtidin^<br />

Enclosed<br />

. . .<br />

Memorial Hospital at the drive-in theatres<br />

will start July 31 with the Leawood<br />

and Shawnee. Teams will be organized so<br />

that WOMPIs and helpers will be at various<br />

drive-ins with tin cans on specified<br />

dates during August. Announcement will<br />

Frank<br />

be made later of the schedule<br />

Dorcy, assistant manager at the Paramount<br />

Theatre, who is holding the fort while<br />

Manager Harold Lyon is at St. Mary's<br />

Hospital recuperating from an operation,<br />

reported that Lyon is showing signs of improvement<br />

and eager to get back to work.<br />

Russell Borg, Warner Bros, branch manager,<br />

and wife, Blanche, who recently<br />

made an automobile tour to Westport and<br />

Norwalk, Conn., as well as Henderson, N.C.,<br />

had a wonderful time seeing the eastern<br />

part of the country. Borg is very happy<br />

about the opening of "PT 109" at the Paramount<br />

Theatre.<br />

Sue Kansas Censor Board<br />

Over 'Because of Eve'<br />

KANSAS CITY—Modern Film Distributors<br />

of Chicago filed a suit Monday (22)<br />

in Wyandotte County circuit court against<br />

the Kansas State Board of Review for<br />

banning "Because of Eve" in its entirety i.i<br />

March 1962. Irwin S. Joseph is general<br />

sales manager of the distribution company.<br />

Edward H. Powers is the attorney for the<br />

plaintiff with Harold Harding as consultant.<br />

1 year for $3<br />

HUMDINGER SPEAKERS $3.50 each<br />

HEAVY DUTY SPEAKER MECHANISM $1.65<br />

MISSOURI THEATRE SUPPLY<br />

lis Wot* Itth Kanm Clly I, M«.<br />

B«miii«ra 1-3070<br />

DRIVE-IN OWNERS-<br />

Now ... a 4-ineh cast aluminum<br />

speaker, unpainted, with profective<br />

53 69<br />

screen, straight cord.<br />

SHREVE THEATRE SUPPLY CO.<br />

217 West 18th HA 1-7849 Kansas City, Mo.<br />

D Send<br />

TOWN ZONE STATE..<br />

NAME<br />

I^^^Q<br />

POSITION<br />

D 3 years for $7<br />

Invoice<br />

THE NATIONAL FILM WEEKLY 52 issues a year<br />

825 Van Brunt Blvd., Kansas City 24, Mo.<br />

BOXOFTICE July 29, 1963 C-3


COLLEGE<br />

IS BUSINESS'<br />

BEST<br />

FRIEND<br />

Business employs almost half of<br />

the product of colleges—the college<br />

graduate. Business management is<br />

largely composed of college graduates.<br />

Business concerns benefit extensively<br />

from the research colleges<br />

engage In.<br />

great debt.<br />

Business owes college a<br />

Higher education is facing during the<br />

next decade greatly enlarged student<br />

enrollments, the problems of an explosion<br />

of knowledge, and the need<br />

to meet ever growing demands for<br />

ever better educated men and women.<br />

These problems involve vastly increased<br />

costs which cannot be met<br />

out of pre.sent income.<br />

The operating cost of higher education<br />

today is over four and a half<br />

billion dollars a year and will at least<br />

double in this decade.<br />

Busine.ss and industry, as major beneficiaries<br />

of American higher education,<br />

must recognize a responsibility<br />

to contribute their fair share.<br />

American business corporations produce<br />

much of the nation's wealth.<br />

They have enormous power for good.<br />

We believe they can exercise it in a<br />

meaningful way — as many do now —<br />

by providing voluntary support for<br />

colleges and universities of their<br />

choice.<br />

These conclusions, and the following<br />

statement of conviction, were<br />

outcomes of a recent conference of<br />

business leaders sponsored in New<br />

York by the Council for Financial<br />

Aid to Education, Inc.<br />

KENNETH H.<br />

American (^yanaynid Co.<br />

KLIPSTEIN,<br />

JOSEPH A. GRAZIER,<br />

American Radiator & Standard<br />

Sanitary Corporation<br />

M. NIELSEN,<br />

The liahrock & Wilcox Co.<br />

HARMON S. EBERHARD,<br />

Caterpillar Tractor Co.<br />

HAROLD H. HELMj<br />

Chemical Hank New i ork<br />

Trust Company<br />

F. W. MISCH,<br />

Chrysler Corporation<br />

FRANK O. H. WILLIAMS,<br />

Connecticut General Life<br />

Insurance Company<br />

WESLEY M. DIXON,<br />

Container Corporation of America<br />

THOMAS C. FOGARTY,<br />

Continental Can Company, Inc.<br />

SAMUEL LENHER,<br />

£.\ /. du Pont de Nemours


I<br />

'Cleopatra' Writing<br />

New Memphis Records<br />

MEMPHIS—For the third straight<br />

week<br />

the 20th-Fox film, "Cleopatra," made attendance<br />

history for Crosstown Theatre.<br />

The management reported business continued<br />

to be 750 per cent of average. Not<br />

far behind, with "Sorry, Sold Out" signs<br />

in front at curtain time more often than<br />

not, was the Palace which reported 500<br />

per cent of average for a second week of<br />

"How the West Was Won."<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Crosstown Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 3rd wk 750<br />

Guild Lucky Jim (Union) 100<br />

Maico A Gathering ot Eagles (Univ), 3rd wk 90<br />

Palace How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cinerama), 2nd wk 500<br />

Plaza The Nutty Professor (Para) 150<br />

Slate Donovan's Reef (Para), 3rd wk 100<br />

Strand Come Blow Your Horn iPara), 2nd wk. ..175<br />

Warner Spencer's Mountain (WB), 2nd wk 170<br />

Theatreman W. G. Enloe<br />

Is Honored at Raleigh<br />

RALEIGH, N. C—Shortly after he was<br />

succeeded by city councilman James W.<br />

Reid as mayor, W. G. Enloe was cited by<br />

the Raleigh Rotary Club and the First<br />

Presbyterian Church here for his six years<br />

of service as the capital city's top executive.<br />

Enloe, who is district manager for<br />

North Carolina Theatres (Wilby-Kincey),<br />

received plaques from both the civic club<br />

and his church. He was commended in particular<br />

for the manner in which he has<br />

dealt with the city's racial problems.<br />

The former mayor appointed a biracial<br />

committee to study and make recommendations<br />

regarding problems which had arisen<br />

between the races. Later on, members of<br />

the committee announced the successful integration<br />

of most of Raleigh's business<br />

places, including the Ambassador Theatre,<br />

which is a part of the Wilby-Kincey circuit.<br />

Reid, the new mayor, is a vice-president<br />

of Branch Banking & Trust Co. In his first<br />

speech as mayor he said "continued understanding<br />

is essential" to a final settlement<br />

of the city's racial problem.<br />

Enloe did not seek re-election to the<br />

council this year.<br />

Shopping Center Theatres<br />

Install Hurley Screens<br />

MIAMI — Joe Hornstein, Inc., theatre<br />

equipment dealer here, has completed installations<br />

of Hurley screens at two new<br />

shopping center theatres in the area.<br />

At the Cinema, the new Cutler Shopping<br />

Center theatre opened recently by General<br />

Drive-In Theatre Corp., Boston, Hornstein's<br />

crew installed a 28%x63-foot SuperOptica<br />

screen. The second installation was at the<br />

Plaza Theatre which Wometco will operate<br />

in the West Hollywood Shopping Center.<br />

Wometco's choice for this situation is a<br />

Hurley SuperGlo screen, 23x50 feet.<br />

Reseats Columbus Varsity<br />

COLUMBUS, MISS. — Theatregoers are<br />

enjoying new comfort when they attend the<br />

Varsity Theatre. Last month the management<br />

completed the installation of the entire<br />

theatre—main floor and balcony—with<br />

luxurious Bodiform chairs which automatically<br />

rise to a three-quarters fold when a<br />

patron gets up to permit newcomers to<br />

enter a row.<br />

Atlanta Builders Add<br />

3J50 Theatre Seats<br />

ATLANTA, GA.—In the short space of<br />

one month, Atlanta, which had not ex-<br />

John Stembler<br />

H. B. Meiselman<br />

perienced the opening<br />

of a new theatre<br />

in 35 years, had the<br />

exciting pleasure of<br />

participating in four<br />

gala, klieglighted<br />

debuts of a quartet<br />

of expensive and eleg<br />

a n t four-wallers.<br />

What is more important<br />

is the fact that<br />

these openings added<br />

a<br />

some 3,750 seats to<br />

community<br />

has been on the<br />

which<br />

losing<br />

side in this important facet of motion<br />

picture theatre operation.<br />

Previous to a month ago, the last new<br />

theatre constructed within the city limits<br />

was the 4,400-seat Pox, now being operated<br />

by Wilby-Kincey Corp. It was unveiled<br />

Christmas Day, 1929, and, of coui'se, had<br />

to weather the depression to make it<br />

down through the years.<br />

Several years ago, the downtown 2,000-<br />

seat Paramount Theatre was torn down and<br />

replaced with an office building. About 1,-<br />

500 seats went down the drain when a<br />

large department store absorbed the old<br />

Capitol Theatre on Atlanta's historic<br />

Peachtree Street.<br />

Then came the renewal of interest in<br />

theatre building triggered by the pui'-<br />

chase by Martin Theatres, Inc., the circuit<br />

based in Columbus, Ga., of the antiquated<br />

900-seat Rialto in the heart of Atlanta and a<br />

500-seat downtowner named the Central,<br />

which they subsequently sold. The circuit<br />

almost immediately announced plans to replace<br />

the Rialto with a 1,200-seat de luxe<br />

house as the center of a complex of office<br />

buildings, fronting on both Forsyth and<br />

Luckie streets. This announcement started a<br />

real theatre building boom.<br />

Georgia Theatres, a chain operation<br />

with headquarters in Atlanta, broke ground<br />

on its Lenox Square Theatre on a site occupied<br />

by a regional shopping center with<br />

the same name. This center has nearly 100<br />

stores, shops and service establishments<br />

and serves an area of 250,000 population.<br />

What's more, there is space to park 6,000<br />

automobiles.<br />

Original plans for the vast community<br />

center called for the inclusion of a theatre<br />

and now that the Lenox Square is<br />

in operation, the slogan used by the center,<br />

"Everything's There at Lenox Square,"<br />

has come full circle. The Lenox is a 650-<br />

seat de luxe theatre in the heart of Atlanta's<br />

silk stocking North Side and was<br />

opened with "Come Blow Youi- Horn," now<br />

in its fifth week. The main topic of conversation<br />

about the theatre has been "the<br />

seats that rock." It goes without saying<br />

it is completely modern in every respect<br />

from screen to projection booth.<br />

Georgia Theatres numbers some 40 locations,<br />

equally divided between hardtops<br />

and drive-ins and all located within the<br />

state of Georgia. John H. Stembler is<br />

president of the circuit and he also is serving<br />

his second term as president of the<br />

Theatre Owners of America, Inc. E. E.<br />

Whitaker is general manager.<br />

The Lenox Square opening was sponsored<br />

by the Ladies Committee of Variety,<br />

Atlanta Tent 21, with proceeds used to<br />

provide "Sunshine Coaches" for handicapped<br />

children in the Atlanta area. Howard Rutherford,<br />

for many years manager of Loew's<br />

Grand Theatre is manager of Lenox<br />

Square.<br />

Two other new theatres, both located<br />

in shopping centers, were built here by H.<br />

B. Meiselman Theatres, which operates in<br />

North and South Carolina, Florida and<br />

Georgia. First to open was the Atlantic,<br />

which occupies space in the Atlantic Discount<br />

Center, which got under way with<br />

"Call Me Bwana." Another first-run picture,<br />

"Dr. No," followed, but the policy<br />

of this house has now settled down to subsequent<br />

runs. The Atlantic, a 950-seater,<br />

is located on the South Side.<br />

Three weeks later Meiselman unveiled his<br />

Cherokee Theatre in a North Side shopping<br />

center from which the house got its<br />

name. It also is a 950-seater and it opened<br />

with fanfare with "55 Days at Peking" on<br />

the screen. Both these theatres are excellently<br />

appointed and modern in every<br />

respect. They bring the Meiselman chain<br />

to 19 and No. 20 is said to be on the drawing<br />

board at this time, with Atlanta rumored<br />

as the location. Perry Reavis is Meiselman's<br />

district manager in charge of the<br />

Georgia operations.<br />

The fourth theatre to bow in this flurry<br />

of openings was Martin's Rialto, which<br />

has become the flagship of this circuit<br />

which operates some 150 houses in Alabama,<br />

Florida, Georgia. Kentucky and<br />

Tennessee. The opening night was sponsored<br />

by the Atlanta Junior Chamber of<br />

Commerce for the benefit of the Warren<br />

Memorial Boy's Club building fund. Some<br />

(Continued on page SE-2)<br />

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BOXOFHCE July 29, 1963 SE-1


. . Joan<br />

did<br />

ATLANTA<br />

gcreen personality Jock Mahoney. number<br />

13 In a list of actors portrayinK Tarzan.<br />

arrived In town Wednesday 1241 to<br />

aid in the promotion of his newest picture.<br />

MGMs "Tarzan s Three Challenges. "<br />

which<br />

is playing at 19 theatres in the Atlanta<br />

area. Mahoney made personal appearances<br />

at the Hilan Theatre. Scott Boulevard<br />

Drive-In. South Starlite Drive-In and<br />

Stewart Drive-In Thursday 1 25 ><br />

Roy and E. D. Martin announced that<br />

construction has started on their new<br />

drive-in in Chattanooga. It will have at<br />

least a 700-car capacity and will be located<br />

on Route U northeast of the city. It<br />

should be completed in a few months and<br />

will be modern in every respect.<br />

Georeia Hudlow. who works in the cashier's<br />

department at Columbia Pictures, has<br />

departed for New Orleans for her vacation<br />

. . . Charlie Karr. Martin Theatres,<br />

enjoying his second week of vacation, can<br />

be found at Treasure Island.<br />

James Velde and Eugene Jacobs, executives<br />

of United Artists from New York, were<br />

in town last week for a southern sales<br />

meeting with their managers. Present for<br />

the meeting were Byron Adams. Jacksonville<br />

office; Gene Goodman. New Orleans-<br />

Harold Keeter. Charlotte: J. H. Martin.<br />

Memphis, and Stevens, St. Louis. The meeting,<br />

hosted by Bill Hames. Atlanta manager,<br />

was held at the Cabana Motel.<br />

The many friends of Snake Richardson<br />

local AlP manager, wish to extend their<br />

deepest sympathy to him in the death of<br />

his wife Marie. Funeral services were held<br />

Friday (I9i at Atlanta.<br />

C. H. Simpson has spent the last week<br />

coming and going to Knoxville where he<br />

has been in conference with his landlord<br />

about their plans for rebuilding the Riviera<br />

Theatre, which was destroyed by fire last<br />

month<br />

. . . Welcome to Filmrow: Arlene<br />

Norman, new employe at Martin Theatres,<br />

and Juanice Davenport, new addition to<br />

the MGM billing department . . . The<br />

father of Tommy Murphy, shipper at Benton<br />

Bros. Film Forwarding, is in Emory<br />

Hospital.<br />

Mildred Jackson of the accounting de-<br />

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1010 North Sloppay Orir*<br />

P O Boi S4« Albany, Georgia<br />

Ph0B«: HEmlock 2-2t4«<br />

partment at United Artists is spending a<br />

week at home<br />

.<br />

Mathias. former<br />

biller at United Artists, is replacing Joyce<br />

Robbins. who is vacationing in Plant City<br />

this week<br />

. . . Bob Tarwater. sales manager<br />

at United Artists, and his wife left<br />

for Lake Lure, N. C. to visit their daughter<br />

Sarah Ann. a counselor there . . . Sam<br />

Perloff. MGM office manager, left for a<br />

week's vacation at St. Petersburg.<br />

Clyde Maddox. former shipper at Universal,<br />

spent the past few weeks filling<br />

m for regular shipper Gene Carden. who<br />

was vacationing last week in Memphis . . .<br />

R. J. Langer, assistant to Mel Browne at<br />

the Peachtree Art Theatre, returned from a<br />

short trip to Binningham<br />

. . . Carroll<br />

Ogbuin. manager of Warner Bros., left<br />

for his vacation<br />

. . . Brenda Weneger<br />

secretary at Martin Theatres, departed<br />

for her hometown. Oak Ridge. Tenn<br />

Mabel Smith and Ruth Arrwood resumed<br />

their duties as inspectors at Benton Bros.<br />

Film Forwarding following their vacations.<br />

Likewise Oris Smith and Jimmie Ray are<br />

back at their desks at MGM and Bill<br />

Langston returned to his office at Benton<br />

Bros. Pat Brown, too. is back at work at<br />

Warners.<br />

P. J. Henn, who has the Henn Theatre,<br />

Mm-phy. N. C, was in town with a special<br />

guest he introduced to Filmrow, his little<br />

grandaughter . . . Eddie Watson. Strand<br />

Montevallo: Phil Richardson, McLendon<br />

Theatres. Union Springs, Ala., and Carmen<br />

Bunch, booker for the Navy, were the<br />

only other visitors on the Row this week.<br />

3,750 Theatre Seats<br />

Added in Atlanta<br />

I<br />

Continued from preceding page)<br />

$10,000 was raised by Jaycees. On the screen<br />

was "Bye Bye Birdie."<br />

Mayor Ivan Allen jr.. participated at<br />

nbbon-cutting ceremonies at all of these<br />

openings. His speeches fell into a sort of<br />

pattern, but they were happy ones, in<br />

which he congratulated the builders for<br />

their willingness to risk capital in Atlanta<br />

and thanked them for becoming integral<br />

parts of the community.<br />

Present for the dedication of the Rialto<br />

were E. D. Martin, president of Martin<br />

Theatres of Georgia; Roy E. Martin jr.,<br />

chairman of the board; C. L. Patrick, executive<br />

vice-president; Ronnie Otwell. public<br />

relations director, and Robert Hosse. Atlanta<br />

booking office director. William C.<br />

Blane is managing director of the new Rialto.<br />

He formerly was the circuits city<br />

manager in Valdosta.<br />

Martin's Rialto is a plush theatre, unique<br />

in the fact that it is a second-floor operation,<br />

believed to be only the second such<br />

in this country. It is a stadium-type house.<br />

Entrance to the ground floor lobby is from<br />

Forsyth street and the exit is on Luckie<br />

street. This avoids "traffic crossing during<br />

ingress and egress when a show breaks.<br />

"<br />

A grand staircase leads to the second floor<br />

lounge and an escalator is available for<br />

those who do not hke to climb stairs. This<br />

escalator is reversible and helps to move<br />

the crowds when a show is over. Prominent<br />

in the lounge is a bronze bust of the late<br />

Roy E. Martin, father of E. D. and Roy jr.,<br />

and founder of the large circuit.<br />

About a year ago Martin chain leased<br />

the old Tower Theatre, formerly the Erlangcr.<br />

used mostly for touring legitimate<br />

theatre attractions. Contractors gutted the<br />

2,000-seat house and transformed it into<br />

an elegant showcase for exclusive showing<br />

of Cinerama product. It was named Martin's<br />

Cinerama and opened with "The<br />

Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm "<br />

followed by "Windjammer' and "How tlie<br />

West Was Won," now in its fifth month.<br />

Renovation, remodeling and refurbishing<br />

of this house cost $600,000.<br />

While these "major" expenditures were<br />

going on a lot of money was spent on<br />

"freshening up" and remodeling other theatres<br />

in Atlanta's metropolitan area.<br />

Wilby-Kincey. prior to the showing of<br />

"The "<br />

Longest Day. a major renovation<br />

job on its downtown Roxy Theatre, including<br />

a wide red carpet, leading from<br />

the sidewalk to the theatre doors, and<br />

now being used for the throngs invading<br />

the Roxy for "Cleopatra."<br />

Storey Theatres did the same thing for<br />

its Rhodes, the ace house, prior to "Lawrence<br />

of Arabia." now in its fifth month.<br />

Storey also spent a goodsized chunk of<br />

dough giving its suburban house, the Hilan.<br />

a complete facelift and inner going-over!<br />

John and Ruth Carter rebuilt their Buckhead<br />

Theatre, from stem to stern, renamed<br />

It the Capri Cinema and have been doing<br />

fine business with such pictures as "El<br />

Cid." "Mockingbird" and "Irma La Douce."<br />

Georgia Theatres remodeled two fourwallers,<br />

the Plaza and Gordon.<br />

The huge Fox has undergone some repair<br />

work and Loew's Grand has had a<br />

face-lift. too.<br />

So it is safe to forecast that motion picture<br />

business is on the upgrade in Atlanta,<br />

a booming town, in which exhibitors have<br />

a great deal of faith and hopes for the<br />

futiu-e.<br />

Finishing New Auditorium<br />

At Madisonville Mustang<br />

F'c-n Sjulh^cst Edition<br />

ROCKDALE. TEX.—The Matson Theatre<br />

interests, operators of the Mustang<br />

Drive-In in Madisonville. have announced<br />

that the new air-conditioned auditorium at<br />

the drive-in will be opened soon.<br />

The auditorium will seat 125 patrons in<br />

fully upholstered theatre chairs which will<br />

be installed facing the completely revamped<br />

screen.<br />

Paramounfs "Seven Days in May" was<br />

directed by John Frankeiiheimer from Rod<br />

Selling's screenplay.<br />

Large Core<br />

Greater Crater Area<br />

meoni<br />

MAXIMUM LIGHT<br />

Cvniy Dittributad<br />

SE-2<br />

BOXOmCE July 29. 1963


Oklahoma's First Art<br />

Theatre to Open Soon<br />

From Southwest Edition<br />

OKLAHOMA CITY—Mis. Leonard A.<br />

Newcomb and son Leonard W. have purchased<br />

the Perm Theatre at 1212 North<br />

Pennsylvania from Charles A. Novey and<br />

wife, who have operated the subrun about<br />

30 years.<br />

The Newcombs own the Lakeside, a firstrun<br />

suburban house. They intend to renovate<br />

the Penn at a cost of approximately<br />

$50,000 and reopen it as an "adult" showcase.<br />

Seating capacity will be reduced<br />

from 550 to 314.<br />

"We are interested in providing good,<br />

provocative and thoughtful films, purely<br />

for adults," Mrs. Newcomb said. "We intend<br />

to bring the best foreign and domestic<br />

pictures to the thinlcing populace of Oklahoma."<br />

The Newcomb operation will be the only<br />

art theatre in Oklahoma.<br />

SHREVEPORT<br />

Ted Hatfield, 26, who has managed Gulf<br />

States Theatres' Paramount and Delta<br />

in Monroe the last four and a half years,<br />

has been promoted to Shreveport manager<br />

in charge of the Strand to succeed C. Carroll<br />

Beasley, who resigned to go into the<br />

local automobile sales business. He has<br />

been in charge of the Strand and Saenger<br />

for more than six years. Previous to his<br />

stay at Monroe, Hatfield was manager of<br />

the Rex in Pensacola, assistant at the Saenger<br />

there and the Paramount in Hot<br />

Springs, and usher and doorman at the<br />

latter. He and his wife Peggie Ann have<br />

three sons.<br />

Motion picture theatre managers here<br />

are smiling once again. Attendance, which<br />

dropped months ago, zoomed after such<br />

pictures as The Longest Day, Lawrence of<br />

Arabia, A Gathering of Eagles, Donovan's<br />

Reef and the new Disney features hit local<br />

screens. Carroll Beasley reported the theatre<br />

business definitely has hit a new<br />

stride. Joe Gianforte, supervisor of the<br />

Don, Joy and Broadmoor theatres and<br />

the Barksdale, Joy and Sunset drive-ins,<br />

says business is back where it was a few<br />

months ago.<br />

Public to Decide Future<br />

Of Brownsburg Browny<br />

From Central Edition<br />

BROWNSBURG, IND.—Whether Manager<br />

Jerry Garrison reopens the Browny<br />

Theatre this fall depends on how much<br />

interest parents of local youngsters express<br />

in having the theatre in operation. Garrison<br />

closed the Browny early in June following<br />

the failure of the air conditioning<br />

system to function properly for weekend<br />

shows.<br />

If enough public interest in reopening<br />

the Browny can be displayed. Garrison said<br />

he would carefully consider returning the<br />

theatre to operation after school starts.<br />

He believes that a theatre offering regular<br />

weekend movies provides a place for<br />

youngsters and teenagers to go and keep<br />

out of mischief and would be a boon to<br />

parents.<br />

Growing McLendon Circuit Operating<br />

Ten Theatres Bought From Martin<br />

UNION SPRINGS, ALA.—In one of the<br />

largest theatre real estate transactions of<br />

the last decade, Fred T. McLendon Theatres<br />

of this city recently purchased ten Alabama<br />

theatres in six different towns from Martin<br />

Theatres of Columbus, Ga., and has taken<br />

over their operation.<br />

The properties involved in the deal are<br />

the Martin Theatre, Florala; Martin Theatre<br />

and Pendley Drive-In, Andalusia; Ritz<br />

Theatre and Eagle Drive-In, Brewton;<br />

Strand Theatre and Palms Drive-In, Atmore;<br />

Ritz Theatre and Camellia Drive-In<br />

Greenville, and the Pix Theatre, Evergreen.<br />

In the sale, McLendon acquired all the<br />

buildings and realty of the theatres involved,<br />

except those in Andalusia, Greenville and<br />

Evergi'een, according to the announcement<br />

from the purchasing circuit's home office<br />

here.<br />

The sale of these ten smalltown theatre<br />

properties by Martin is in line with that<br />

circuit's announced policy of continuing<br />

operations mainly in larger cities and in<br />

areas within range of film distributors headquartered<br />

in Atlanta.<br />

Fred McLendon, the head of the Fred T.<br />

McLendon Theatres, has been in the motion<br />

picture business since 1929. Together<br />

with his associates, M. A. Connett and Phillip<br />

Richardson, they operate a total of 40<br />

theatres in Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia,<br />

Florida and North Carolina.<br />

Ralph B. Mann, who has had 21 years in<br />

the theatre industry and 13 years in radio<br />

and newspaper work, has been named regional<br />

manager of the expanded McLendon<br />

circuit. Mann will reside in Andalusia, from<br />

where he will direct his division of the<br />

circuit's activities. Mann and his family,<br />

consisting of his wife Elizabeth and three<br />

children, Robert, 19, Mary Charles, a high<br />

school senior next fall, and Beverly, 8. had<br />

been residing in Fernandina Beach, Fla..<br />

20 miles north of Jacksonville, where Mann<br />

was on a radio station staff.<br />

In Florala, Mrs. M. P. Jones, who had<br />

managed the Martin Theatre for the Martin<br />

circuit, is being retained in that position by<br />

the McLendon management. Extensive improvements<br />

will be made soon in the Florala<br />

Martin, the new owners said.<br />

In Evergreen, Ferrell R. Johnson has been<br />

appointed manager of the Pix Theatre by<br />

McLendon as successor to Mrs. Gladys Barron,<br />

who had been in charge for the previous<br />

owners. Johnson, a native of Andalusia<br />

where he was graduated from high school<br />

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YOU ARE LOSING SEVERAL<br />

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in 1961, served as assistant manager at the<br />

Andalusia Martin Theatre in his senior<br />

year. After his graduation he was assigned<br />

by the Martin circuit to manage its theatre<br />

in Dawson, Ga. He remained there until<br />

April of this year, when he resigned to join<br />

the McLendon group.<br />

In Andalusia, Olin Lawson, who had managed<br />

the Martin Theatre and Pendley<br />

Drive-In for Martin Theatres for 13 years,<br />

resigned from that circuit when the transaction<br />

was completed for the sale to Mc-<br />

Lendon. Lawson accepted a position as technical<br />

engineer at the Ward-Bell TV Appliance<br />

Center and will continue to make his<br />

residence in Andalusia. Mann said he was<br />

delighted that Lawson had elected to remain<br />

where he would be readily accessible<br />

as consultant in connection with operation<br />

of the Anadulsia theatres, which are to be<br />

improved as soon as possible. Mann said<br />

that all other staffers at both the Andalusia<br />

Martin and Fendley theatres would be retained.<br />

Post paid when check is sent with order.<br />

Martin Transfers 'Victor Allen<br />

To Calhoun, Ga., Theatres<br />

CALHOUN, GA.—Victor Allen has been<br />

transferred here from Atmore, Ala., to manage<br />

the Martin circuit's two local properties,<br />

the Martin Theatre and the Bel Air Drive-<br />

In. Allen had been in charge of the circuit's<br />

Martin Theatre in Atmore, one of the ten<br />

theatres recently purchased by McLendon<br />

Theatres from the Martin organization. Allen<br />

has been with Martin for ten years. He<br />

and his wife Juanita have three children.<br />

John Stm-geon, Allen's predecessor here,<br />

was given a new Martin assignment in<br />

Marietta as manager of the Cobb Theatre.<br />

Long Remodeling Program<br />

Ends at Belleville Ritz<br />

From Central Edition<br />

BELLEVILLE, ILL. — An extensive remodeling<br />

and redecorating program, in<br />

progress for four months, was recently<br />

completed at the Ritz Theatre. In charge<br />

of the program were Richard L. Wright,<br />

manager, and Wesley F. Bloomer, head of<br />

the Bloomer Amusement Co.<br />

The project included reupholstering the<br />

push-back adjustable seats, a new metallic<br />

white screen, drapes, carpets, larger sound<br />

system, acoustical arrangements and new<br />

lenses.<br />

NEW<br />

AN ILLUMINATED SCREW DRIVER<br />

for working on speaker post after dark . . . Complete<br />

with 4 driver bits; two sizes flat head and<br />

Phillips head and two No. 135 batteries, $3.35 each.<br />

LOU WALTERS<br />

Sales and Service Co.<br />

4207 Lownview Ave., Dollas 27, Texas<br />

Phone EV 8-1550<br />

BOXOFHCE July 29, 1963 SE-3


I iih'iistcry<br />

MEMPHIS<br />

Tt was the sort of audience reaction movie<br />

manaseis must have nightmares about<br />

—several hundred patrons suddenly walked<br />

out. deserting the theatre in the middle of<br />

the film. Such an exodus occured at 9 p.m.<br />

at Plaza Theatre during a sneak preview<br />

of "A New Knid of Love." The patrons<br />

milled around the lobby looking as if they<br />

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100 Taylor Street<br />

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smclled something bad. And they did. It<br />

was what is commonly called a stink bomb.<br />

Manager Kenneth Goderre quickly located<br />

the hidden bomb and carried it out. The<br />

air conditioning system changed the air<br />

and removed the foul odor. The patrons<br />

went back and enjoyed the show.<br />

As a result of a labor dispute which began<br />

several weeks ago. the Plaza is being<br />

picketed by the local of the International<br />

Alliance of Theatre Stage Employes and<br />

Motion Picture Machine Operators. Police,<br />

who investigated, said they could find no<br />

evidence connecting the stink bomb and<br />

the pickets.<br />

"Irma La Douce" opens at the State August<br />

1 and "Captain Sindbad" on August<br />

29, Manager Arthur Groom announced . . .<br />

Producer Joe Pasternak, who was in<br />

Memphis several years ago. expressed a desire<br />

to make a film for MGM with Elvis<br />

Presley. Memphis star. Pasternak has finally<br />

snagged him and shooting will begin<br />

in about a year on "The Only Way to Love."<br />

Elvis is now in Hollywood where shooting<br />

started this week on his "Viva Las Vegas."<br />

Sam Udelson, for 33 years an employe at<br />

the Palace Theatre where he has served as<br />

assistant manager for the past 15 years, is<br />

retiring. Affectionately known to thousands<br />

as "Sammy," Udelson is now on vacation<br />

and begins his retirement at the end of<br />

his vacation . . . B. O. McCarley, salesman<br />

for 20th-Pox, is vacationing in Florida.<br />

Hays Redmon, Strand, Millington, and<br />

Louise Ma.sk. Luez. Bolivar, were among;<br />

Prom<br />

visiting Tennessee exhibitors<br />

Arkansas came Gordon<br />

. . .<br />

Hutchins, State,<br />

Corning: J. K. Jameson, Ken, McCrory:<br />

Orris Collins, Capitol. Paragould: William<br />

Elias. Elias Drive-In, Paragould: Ann<br />

Hutchins. State. Corning: John Staples.<br />

Carolyn, Piggott, and Mrs. O. W. Mc-<br />

Cutchen, Ritz, Blytheville.<br />

Frank Heard. Lee Drive-In. Tupelo: Leon<br />

Rountree, Holly, Holly Springs; and John<br />

Twiehaus. Skylark Drive-In, Clarksdale,<br />

The<br />

were in town from Mississippi<br />

"V.I.P.s" starring Elizabeth<br />

. . .<br />

Taylor and<br />

Richard Burton, opens at Loew's Slate in<br />

Memphis September 26. At that time,<br />

"Cleopatra" at the Crosstown will be in<br />

its fourth month, so the Liz and Richard<br />

will be competing with themselves.<br />

Columbia. Mo., Broadway<br />

Updates Concessions Area<br />

From Central Edition<br />

COLUMBIA, MO. — Columbia motion<br />

picture patrons are finding it easier and<br />

more enjoyable than ever to satisfy that<br />

|3opcorn and soda craving that is so much<br />

a part of attending a drive-in movie, according<br />

to a recent feature story in the Columbia<br />

Mlssourian. The patrons' increa.sed<br />

pleasure is the result of $25,000 being invested<br />

in improvements In the concessions<br />

area at Commonwealth Theatres' Broadway<br />

Drive-In.<br />

The Ml.s.sourlan's account continues:<br />

Both rcstrooms and the concessions area<br />

were enlarged by extending the building<br />

22 feet. Restroom facilities have been<br />

greatly Improved with Increa.sed area and<br />

ceramic tile floors and walls.<br />

New additions in the concession area itself<br />

include two new drink machines, a new<br />

popcorn machine, two new food warmers<br />

and a new- furnace for nippy weather heating<br />

of the main building.<br />

Formica surfaces replace metal runners<br />

on the all-new cafeteria style counters and<br />

condiment tables.<br />

Modern lighting fixtures complement the<br />

decor of the remodeled concession stand.<br />

Planned improvements include possible<br />

renovation of roadways and 404 individual<br />

parking ramps. Also planned is modernization<br />

of the patio area and expansion of<br />

playground facilities.<br />

C. K. Odor was the general contractor for<br />

the job.<br />

The Broadway Drive-ln has been a favorite<br />

entertainment spot for Columbians<br />

and students since 1948, when it was formally<br />

opened. At that time, it was outside<br />

the city limits, but the rapid growth of Columbia<br />

along West Broadway now puts the<br />

theatre in a prime residential area within<br />

the city limits.<br />

The theatre operates fulltime 36 weeks<br />

per year and 18 weeks of weekend operation<br />

only. May through September constitutes<br />

the peak attendance period, but weekend<br />

operation is necessary for the winter<br />

months, weather permitting. There are<br />

usually about five weeks in the winter when<br />

the theatre is not open, due to weather<br />

conditions.<br />

Attendance does not drop in the summer<br />

months with the departure of the university<br />

students, but remains constant because<br />

an increased number of families find it<br />

easier to attend w'hen children don't have<br />

to go to school the next morning. At the<br />

drive-in's spacious playground, called<br />

"Funderland," improvements include addition<br />

of equipment and area.<br />

Frank Banning has managed the drivein<br />

since April 1962. Earl Douglass is district<br />

manager for the Commonwealth territory<br />

that includes the Broadway Drive-In.<br />

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ENDLESS


. . Friends<br />

I<br />

Asks More Efficient<br />

Use of U.S. Talent<br />

From New England Edition<br />

HARTFORD—William H. Starkey, television-trained<br />

(he began as a television<br />

commercial writer in his native Charleston,<br />

W. Va.) producer-director is one creative<br />

talent afraid that the American film industry<br />

has lost considerable ground in new<br />

effects.<br />

Here for world premiere of his newly<br />

completed "Man and His Woman" at Connecticut<br />

Cinema's Art Cinema, New Yorkbased<br />

Starkey told <strong>Boxoffice</strong>:<br />

"It's time that American filmmakers<br />

stopped observing the status quo. I'd be<br />

the first in this business called entertainment<br />

to admit that there have been tremendous<br />

innovations. At the same time,<br />

we've got to stop paying lip service to the<br />

long-anticipated 'new wave' of American<br />

moviemaking and other innovation-pacing<br />

and show the rest of the world's motion<br />

picture community that there is talent on<br />

these shores, very much capable of turning<br />

out attractions of distinction, of unsurpassed<br />

calibre."<br />

Lean, bespectacled William H. Starkey,<br />

who got his first job in entertainment as<br />

an usher in his home town, went to Europe<br />

with the army pictorial service during<br />

World War II (fellow writers-directors included<br />

John Sturges and George Stevens i,<br />

got his Bachelor of Arts degree from Morris<br />

Harvey College, Charleston, after discharge.<br />

He started in "on the ground floor" of<br />

television, back in the late 1940s, in<br />

Charleston, went on to New York and what<br />

he anticipated would only be a brief stint<br />

with then-infant ABC -TV.<br />

R. C. Whitehurst Acquires<br />

Murfreesboro House Again<br />

MURFREESBORO, N. C—R. C. Whitehurst,<br />

former owner of the Pastime Theatre,<br />

has re-acquired it from Cecil Forehand and<br />

Bynum Brown to whom he sold it three<br />

years ago.<br />

During most of the period of their ownership.<br />

Forehand and Brown operated the<br />

theatre in the fall and winter months while<br />

Chowan College was in session, but last<br />

spring they leased the theatre to the local<br />

Jaycees who kept it open to within a few<br />

weeks of its repurchase by Whitehurst. Normally<br />

the Pastime is closed during the summer<br />

while the Murfree Drive-In, west of<br />

town on U. S. 258-158, is open.<br />

North Carolina Has Own<br />

Filmmaking Section<br />

RALEIGH, N. C. — North Carolina has<br />

turned down a proposal that the state put<br />

up $45,000 for a ten-minute movie short to<br />

be produced by 20th-Pox. This studio, which<br />

has made travelogs for a number of states,<br />

advised the Department of Conservation and<br />

Development that the North Carolina film<br />

would be shown in 10.000 theatres throughout<br />

the country. But at its monthly meeting<br />

this week, the department board rejected<br />

the offer, pointing out that the state now<br />

has its own film division. Just recently, the<br />

film division turned out a 30-minute feature<br />

on the North Carolina legislature.<br />

CHARLOTTE<br />

Theatre owners of North and South Carolina<br />

held their board meeting July<br />

15, with R. E. Agle, Statesville, the chairman,<br />

presiding. Others attending were<br />

Harry Pickett, Charlotte: Joe Accardi,<br />

Morganton; Harold Armistead. Easley. S.<br />

C; R. L. Baker, Gastonia: F. H. Beddingfield,<br />

Charlotte; H. E. Buchanan, Hendersonville;<br />

Jack Fuller, Columbia, S. C; W.<br />

H. Hendricks, Reidsville: H. P. Kincey and<br />

E. G. Stellings, Charlotte.<br />

Florence Hargett, Dominant Pictures,<br />

was hospitalized several days for observation<br />

following a fall . . . Mrs. Mabel Long.<br />

Columbia, and family together with her<br />

daughter Mrs. Virginia Sykes and children<br />

of Rome, N. Y., are spending a few days<br />

at the beach . . . Other Filmrowites on vacation:<br />

Clarinda Craig. MGM, at Montreat:<br />

Doris Ducker, 20th-Pox, at Kure Beach;<br />

Mildred Warren, 20th-Fox, at Crescent<br />

Beach, and Dessie Guyer, Columbia, in the<br />

mountains.<br />

Exhibitors' attending the screening of<br />

American International's new picture, "Beach<br />

Party," were to be guests of Walter Pinson<br />

following the screening for a beach party<br />

at his Lake Wylie cottage . of<br />

W. M. Richardson in this teiTitory were<br />

saddened by the recent death of his wife.<br />

Richardson now is assigned to the Atlanta<br />

territory.<br />

J. W. Hand of the Little Theatre, Bamberg,<br />

S. C, is a patient in Bamberg Hospital,<br />

Jack Puller and<br />

Bamberg, S. C. . . . family of Columbia, S. C, enjoyed last<br />

weekend in the mountains of North Carolina<br />

. . . Queen City Booking is handling<br />

the Mebane Theatre, Mebane, for Numer<br />

Isley . . . Stanley Schneider, Colony The-<br />

Qi's


. . French<br />

. . Mrs.<br />

. . . Mrs.<br />

. . The<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

ITertnan H. .'Mt-iselman. theatre circuit<br />

owner from Charlotte. N. C, who now<br />

has the local first-run Town and Country<br />

Theatre and the subrun Midway and Fox<br />

drive-ins. headed a symbolic Kround-breaking<br />

ceremony here July 20 at the beginning<br />

of construction of the new Cedar Hills Theatre.<br />

Leased to Meiselman by Watoma. Inc..<br />

owners of the large Cedar Hills Shopping<br />

Center, the new westside house will seat<br />

1.000 patrons and is expected to be ready<br />

for occupancy prior to the Christmas holidays.<br />

C. H. "Daiuiy" Deavcr, manager of the<br />

Town and Counti-y. ran into many holdover<br />

dates with "Spencer's Mountain" to<br />

round out four full weeks of playing time<br />

before his north Florida premiere of "Summer<br />

Magic" . . . "Filmed in Florida" signs<br />

were proudly displayed for two first-run<br />

film hits on local screens. "PT 109" at the<br />

Florida and "Flipper" at the Imperial . . .<br />

Marty Shearn closed out his run of "55<br />

Days at Peking" for a red-carpet opening<br />

of "Irma La Douce" for adults only. Child<br />

and student tickets were not on sale.<br />

Richard Stepkin, teenage son of Max<br />

Noreico Projectors<br />

ROY SMITH CO.<br />

365 Park St. Jacksonville<br />

Stepkin, MGM head booker, was envied<br />

by thousands of other local youngsters<br />

when he won a field trip with the Jacksonville<br />

Suns professional baseball team<br />

which carried him on a tour of the midwest<br />

and into Canada . . . Marion Harri.s. former<br />

MGM cashier, and Tim Harris, local<br />

insurance executive, have a new son, Michael<br />

Perry Harris. Marion is the sister of<br />

John G. Meehan. Imperial a.ssistanl. and<br />

sister-in-law of Tom Sawyer. Florida State<br />

Theatres booker and president of the Motion<br />

Picture Charity Club.<br />

Byron Adams, United Artists manager,<br />

returned from a company regional sales<br />

gathering conducted by James Vclde, UA<br />

vice-president, in Atlanta . . . Marjorie<br />

Roberson, MGM office worker, returned<br />

from a week's vacation which she spent at<br />

Lake Brooklyn with her husband and their<br />

four daughters.<br />

Charley King, AIP manager, returned<br />

from a visit with exhibitors in the Miami<br />

area . Harvey jr.. son of the<br />

FST concessions chief, is undergoing nine<br />

w'eeks of intensive officer training at Newport,<br />

Nancy Gilfillan is Bob<br />

R. I. . . . Bowers' new secretary in the Allied Artists<br />

office, succeeding Wilma Murphy, who is<br />

now working at Cape Canaveral . . . Kitty<br />

Dowell. secretary to Bill Humphreys at<br />

Capitol Releasing, left here for a vacation<br />

visit with friends and relatives in Columbus.<br />

Ohio . . . Mike Seravo. 'Warner Bros,<br />

salesman, remained at home during his<br />

third week of vacation time . Jackie<br />

Capps, wife of Bob Capps, MGM manager,<br />

has been welcomed into 'WOMPI as<br />

a sustaining member.<br />

Mary Hart, 'WOMPI leader at the FST<br />

home office, was appointed WOMPI finance<br />

chaii-man by president Ida Belle Levey,<br />

after Doris Humphreys, United Artists, resigned<br />

the post because of the press of<br />

other duties . . . Special WOMPI birthday<br />

greetings have been extended to membeis<br />

Anne Dillon, 'Virginia Merritt, Jane Paircloth.<br />

Marjorie Roberson and Judy Cason<br />

'Valle Voyles. sister of honorary<br />

WOMPI member Edith Smith of FST. designed<br />

the attractive favors which were<br />

presented to residents of the All Saints<br />

Catholic Home for the Aged at the monthly<br />

birthday party which WOMPI members<br />

staged at the home. A birthday case was<br />

a product of Anne Dillon's home oven.<br />

Kitty Dowell, Ida Belle Levey and Enid-<br />

"Easy" Raulerson won special citations<br />

zell<br />

from the WOMPI service committee for their<br />

outside eleemosynary activities during<br />

June ... By dint of hard work WOMPI<br />

members have already raised two-thirds<br />

of the $1,266 needed to charter a Greyhound<br />

bus for a round-trip between here<br />

and Dallas for the WOMPI Ass'n convention<br />

in September . advance program<br />

for the tenth WOMPI Ass'n convention<br />

lists Anne Dillon of this city as chairman<br />

of the convention invitations committee<br />

and Mary Hart, also of this city,<br />

has been selected to deliver an invocation<br />

opening the September 14 sessions of the<br />

gathering in Dallas.<br />

Visiting exhibitors included Walter Anson.<br />

Wildwood: Dick Eason, MGM Theatres.<br />

Leesburg; Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Bailey,<br />

Blountstown; Samuel A. Newton, Grovewe<br />

remember for you..,<br />

exclusive with<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

Nationallf Ixlumin . . . Locollf Intentirt<br />

SE-6<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


land; Louise Kaniaris, San Marco Drive-<br />

In, St. Augustine Beach; and T. Edison Bell,<br />

New Smyrna Beach . . . Earl Turbyfill,<br />

local independent booker, has added John<br />

Gardner's Arrow Drive-In at West Hollywood<br />

to his accounts . . . Marvin Skinner<br />

of this city has taken over booking duties<br />

for the Goulds Theatre, Goulds. He also<br />

handles the Palms Theatre and Breezeway<br />

Drive-In at Homestead for owner Clyde<br />

Chambers.<br />

Dave Barnett, day manager of the local<br />

FST parking lot where the former Palace<br />

Theatre was located, returned from a vacation<br />

visit with his son in Miami. Dave said<br />

he had a chat with Jim Levine at the<br />

Carib Theatre in Miami. Jim, former manager<br />

of the local Florida Theatre, is now<br />

a relief manager with Wometco.<br />

Jimmy Bello, AIP manager in Atlanta<br />

and a recent visitor here, revealed with<br />

pride clippings from the Constitution and<br />

Journal, Atlanta newspapers, concerning<br />

the outstanding sports accomplishments<br />

of his son Jimmy. Young Bello pitched a<br />

perfect baseball game by striking out all<br />

batters in a game between his Bisons and<br />

the Suns of the Triple AAA Decatur-Mc-<br />

Coy Babe Ruth League in Atlanta. So far<br />

this season Jimmy has struck out 57 batters<br />

in 28 innings and has maintained a<br />

.485 batting average for himself.<br />

Thrill' Premiere<br />

In LA August 6<br />

From Western Edition<br />

LOS ANGELES—Universal's "The Thrill<br />

of It All," will be given a gala black-tie<br />

invitational premiere at the Village Theatre<br />

August 6, launching the local multipletheatre<br />

engagement of the comedy starring<br />

Doris Day, James Garner and Arlene<br />

Francis.<br />

The premiere will be attended by many<br />

of Hollywood's top stars and industry leaders<br />

and will be given all the usual trimmings<br />

of lights, bleachers, red carpet, etc.<br />

Ross Hunter and Martin Melcher produced<br />

the comedy directed by Norman<br />

Jewison from the screenplay by Carl<br />

Reiner.<br />

Catherall, Mauck Advance<br />

With FWC Appointments<br />

From Western Edition<br />

LOS ANGELES — Phill Catherall, now<br />

manager of the Loyola Theatre hei-e, has<br />

been appointed to manage the Fox Peninsula<br />

Theatre, now being completed for its<br />

August 7 opening in Rolling Hills Estate,<br />

Palos 'Verdes. Catherall's appointment was<br />

announced by Robert L. Weeks, Fox West<br />

Coast district manager.<br />

Catherall's first experience as a theatre<br />

manager was gained at the Highland in<br />

Los Angeles, after he began his career as<br />

an usher. He also has managed theatres in<br />

Manhattan Beach and Venice.<br />

Weeks also said that William P. Mauck,<br />

manager of the Fox Redondo Theatre, has<br />

been advanced to area manager for the circuit's<br />

theatres in Redondo Beach, Hermosa<br />

Beach, Manhattan Beach and Palos<br />

Verdes. Mauck started as a doorman in<br />

San Diego, rising to manage theatres there<br />

and in Imperial Valley and Los Angeles<br />

since 1946.<br />

MIAMI<br />

. . .<br />

T ola Strom, secretary to Al Weiss, executive<br />

with Florida State Theatres, was vacationing<br />

in New York. She and husband Sid<br />

celebrated their 22nd wedding anniversary<br />

recently Gary Briske, receptionist for<br />

FST, was vacationing in Winnipeg . . . Ralph<br />

Puckhaber, also with Florida State, was vacationing<br />

right here at home with his<br />

family . . Jack Godfrey, manager of the<br />

.<br />

Paramount, and Harry Margolesky, manager<br />

of the Beach, were helping out in the<br />

office while Puckhaber was away.<br />

.<br />

Lou Liss, manager of the Sheridan on Miami<br />

Beach, spent his vacation at a Florida<br />

west coast spot . Hank Stanton, manager<br />

of the Florida<br />

.<br />

in Hollywood, went to Hot<br />

Springs on a vacation . . . Hays Garbarino,<br />

manager of the Florida in West Palm Beach,<br />

vacationed in Pennsylvania, while John Mason,<br />

his assistant, spent his vacation in<br />

town. Edward Cole, assistant manager at<br />

the Boulevard, also stayed in town, moving<br />

into a new home.<br />

Lillian Claughton, head of Claughton<br />

Theatres, spent her birthday (18) propped<br />

in a bed at Victoria Hospital. She slipped<br />

on a garage floor a few weeks ago and<br />

when a leg pain persisted she had it X-<br />

rayed. The pictures showed a broken bone.<br />

The leg was put in a cast, and she was to<br />

stay in the hospital for two weeks . . . Her<br />

son Ed, who is becoming more and more<br />

interested in politics in this area, asked the<br />

Metro commission recently to give voters<br />

a chance to accept or reject the federal<br />

urban renewal program just getting started.<br />

He made it clear that his group will push<br />

for a referendum on the question if the<br />

commission refuses to agree. Claughton, representing<br />

the Dade County Ass'n of Unincorporated<br />

Areas, pushed for a morally binding<br />

straw vote on the November 5 ballot.<br />

He said the association is strongly opposed<br />

to the federal ui'ban renewal program as a<br />

"taking of private property for other than<br />

public purposes." He said the group is not<br />

opposed to slum clearance but felt that<br />

Metro has sufficient power to tear down<br />

slum dwellings or force their repair.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mitchell announce the<br />

engagement of their daughter Annelle to<br />

John A. Baird m of Port Lauderdale. Annelle<br />

is with United Airlines here, Baird is<br />

with Riverside Memorial. The wedding will<br />

take place next May. Mitchell is director<br />

of sales and promotions for Wometco Theatres.<br />

June Wilkinson appeared at the southern<br />

premiere of her new picture, "La Rabia"<br />

(The Rage Within), at Caplan's Roosevelt<br />

Theatre on Miami Beach Thursday (25) ...<br />

Producer Massey Ci-eamer also attended. The<br />

Spanish-language picture was produced by<br />

Ci'onos Productions of Mexico City, and<br />

has English subtitles. Ai-mando Silvestre<br />

costars with Miss Wilkinson.<br />

Marlene Schmidt, Miss Universe of 1961,<br />

was rushed to the Mount Sinai Hospital<br />

for an emergency appendectomy, and<br />

came through the operation "in very good<br />

shape." The German-born blonde beauty<br />

suffered the appendicitis attack only a few<br />

hours before she was scheduled to make<br />

a stage appearance during the Miss Universe<br />

Pageant. She is the mother of a 2-<br />

month-old daughter and is married to Ty<br />

Hardin, a TV and motion picture actor,<br />

whose most recent roles include a leading<br />

part in "PT 109." He was one of the judges<br />

in the Miss Universe contest. Peter Sellers,<br />

also a judge in the Miss Universe finals,<br />

was scouting talent while looking over the<br />

beauties. He planned to pick up eight girls<br />

to appear "The World of Henry Orient"<br />

which he'll film in California.<br />

. Beryl Gillespie, a<br />

Burton Clark, Wometco's Seaquarium,<br />

returned from an extended vacation trip<br />

through the west<br />

clerk in<br />

.<br />

accounting<br />

.<br />

at Wometco, is on a<br />

trip to Scotland, her former home, to visit<br />

her father. From there she was to go to England,<br />

Liechtenstein and elsewhere in Europe<br />

. . . Belle Hull of WTVJ sales was on a trip<br />

to Greece, Turkey, the Holy Land, Istanbul<br />

and other places for a few weeks . . .<br />

Marge Dillingham of WTVJ music depart-<br />

. . .<br />

ment was touring the west. She was to fly<br />

Tom<br />

to Hawaii from San Francisco<br />

Rayfield, manager of Wometco's Carib<br />

Theatre, Miami Beach, was recuperating<br />

after a three-week bout with a virus.<br />

been a long time in the making but<br />

It's<br />

"The Man in the Water" was completed<br />

just in time to get in on some of the publicity<br />

resulting from the recent sighting<br />

of a body in the waters off Jamaica following<br />

a boating tragedy. "Man in the<br />

Water" was filmed at Key West, starring<br />

and directed by Mark Stevens. The film<br />

also introduces Lina Scott. The yarn is<br />

about a psychotic killer . . . Meanwhile,<br />

Filmaster Productions, which made "The<br />

Beachcomber," featui'ing Cameron Mitchell<br />

and Joe Morrison, up at Orlando, has a<br />

new series in prospect. It also has a Caribbean<br />

locale. It's called "Crawford's Key."<br />

The Concord, a 1,000-seat theatre recently<br />

opened by Town and Country Theatres at<br />

114th avenue and Bird road, is representative<br />

of the trend toward "compact"<br />

theatres, mainly in surburban shopping<br />

centers. The "compactness" of the Concord<br />

is a matter of deliberate design. Says Samuel<br />

M. Puder, who with Leon Miller, were<br />

architects of the Concord: "Our effort<br />

was to get away from the monumental<br />

garish, old style movie palaces, and instead,<br />

create a theatre sufficiently relaxed<br />

and informal in feeling to be totally at<br />

home in its tropical-surburban smroundings<br />

. . . Moviegoers want to feel at home<br />

in a theatre."<br />

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: July 29, 1963 SE-7


. . . The<br />

. . Mike.<br />

which<br />

NEW ORLEANS<br />

Canjuro. the Japanese film starring Toshiro<br />

Mifune. Venice best actor award<br />

winner, will open the a top art film first<br />

run policy at the Royal Art Theatre, situated<br />

in the French Quarter, on the 31st.<br />

Joel Bluestone. who also has the Gretna<br />

Green Drive-In. recently installed air conditioning<br />

Marie, wife of<br />

in the Royal . . . William M. Richardson, independent distributor<br />

at Atlanta, who formerly lived here<br />

many years, died . . . Another death causin?<br />

sorrow up and down the Row was that of<br />

Frank J, A. McCarthy. Universal sales executive,<br />

at his home in Pelham. N. Y.<br />

Valeria Hogan, BV secretary, took a day<br />

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Hours of mo>


New Tarzan Has Both<br />

Muscles and Brains<br />

By JOHN C. WILSON<br />

EL PASO—Jock Mahoney, newest of filmdom's<br />

Tarzans, swung into this city by<br />

jet plane, and wore Hollywood attire in-<br />

Jock "Tarzan" Mahoney is pictured<br />

above with Jack J. Veeren, city manager<br />

at El Paso for Stanley Warner of<br />

Texas.<br />

stead of a loin cloth. Speaking in correct<br />

polysyllables, no grunts, he convinced everybody<br />

at a breakfast held in his honor<br />

at Caballero Motor Hotel, that the famous<br />

ape man has indeed changed his image.<br />

Gone are the guttural sounds used by<br />

former film Tarzans in such classic<br />

sentences as "Me Tarzan—you Jane." In<br />

fact Jane is gone too! She doesn't appear<br />

in "Tarzan's Three Challenges," the newest<br />

picture in the Edgar Rice Burroughs<br />

series which Mahoney was in El Paso<br />

Monday (15) to promote.<br />

Gone too is Cheetah, the chimpanzee<br />

with whom previous Tarzans conversed in<br />

the African jungles when Jane was not<br />

around. Even Africa is eliminated from<br />

the new opus. The entire picture was filmed<br />

in Thailand. It's all part of MGM's and<br />

Producer Sy Weintraub's plan to civilize<br />

Tarzan to a modern world. And Mahoney,<br />

aged 44, who went to college and is a<br />

veteran of many other motion pictures, undoubtedly<br />

is the perfect choice. He has<br />

the mentality plus the muscles. His most<br />

pressing questions were about the different<br />

Tarzans, beginning with the first and late<br />

Elmo Lincoln-.<br />

LEFT JANE IN AFRICA<br />

What happened to Jane? The blonde,<br />

blue-eyed Mahoney, 6 feet 4 inches tall<br />

and weighing 201 pounds, explained: "Jane<br />

was left behind in Africa in her tree-top<br />

home. Since Tarzan is married to her, he<br />

can't even look at another woman in this<br />

new picture. In my first Tarzan film, 'Tarzan<br />

Goes to India,' we had to have 300<br />

elephants and we could get them together<br />

only outside of Africa. In the new picture<br />

the scene is Tibet. Well, Thailand<br />

looks like Tibet, and the scenic background<br />

is fantastic!"<br />

Mahoney relates he is the only Caucasian<br />

in the picture. The heavy is Woody<br />

Strode, a colored ex-athlete from UCLA,<br />

and the supporting players are all Thilanders,<br />

Chinese and Japanese. One member<br />

of the cast said he was a Phoenician,<br />

but Mahoney told him there hadn't been<br />

any Phoenicians in 3,000 years. Mahoney<br />

finished shooting "Three Challenges" two<br />

months ago almost dead. "I had ptomaine<br />

poisoning, amoebic dysentery, dengue fever<br />

and pneumonia all at the same time. I<br />

lost 40 pounds, and shot the last scenes<br />

living on oxygen."<br />

"There are two English words known<br />

all over the world 'Cowboy' and 'Tarzan,' "<br />

says Jack.<br />

"I love the role. I put myself mentally<br />

into Tarzan. In adjustment of his character,<br />

we are going back to author Burrough's<br />

original concept. The early Tarzan<br />

of the books was Lord Greystroke, an<br />

educated man who spoke seven languages."<br />

Mahoney, the 13th film Tarzan, thinks<br />

Johnny Weissmuller was the best of the<br />

former Tarzans. Jock's own "Tarzan Goes<br />

to India" broke boxoffice records.<br />

Jack J. Veeren, city manager in El Paso<br />

for Stanley Warner of Texas, says the circuit's<br />

Bordertown Twin-Screen and El Paso<br />

Drive-In begin showing the picture August<br />

1. Later, simultaneous engagements are<br />

booked for Ralph F. Calderon's Cactus<br />

Drive-In and suburban Valley Theatre,<br />

Bill Burke's Fiesta ozoner, and C. D. Leon's<br />

downtown Crawford Theatre.<br />

Accident-Health Plan<br />

Soon by Texas COMPO<br />

DALLAS—Negotiations are<br />

almost complete<br />

whereby members of Texas COMPO<br />

can avail themselves, their families and<br />

employes of extensive accident and health<br />

insurance coverage at a substantial savings<br />

under an association plan which will<br />

be underwritten by Continental Casualty<br />

Co.<br />

Kyle Rorex, executive director of Texas<br />

COMPO, said the plan will be highly beneficial,<br />

especially for the independent exhibitor<br />

who thus will be able to get dependable<br />

and broad coverage at a blanket<br />

price similar to that now enjoyed only<br />

by large multiemploye companies.<br />

"The program provides protection even<br />

for 'uninsurable' members and every<br />

policy carries a guaranteed renewal clause,"<br />

Rorex said.<br />

The exhibitor can choose parts or all of<br />

the four basic plans which will be offered.<br />

Available is a hospital indemnity plan<br />

providing up to $250 weekly for 52 weeks;<br />

a catastrophe hospitalization plan with<br />

a deductible feature to protect the exhibitor<br />

member against catastrophic hospital<br />

bills up to $10,000 for himself and<br />

each member of his family; an income protection<br />

plan providing a regular monthly<br />

income to the exhibitor when he is disabled<br />

due to illness or accident, and finally an<br />

overhead expense plan which would pay up<br />

to $1,000 a month to help meet fixed expenses<br />

such as rent, heat, utilities, employe<br />

salaries, etc., when the exhibitor is disabled<br />

by accident or sickness.<br />

Rorex announced that representatives of<br />

the Continental Casualty Co. in various<br />

sections of the state will call on Texas<br />

exhibitors personally to explain the details<br />

of the program. To be eligible to obtain<br />

the association rates the participant<br />

must be a paid-up member of Texas<br />

COMPO.<br />

It was reported that all expenses and<br />

administrative details are to be absorbed<br />

by Continental Casualty Co.<br />

Peter Glenville directed Paramount's<br />

"Becket" from Edward Anhalt's adaptation<br />

of Jean Anouilh's play.<br />

O'Donnell to Present<br />

WOMPI Ass n Awards<br />

DALLASof<br />

Cinema<br />

-William O'Donnell, president<br />

Art Theatres in Texas, and<br />

brother of the late<br />

R. J. O'Donnell, executive<br />

of Interstate<br />

circuit and godfather<br />

of WOMPI, will present<br />

the convention<br />

awards at the International<br />

Ass'n of<br />

Women of the Motion<br />

Picture Industry's<br />

tenth annual<br />

conference here September<br />

13-15.<br />

Wm. O'Donnell<br />

Trophies will be<br />

bestowed for cornearned<br />

by the Dallas<br />

munity service.<br />

WOMPI Club last year; convention attendance,<br />

won by the Jacksonville group<br />

in 1962; publicity, which went to the<br />

Charlotte women last year; industry relations,<br />

won the previous year by Dallas,<br />

and membership which the Memphis<br />

WOMPIs won in 1962.<br />

O'Donnell, who is one of the most popular<br />

leaders of the motion picture industry<br />

in the southwest, will also present a newly<br />

created award which will be given only<br />

every ten years — "WOMPI of the Decade."<br />

This is a commendation to be given to an<br />

individual WOMPI making the greatest<br />

contribution to the WOMPI Ass'n during<br />

the last ten years, each WOMPI club nominating<br />

one person.<br />

Presentation of these awards will be part<br />

of the program of the WOMPI banquet on<br />

Saturday night, September 14, at which<br />

Texas Gov. John Connally will be the<br />

principal speaker and Lt. Gov. Preston<br />

Smith will receive the "DITTO" (Distinguished<br />

Independent Texas Theatre<br />

Owner) award. The presentation will be<br />

made by John Rowley, president of Rowley<br />

United Theatres. Msgr. William O'Brien<br />

will give the invocation at this affair and<br />

Conrad Brady, an executive of Interstate<br />

Theatres, will be toastmaster.<br />

Boudouris Airers Bought<br />

By Northeast Drive-Ins<br />

From Mideast Edition<br />

CLEVELAND—Al Boudouris, Toledo theatre<br />

supply manufacturer and drive-in operator,<br />

has sold his Miracle Mile, Maumee<br />

and Franklin Park drive-in theatres to<br />

Northeast Drive-In Theatres, headed by<br />

Sumner Redstone of Boston.<br />

The airers had been booked by the Jack<br />

Armstrong circuit of Bowling Green, according<br />

to information reaching here.<br />

Always<br />

Best<br />

Always<br />

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It's A Tradition<br />

- For Beit Scrrice<br />

Send Filmack Yoor Next Order For<br />

S^pecial TtaiUtA<br />

FILMACK<br />

1327 S. Waboih<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963 SW-1


. . Ernest<br />

Lumpkin<br />

OKLAHOMA CITY<br />

H II<br />

Fxhibitors, distributors and other film<br />

folk are invited to attend the open<br />

UTOO meeting on Monday, September 9.<br />

This is the Monday after Labor Day. The<br />

meeting will open with a cocktail hour,<br />

luncheon and installation of officers.<br />

Afterward, several new picture trailers will<br />

be screened. Distributors are asked to make<br />

arrangements with Charles Wills, projectionist<br />

at the Variety Club screening room.<br />

Oscar David Edmiston, father of Ed Edmiston.<br />

MGM publicist, died at the age of<br />

58. A requiem mass was said at St. Patrick's<br />

Church . Craig and his<br />

wife, who operated the Duke Theatre at<br />

Duke about ten years ago. have taken over<br />

the Kozy Theatre in Granite, where they<br />

also are operating a variety store. They<br />

are building back the business at the Kozy.<br />

which had been dark several years, and are<br />

looking forward to a profitable fall with a<br />

good cotton harvest apparently assured.<br />

.\udie Adwell, who was transferred to<br />

Albuquerque a few weeks ago to assist Paul<br />

West in the supervision of several drivein<br />

theatres acquired there by Video Independent,<br />

has resigned and returned to<br />

Oklahoma City to operate the Ritz Theatre<br />

in suburban Britton. taking over from<br />

Sol Sachs. Continental<br />

Roy Avey jr . . .<br />

Pictures, and Glen Fannin. Embassy, were<br />

in<br />

from Dallas.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Wade Berryman. who have<br />

the Rogue Theatre and Matador Drive-In<br />

at Matador. Tex., are now doing their own<br />

booking. Amos Page of McLean and<br />

Quanah had been doing this for Wade and<br />

his wife Nan. They have built an auditorium<br />

in front of the snack bar to seat<br />

100 persons, which can be expanded if<br />

necessary, and will operate through the<br />

winter. They have figured out a w-ay to<br />

prevent the auditorium windows from<br />

fogging up during cold weather and to<br />

keep the glass clear during rain and snow.<br />

They have booked Spanish-language pictures<br />

during the cotton picking season.<br />

Seen on the Row were these exhibitors:<br />

Johnny Pagan. Borger, Amos Page,<br />

Quanah, both in Texas; George Jennings,<br />

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ill Wm« Grand Otilohomo CItT<br />

Comanche: Leonard White. Wcatherford;<br />

E. B. Anderson. Norman; Clint Applewhite.<br />

Carnegie; Bill Long. Guymon: R. R. Mc-<br />

Coy and wife. Edmond; Bob Downing. Collinsville:<br />

Eddie Jones and Jim McKenna.<br />

Tulsa; Betty McCaskill. Maysville; Ray<br />

Smith. Beaver; T. V. McDowell and wife,<br />

Buffalo; Volney Hamm. Lawton: Charles<br />

Smith. Wynnewood: Mrs. Bob Smith. Canton,<br />

who said the new Smith home there<br />

will be completed in two or three weeks;<br />

G. E. and Carrie Ortman. Hennessey, and<br />

"<br />

J. C. "Doc and brother Leonard<br />

of Weatherford.<br />

E. M. Freiburger, retired exhibitor who<br />

lives in Bartlesville, recently returned to<br />

his old home in New London. Wis., to attend<br />

a family reunion. He reports that he<br />

saw this sign in a restaurant: "Help Us<br />

Stamp Out Home Cooking." Freiburger<br />

owned and operated the Dewey Theatre<br />

at Dewey for some 25 years before selling<br />

to Walter W. Bell of Chctopa. Kas. Before<br />

taking over at Dewey. Freiburger<br />

traveled many years, and at one time was<br />

the bandmaster for the Cole Bros. Circus.<br />

now secretary of the Moose Lodge in<br />

He is<br />

Bartlesville.<br />

Bill and Viola Cleverdon, who operated<br />

the Ritz subrun in Altus until they sold<br />

out a few months ago to Video Independent<br />

Theatres, are still working at the<br />

Alius Air Force base and operating the Ritz<br />

Theatre in Eldorado. 25 miles southwest<br />

of Altus. They plan to open full time in<br />

the fall during cotton harvesting. The last<br />

part of August, a daughter Martha and<br />

family will visit the Cleverdons. Martha's<br />

husband is going to summer school in<br />

Greeley, Colo., and they live in Denver.<br />

Another daughter Sue is at Oklahoma<br />

State University at Stillwater, taking a<br />

course in student counseling.<br />

R. J. "Fateye" Cordell, who manages the<br />

Palace. Gem and Car-Vu theatres in Chilreturned<br />

from a<br />

dress. Tex., has recently<br />

trip down to Rockport. where he and some<br />

friends had expected to get in some good<br />

fishing, but stated that the wind was so<br />

bad that it was all but impossible to wet<br />

a line.<br />

Several weeks ago, L. A. "Smokey " Adams<br />

announced that he had taken over the<br />

operation of the Franroy and Alamo theatres<br />

in Snyder from J. C. Millirons. A<br />

former owner of the Alamo. Bryan Burns,<br />

introduced Adams around Filmrow. The<br />

Alamo had been closed for several years,<br />

and we were astounded when Adams said<br />

he wanted to book pictures for this house<br />

and not the Franroy. This happened in<br />

April. Recently we went to Snyder to see<br />

Adams, and were greatly surprised when<br />

we drove up In front of the Franroy and<br />

found that it had been converted into a<br />

roller skating rink. Adams said he believed<br />

that he had solved the problem of Kt-tting<br />

the older people back into the theatres.<br />

Now the noisy youngsters are attending<br />

the skating rink In droves, and the parents<br />

are gradually going back to the Alamo.<br />

The oldsters jast could not stand the<br />

nol.sy kids, so. they stay at home and watch<br />

till- old movies on TV. We were also sur-<br />

1 :::,pd when Adams told us that the Alamo<br />

was a much better theatre for projection<br />

of motion pictures. Business is good at<br />

both the theatre and the skating rink, and<br />

Adams is looking forward to a good fall<br />

business if the cotton crop comes out as<br />

well as it is predicted.<br />

E. T. Borum, who operates the Earth<br />

Theatre and Sunset Drive-In at Earth.<br />

Tex., was out working at the outdoor theatre<br />

when we arrived in town. It was<br />

around 100 degrees and he was glad to<br />

quit and meet us in his office at the<br />

Earth Theatre. Business is better now than<br />

it has been for some time, and Borum was<br />

very optimistic the upturn will be maintained.<br />

He operates the Earth Theatre part<br />

time, using his Sunday picluie for a matinee<br />

in the theatre and at night at the<br />

drive-in. On Saturdays he runs Spanish<br />

pictures for the many Mexicans that live<br />

in and around town.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Garland Dobson will close<br />

their Bearcat Drive-In in Erick October<br />

31 with a Halloween show. They have been<br />

operating full week duiing the summer<br />

months except on Tuesdays. After school<br />

starts in September, the schedule will be<br />

cut to two changes, four days. Dobson plans<br />

on a vacation about August 1. He is employed<br />

by the Hydro-Tex Co. and travels<br />

most of the time, but manages to get back<br />

home each night. For his vacation he and<br />

a friend will do some fishing in the White<br />

River in Arkansas. He expects to be gone<br />

about two weeks. A son Lindell will go to<br />

Southwestern College at Weatherford this<br />

fall, and a daughter Jaunell will be a<br />

sophomore in the Erick High School.<br />

Form Lakeland Firm<br />

To Run New Thealre<br />

From Southeast Edition<br />

LAKELAND. FLA. — An announcement<br />

has been made here of the formation of<br />

Grove Entertainment, a new company In<br />

the field of film exhibition for the purpose<br />

of operating a new indoor theatre, the<br />

Grove Park Theatre, now being completed<br />

at the local Grove Park Shopping Center.<br />

Heading the new concern is Jeanne Hart as<br />

president; Herb Roller, former manager of<br />

the local Polk Theatre, as general manager<br />

and vice-president; Thomas Dell, secretary,<br />

and Ralph Penn. treasurer. Designed by<br />

architect Donavon Dean of this city, the<br />

Grove Park is a $260,000 masonry and steel<br />

structure with a seating capacity of 900.<br />

It will have a first-i-un policy and is expected<br />

to be open about October 1.<br />

Boston's series of unsolved murders by<br />

strangulation of 11 women will be the<br />

basis of "The Boston Strangler." Victor<br />

Buono will star in the Allied Artists film.<br />

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BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


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atre there . FU\vna of Prels Theatres<br />

is buyinK and bookinK for both the<br />

Oaks in Columbus and the AUred in Pryor.<br />

Robert Moxley, a 25-year veteran in<br />

stage direction and theatre management,<br />

has been appointed manager of the Mc-<br />

Farlin Memorial Auditorium on the SMU<br />

campus ... Ed Sherbeyn, former assistant<br />

to the division manager at National Screen<br />

Service here, has been named manager of<br />

the Fine Arts Theatre here by Trans-<br />

Texas Theatres. He succeeds Gene W3lch,<br />

shifted to another position. Sherbeyn has<br />

been a manager in his hometown of Kewanee.<br />

111., and at the Dallas Memorial<br />

Auditorium.<br />

Rosemary White, local<br />

chairman for the<br />

September WOMPI convention, reported on<br />

the program arrangements at a luncheon<br />

meeting of the local club. Official delegates<br />

to the convention were appointed as follows—president<br />

Thelma Bailey and Marie<br />

Russey, with Elsie Parish and Joy Surratt<br />

as alternates. The paint job won in the<br />

recent KBOX contest was donated to the<br />

Bill Herrod church in West Dallas.<br />

Tom McKean was preparing for eye<br />

surgery . Strickland and Ed Walsh<br />

were in buying and booking . Busch<br />

of Oklahoma City attended the golf tournament,<br />

and dropped by Paramount to attend<br />

a tradescreening . Bradley.<br />

Paramount booker, was on a vacation.<br />

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Q U S T O N<br />

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. . Eleanor<br />

. . Iowa<br />

Receipts Outsizzle<br />

Omaha Thermometers<br />

OMAHA—The temperature that baked<br />

the Midlands last week was no better than<br />

the boxoffice thermometer on the Omaha<br />

movie front. While receipts did no astronomical<br />

zooming, the figui-es were really<br />

hot considering that only one new offering<br />

was on the list and many holdovers<br />

showed greater strength than the week<br />

preceding. The Orpheum got off to a big<br />

start with "Come Blow Your Horn" and<br />

the first week more than doubled average.<br />

"Spencer's Mountain" picked up speed in<br />

its third week at the Omaha.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Admiral The Greot Escape (UA), 2nd wk 160<br />

Cooper Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 9th wk 120<br />

Indian Hills How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cineroma), 7th wk 300<br />

Omaha Spencer's Mountain (WB), 3rd wk 140<br />

Orpheum Come Blow Your Horn (Para) 220<br />

State Savoge Sam (BV), 4fh wk 85<br />

Eight Minneapolis Houses<br />

Beat Average Figures<br />

MINNEAPOLIS—Business was pretty<br />

good in the sweltering Mill City last week<br />

as 14 first-run theatres reported in. The<br />

mighty one, "Cleopatra." now in its fom-th<br />

week, blasted out a 650 per cent. "How<br />

the West Was Won" did 200 per cent. Newcomer<br />

"Summer Magic" did 150 per cent,<br />

w-hile holdover "Irma La Douce" also<br />

racked up that figure. Another outstanding<br />

holdover was "Come Blow Your Horn,"<br />

now in a fourth week, and still going strong<br />

at 120 per cent. The Uptown, returning to<br />

the ranks of the first-run houses, played<br />

"Heavens Above" at<br />

125 per cent.<br />

Academy Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 14th wk. .. 90<br />

Campus Two Daughters (Janus) 90<br />

Century Cleopatra ;20th-Fox), 4fh wk 650<br />

Cooper How the West Wos Won (MGM-<br />

Cineroma), 19th wk 200<br />

Gopher Donovan's Reef (Paro), 2nd wk 100<br />

Lyric Spencer's Mountain (WB), 3rd wk 110<br />

Mann—Come Blow Your Horn (Para), 4th wk 120<br />

Orpheum Summer Magic (BV) 150<br />

State Captain Sindbad (MGM), 2nd wk 70<br />

St. Louis Pork The L-Shoped Room (Col), 4th wk. 90<br />

Suburban World Winter Light (Janus) 110<br />

Uptown Heavens Above (Janus) 125<br />

World Irma La Douce (UA), 2nd wk 150<br />

Heat Wave Favorable Factor<br />

In High Milwaukee Grosses<br />

MILWAUKEE—The heat wave must<br />

have driven 'em into the theatres, for no<br />

house reported less than an average gross.<br />

The outstanding films were "Cleopatra"<br />

at the Strand: "Mondo Cane," a holdover<br />

at the Tower and Oriental, and "Irma La<br />

Douce" at the Wisconsin.<br />

Downer The Balcony (Cont'l), 3rd wk 140<br />

Ogden Five Sinners (SR); The Big Deal on<br />

Madonno Street (UMPO), rerun 100<br />

Oriental Mondo Cone (Times), 3rd wk 250<br />

Palace How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cinerama), 14th wk 200<br />

Riverside A Gathering of Eagles (Univ), 2nd wk. 110<br />

Strand Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 2nd wk 300<br />

Times Carry On Regardless (Governor) 200<br />

Tower Mondo Cane (Times), 2nd wk 300<br />

Towne Flipper (MGM); CoHle King (MGM) 125<br />

Warner Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 2nd wk 250<br />

Wisconsin irma La Douce (UA), 2nd wk 275<br />

Midweek Upturn Subject<br />

For Pleasant Probing<br />

Des Moines—A number of exhibitors,<br />

both in Des Moines and around the<br />

state, are crowing about how their midweek<br />

grosses have picked up the last<br />

month. The trend is not 100 per cent,<br />

of course, but widespread enough to be<br />

a topic of conversation—and speculation.<br />

The exhibitors so happily affected<br />

list these possible reasons for the midweek<br />

upturn: 1. Hot weather, and the<br />

fact that people want to get away<br />

from it. 2. Summer is the off-season<br />

for organizations, meetings and the<br />

hundred - and - one - other obligations<br />

that vie for the public's time in cooler<br />

months. 3. TV fare has been less than<br />

mediocre this season, with a dreary<br />

flood of re-runs.<br />

Some exhibitors have not«d that<br />

their Saturday and Sunday receipts<br />

have slipped but say the midweek upswing<br />

has more than counterbalanced<br />

any weekend falling off. In such cases,<br />

these exhibitors speculate that their<br />

lost weekenders are attracted to the<br />

pond, the links, and the great outdoors,<br />

but apparently are going to the show<br />

during the week.<br />

New 1300-Car Airer<br />

Started in Bay Area<br />

From Western Edition<br />

SAN FRANCISCO—Ground was broken<br />

recently for the Nimitz Auto Movie Theatre,<br />

a 1,300-car airer which is being constructed<br />

on the Nimitz freeway about eight<br />

miles from the Fremont Drive-In by the<br />

Enea family.<br />

A stationary snack bar with an all-electric<br />

kitchen and a number of innovations<br />

will be installed.<br />

John Riley, formerly with National Theatre<br />

Supply Co., is participating in the construction<br />

and will manage the Nimitz when<br />

it opens around the middle of August.<br />

SW Schedules Fall Start<br />

For Milwaukee Theatre<br />

MILWAUKEE — Formal announcement<br />

has been made that construction of a<br />

$500,000 theatre, seating 1,200, at the Capitol<br />

Court Shopping Center will begin September<br />

1. The announcement was made<br />

jointly by Henry Burger, zone manager for<br />

Stanley Warner Theatres, and Walter<br />

Kroening, vice-president and general manager<br />

of the Capitol Court Corp.<br />

The theatre is scheduled to open in the<br />

spring of 1964 and will present Cinerama,<br />

Todd-AO, Cinemascope and 70mm productions.<br />

Burger said the screen will be 65x35<br />

feet, largest in the Milwaukee area.<br />

DES MOINES<br />

T^atinees of Saturday (20) played against<br />

the solar eclipse, Nature's main attraction<br />

and one that will not have a return<br />

engagement around here until 1970. The<br />

press and the eye people did such a thorough<br />

job scaring smoked glasses right off<br />

of people's faces that many youngsters<br />

were herded to the safety of the darkened<br />

cinemas from 2-4 p.m.<br />

The Orpheum passed the Will Rogers collection<br />

plate during its showing of Disney's<br />

"Summer Magic" . . . Gary and Julie Cohn<br />

of Omaha spent a welcome week in Des<br />

Moines with their grandparents, Columbia's<br />

Joe and Mrs. Jacobs .<br />

United Theatreman<br />

Don Bloxham and his family flew<br />

to New York July 19 for a Big City vacation<br />

. . . Florence Muse, Columbia inspector,<br />

spent two weeks in Denver visiting her<br />

son .<br />

Jackson, another Columbia<br />

vacationer, planned a lazy week at home,<br />

with time out for a trip to Rock Creek Lake.<br />

Allied's meeting July 15 at the Varsity<br />

Theatre in Des Moines di-ew a large number<br />

of exhibitors . . . Ben Marcus, division<br />

manager, was in Columbia to call on the<br />

circuits ... In the midst of a very dry<br />

summer weatherwise, mid-July saw the<br />

overnight blossoming of a bumper crop of<br />

signs which read. "Cocktails," "Mixed<br />

Drinks," etc., as liquor-by-the-drink became<br />

a reality in Iowa. What, if any, effect<br />

the legalized irrigation project will have<br />

on theatre attendance remained to be<br />

seen.<br />

At Lincoln Theatres<br />

LINCOLN—"The Longest Day" moved<br />

out of Cooper Foundation's Nebraska Theatre<br />

after a highly successful three-week<br />

run, while "Spencer's Mountain" at the<br />

Varsity received a good two-week audience.<br />

The Nebraska opened on the 26th with<br />

"Mutiny on the Bounty."<br />

David Weston, 24-year-old London-born<br />

actor, plays a featured role in Paramount's<br />

"Becket."<br />

H<br />

URL<br />

E<br />

Y


100.000<br />

MINNEAPOLIS<br />

Deports indicate that "Mondo Cane." upcoming<br />

this week at the Berger Amusement<br />

s Gopher Theatre, is going to be a<br />

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praised it lavishly, calling it one of the best<br />

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movies ever, and the flick Is of such a sensational<br />

nature that it ought to pull big<br />

crowds.<br />

Esquire has an article on Peter "Lawrence<br />

of Arabia" O'Toole in the current issue,<br />

along with a large feature called "The<br />

'Cleopatra' Papers." Fascinating reading.<br />

(I finally caught up with "Lawrence" last<br />

week and found it to be. shall wc say, "the<br />

first adult spectacle," and by far the best<br />

"large" movie I've seen.)<br />

. . Bergman's<br />

The Uptown Theatre is back in the first<br />

run again, debuting with Peter Sellers'<br />

"Heavens Above." Welcome back .<br />

newest. "Winter Light." has been<br />

drawing particularly heavy fire from the<br />

critical guns, but it continues to do wtII at<br />

the Suburban World, despite the lack of a<br />

favorable review . . . The whole TV crew<br />

from Route 66 has been in town this past<br />

week filming a segment of that show at<br />

the newly opened Sheraton-Ritz Hotel.<br />

Tammy Grimes is guest star.<br />

"Tippi" Hedren, who made her bow in<br />

Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds," new to<br />

Minneapolis Friday (19) to be grand marshal<br />

of weekend ceremonies for the Aquatcnnial.<br />

the annual summer festival that<br />

draws 500.000 visitors to the city. Minneapolis<br />

is the former hometown of the<br />

actress.<br />

MILWAUKEE<br />

Tony La Porte, Avalon Theatre, figured<br />

prominently in the record-breaking attendance<br />

1 1 at the 15th annual<br />

South Shore Water Frolic here, a neighborhood<br />

celebration. Takes an exhibitor and<br />

showmanship to do it. Ti-aditionally. the<br />

frolic is a two-day affair but rain cancelled<br />

the parade and fireworks the first<br />

day. Folks certainly turned out July 14.<br />

Speaking of crowds, the Fomth of July<br />

Circus parade sponsored by the Schlitz<br />

Brewing Co. here, which drew close to a<br />

half million people, prompted Al Meskis.<br />

Downer Tlicatrc manager, to hand out heralds<br />

on his film, "The Balcony," as the<br />

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throngs passed the theatre. He said. "With<br />

competition like an old-fashioned circus<br />

to contend with. I figured I was a dead<br />

duck. But I started about an hour before<br />

we opened. Well. I did not do so bad for<br />

the first performance, but the house was<br />

full for the second show ! At any rate, the<br />

handouts really paid off."<br />

A newspaper inter\'iew here recently<br />

featured two prominent members of<br />

Variety Tent 14. John Reddy, manager of<br />

radio station WOKY, present chief barker,<br />

and Bernic Strachota, manager of radio<br />

station WRIT, outgoing chief barker. Since<br />

exhibitors use radio to a great extent in<br />

their promotions, it might be interesting to<br />

highlight their comments. Strachota;<br />

"There are two types of music, popular and<br />

unpopular. We at WRIT aim for the teens.<br />

They're the ones that turn the radio on<br />

and they seldom turn it off." Reddy: "We<br />

play popular music, music which appeals to<br />

most of the people most of the time." Both<br />

agreed that top musicianship keeps improving.<br />

"Matt" KappI, controller at Baker-Johnson<br />

& Dickinson, advertising and public<br />

relations agency, w-as reminiscing at a<br />

press luncheon recently. Knows all about<br />

the movies, especially the silent ones.<br />

Started out as an usher at the old State<br />

Theatre and discovered that one of his<br />

duties included sitting beside the blind<br />

organist to watch the film closely and do<br />

the prompting so that the music would be<br />

coordinated with the mood and tempo of<br />

the film. "Got 25 cents an hour, which was<br />

a lot of dough in those days for us young<br />

whipper-snappers," he said. Matt Intimated<br />

that "B-J-D" might be interested in<br />

tleins on behalf of some of their clients "if<br />

the right thing came along," he added.<br />

Been wondering what ever became of<br />

Ralph Krau.se. who years ago "managed<br />

one theatre after another" in this area?<br />

He's one of the top salesmen now at Northwestern<br />

Ford on North avenue.<br />

Dan Dandrea New Manager<br />

At Garfield in Alhambra<br />

From Western Fdition<br />

ALHAMBRA. CALIF.<br />

— Dan Dandrea.<br />

manager of theatres and restaurants in<br />

New Jersey many years, has been appointed<br />

manager of the Alhambra Garfield Theatre.<br />

7 East Valley Blvd.<br />

Dandrea managed theatres for the Warner<br />

circuit 17 years and was a leader in<br />

civic and community affairs in each town<br />

or city where he represented the circuit.<br />

In Bridgcton. N. J., where he managed a<br />

theatre. Dandrea also was president of the<br />

Bridgcton Merchants Ass'n for three years<br />

and headed the Community Chest two<br />

years.<br />

Theatreman Robbed<br />

^tom VVcsfrrn Edition<br />

SAN JOSE. CALIF—The manager of the<br />

Winchester Drlve-In was shot and robbed<br />

of more than $1,700 of the theatre's receipts<br />

early Monday i8i. Derrill Cagle told<br />

sheriff's deputies he was taking the receipUs<br />

to the bank's night depository<br />

.shoitly after 1 a.m. when two young men.<br />

one armed with a pistol, the other with a<br />

rifle, emerged from the shrubbery and demanded<br />

the money. Cagle refused and<br />

was shot in the cheek. His condition was<br />

described as not .serious.<br />

JC-2<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


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OMAHA<br />

D.vron Hopkins, exhibitor at Glenwood. got<br />

a six-column photo and a plug for the<br />

movie. "Where the Boys Are." all for free<br />

in the Omaha World-Herald. Dick Osterholm.<br />

southwest Iowa reporter for the<br />

World-Herald. wTOte a feature on the<br />

town clean-up for a celebration and the<br />

accompanying photo showed the townsfolk<br />

and firemen washing down the streets and<br />

sidewalks. But the most dominant point<br />

in the p'cture was Byron's Rex Theatre,<br />

where the main swabbing activities were<br />

In progress . . . Hot. hot-weather note;<br />

On one of the stickiest and hottest days<br />

which haunted the Omaha area last week<br />

the air-conditioning went on the fritz in<br />

the unit which supplies the Allied Artists<br />

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wiil<br />

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"tomorrow." In short, th3y avoid the one<br />

thing that will help-seeing their doctors.<br />

For cancer of the colon and rectum can<br />

be cured in 3 out of 4 patients when<br />

discovered early and treated properly. Its<br />

danger signs—change in bowel habits or<br />

unusual bleeding-call for prompt medical<br />

examination. It may not be cancer, but only<br />

a physician will know.<br />

Every adult man and woman can have<br />

life-saving protection from cancer of the<br />

colon and rectum. An annual health checkup,<br />

including digital and proctoscopic exammations,<br />

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Call your local American Cancer<br />

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Sol Slominslty of the Liberty Theatre at<br />

Loup City was released from the hospital<br />

there last week after treatment for gastric<br />

ulcers Warren Hall, exhibitor at Burwell,<br />

. . .<br />

has resigned as county judge and is<br />

devoting a big share of his efforts to preparation<br />

for Nebraska's Big Rodeo coming<br />

up early in August. Hall ha.s long been one<br />

of the hardest workers in the production ct<br />

the attraction which draws visitors from<br />

many states.<br />

Bob Hirz, Warner city manager back from<br />

a vacation at Madden's Lodge on Gull<br />

Lake. Minn., was having a hard time getting<br />

down to earth in hot Nebraska last<br />

week. His daughter went water skiing for<br />

the first time and took to it like a veteran.<br />

Bob didn't water ski but he did fall out of<br />

the boat . . . Orville Dodds of the Burg<br />

Theatre at Stromsburg and his family went<br />

to Estes Park for a vacation.<br />

Norman Grint, owner of the Sun Theatre<br />

at Sargent, is one of the busiest men in<br />

these parts. In addition to operating the<br />

theatre. Norm is the rural mail carrier and<br />

. . .<br />

does aerial crop dusting—and he's hustling<br />

to catch up on his plane orders in thi.s hot<br />

weather Edward Opicinsky, who has<br />

the Strand Theatre at Newman Grove, suf-<br />

. . . Bill<br />

. . .<br />

fered a slipped disc recently<br />

Zedicker. exhibitor at Osceola, also is on ihe<br />

injured list. He does contracting and broke<br />

his foot when he slipped at a building site<br />

Rudy Dibbert. owner and operator of<br />

the Osmond. Neb.. Theatre, advertised the<br />

building for sale, with or without equipment.<br />

Frank Holllngsworth. who has the Holly<br />

Theatre at Beatrice, ribbed Bob Hirz of<br />

Warners for booking in a picture at the<br />

drive-in there at the same time Holliiigsworth<br />

was playing "Spencer's Mountain."<br />

Then Prank admitted that in the first<br />

three days "Spencer's Mountain" grossed<br />

as much as the "Music Man" did in a week.<br />

"And I thought 'Music Man' was big." he<br />

added. Commonwealth reported "Spencer"<br />

was big "all over the circuit" . . . Maurice<br />

Curran. owner of the Idle Hour Theatre<br />

and weekly paper at Greeley, said his son<br />

is going to St. Benedict's Monastery at<br />

Conception. Mo.<br />

Only a<br />

few exhibitors braved the heat to<br />

visit the Row last week, including Nebraskans<br />

Jack March. Wayne: Sid Metcalf.<br />

Nebraska City: Phil Lannon. West Point,<br />

and lowans Al Haals. Harlan: Arnold<br />

Johnson, Onawa: Byron Hopkins. Glenwood,<br />

and Jim Travis. Milford.<br />

LINCOLN<br />

^anager Dan Flanagan of the 84th and<br />

O Drive-In. after a week's run of the<br />

controversial film. "I Spit on Your Grave."<br />

has concluded there may not be too many<br />

dis.'^atlsflcd people in the world. His ads<br />

carried an offer of ticket admission refund<br />

to any dissatisfied customer within the<br />

first 30 minutes' showing of the film nightly.<br />

Two pairs of refunds were made—onr<br />

to nn older couple and the other to two<br />

young men. Dan suspects the latter pair<br />

really were testing the offer to see if it<br />

was bona fide. It was.<br />

Civic-minded Walt Jancke contributed his<br />

bit as a guest on the Joe Martin show over<br />

Lincoln station KOLN-TV on the night of<br />

July 15. He apparently saw to it that the<br />

motion picture industry was given its quota<br />

of credits on the late live special guest<br />

show in the way of a hilarious if noisy<br />

early Mack Sennett comedy rerun. It was<br />

especially picked to give another night<br />

guest, Ceylon's assistant commissioner of<br />

revenue Fernando, "an idea of Hollywood,"<br />

according to emcee Joe Martin. Fernando,<br />

who knew better, went along with the idea<br />

as he and the audience watched the earlyday<br />

speedy reels. Jancke not only reminded<br />

the at-home audience that he's been in<br />

the motion picture business for 40 years but<br />

revealed that he was going to celebrate his<br />

"39th" birthday next week i21i. The Ceylon<br />

guest, on his part, explained his country's<br />

custom of families arranging marriages<br />

by horoscopes scientifically drawn<br />

up according to the hour, date and year of<br />

birth of the couple—a custom he might<br />

have been thinking could be employed<br />

here, especially in Hollywood. Ceylon, he<br />

did note, has a low divorce rate.<br />

More than just Nebraska friends and<br />

relatives had a chance to enjoy motion picture,<br />

television and Broadway star Inga<br />

Swenson during an early July visit to her<br />

former Omaha home as the house guest of<br />

her brother J. Richard Swenson. There are<br />

no movies like "The Miracle Worker" in<br />

Miss Swenson's immediate future but another<br />

Bonanza episode was scheduled for<br />

shooting soon at Paramount Studios.<br />

S. Roy Warner, president of Lincoln Local<br />

151. has volunteered to baby-sit the<br />

couple's 16-year-old bulldog Queenie<br />

during the first two weeks of August while<br />

Mrs. Warner visits relatives in Philadelphia<br />

and Delaware. Queenie. almost<br />

blind and deaf from her years, wouldn't do so<br />

well in strange new houses and around new<br />

faces, the Warners decided after a conference<br />

called in behalf of the aging but<br />

privileged pet.<br />

Members of Lincoln Local 151 had no<br />

more finished their sincere "welcome back<br />

on the job" greetings to Homer Hotchkiss,<br />

Varsity Theatre projectionist, than they<br />

heard of the misfortune suffered by an<br />

Omaha veteran projectionist, Charles<br />

Craig. The past Omaha Local 343 president<br />

suffered a heart attack. Hotchkiss<br />

was in a hospital for months following a<br />

November auto accident in Kansas en route<br />

to Florida.<br />

E. M. Gwin, Cooper's Lincoln city manager,<br />

and his family didn't see much of<br />

15-year-old Tom Gwin for several weeks<br />

before and during the annual four-night<br />

presentation of "Brigadoon," this season's<br />

Pinewood Bowl musical. Tom. a Lincoln<br />

High sophomore this fall, signed on as a<br />

props man and found, according to his dad.<br />

he had a demanding Job.


'Women of the World'<br />

Big Detroit Opener<br />

DETROIT—"Women of the World"<br />

proved to be a powerful newcomer at the<br />

Trans-Lux Krim, attracting returns that<br />

added up to a 220 per cent gross in its<br />

initial week. "Trma La Douce," in its<br />

fourth week here, continued to build<br />

amazingly beyond its opening week's figure<br />

and compiled 330 per cent for the<br />

seven days mider review. "Captain Sindbad,"<br />

showing downtown with "The Slave,"<br />

also was away ahead of average figm-es.<br />

"How the West Was Won" in its fifth<br />

month at the Music Hall appears headed<br />

for some new moneymaking records for<br />

Detroit. In its first 19 weeks, with 271<br />

performances counted, attendance hit<br />

234,106, with a gross of $447,000. According<br />

to Managing Director Russ Russo, this figure<br />

is higher than the total for the 35-<br />

week run of "Search for Paradise" and the<br />

31 weeks of "The Wonderful World of the<br />

Brothers Grimm," giving "West" a fair<br />

chance of approaching the 99-week alltime<br />

record of the pioneer of them all, "This Is<br />

Cinerama." The take of the present pictm-e<br />

has been boosted by 32 special morning<br />

"Youth Shows" which drew 36,078 school<br />

students.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Adams Come Blow Your Horn (Para), 3rd wk 60<br />

Fox Coptoin Sindbod (MGM); The Slave (MGM),<br />

2nd wk 200<br />

Grand Circus The Girl Hunters (Coloramo);<br />

Murder on the Campus (Colorama) ..Not available<br />

Madison Lawrence of Arabia (Col),<br />

23rd wk Not Available<br />

Mercury Irma Lo Douce (UA), 4tii wk 330<br />

Michigan Bye Bye Birdie (Co!) Not available<br />

Palms—PT 109 (WB), 3rd wk Not available<br />

Trons-Lux Krim Women of the World (Embassy) 220<br />

Proof Group of about 30 suburban theatres<br />

A Gathering of Eagles (Univ), sundry second<br />

features Not available<br />

Movies Strong Competitors<br />

For Cincy Fun Dollars<br />

CINCINNATI—Movie attendance in all<br />

first-run theatres held up remarkably well<br />

this week, considering the terrific competition<br />

from baseball, summer opera and numerous<br />

other live attractions. Especially<br />

encouraging to the exhibitors was the<br />

strength of and the interest shown in the<br />

amusement bill which, with exception of<br />

two films, were all holdovers.<br />

Albee Come Blow Your Horn (Paro), 2nd wk. ..110<br />

Capitol How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cinerama), 19th. wk 150<br />

Esquire The L-Shaped Room (Col), 2nd wk 160<br />

Grand Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 4th wk 225<br />

Guild Sparrows Can't Sing (Janus), 3rd wk 95<br />

Hyde Pork The L-Shaped Room (Col), 2nd wk. 150<br />

Keith Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 4th wk 125<br />

Palace A Gathering of Eagles (Univ) 90<br />

Twin Drive-ln King Kong vs. Godzilla (Univ) ..175<br />

Valley Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 15th wk 110<br />

Zeva 'Skee' Yovan Leaves<br />

Loew's After 15 Years<br />

From Southwest Edition<br />

MEMPHIS—Zeva "Skee" Yovan, manager<br />

of the Palace Theatre in Memphis for<br />

Loew's for the past seven years and of the<br />

Orpheum in St. Louis for eight years before<br />

that, has resigned from Loew's organization<br />

to take another theatre position<br />

in Memphis. He had been anticipating<br />

a transfer and did not want to leave<br />

Memphis.<br />

Replacing him at the Palace in Memphis<br />

will be Charles O'Dell, former assistant<br />

manager of the State Theatre for Loew's in<br />

New Orleans. O'Dell has arrived and<br />

taken over his new position and Mrs. O'Dell<br />

will join him next month.<br />

Jack Zide Salute to Open<br />

Michigan Allied Session<br />

DETROIT—A testimonial luncheon to<br />

Jack Zide, whose 20th anniversary as an<br />

independent distributor here was recently<br />

celebrated by probably the largest testimonial<br />

insert in <strong>Boxoffice</strong> ever published<br />

in this territory, will be the kickoff event<br />

for the annual convention of Allied Theatres<br />

of Michigan.<br />

This will be held on Wednesday, August<br />

14, at the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel, and will<br />

be sponsored by Variety Club of Detroit,<br />

of which Zide is a former chief barker.<br />

Zide, in addition to Allied Film Exchange<br />

here, operates exchanges in Cincinnati,<br />

Cleveland, and Indianapolis.<br />

William Wetsman, convention chairman<br />

for Allied, and Irving Goldberg, present<br />

Variety chief barker, are cochairmen of<br />

arrangements for the luncheon.<br />

The general outline of events for the<br />

convention was announced by Wetsman<br />

Edward Small to Lens<br />

Trankie and Johnny'<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Production plans highlighted<br />

by a budget of $4,500,000 were unfolded<br />

here by producer Edward Small coincidentally<br />

with the announcement that<br />

he was bringing to the screen the two colorful<br />

characters, "Frankie and Johnny."<br />

Writer Donald S. Sanford has completed<br />

an adaptation which will permit a variable<br />

selection of top names from which to choose<br />

the two title characters; however, no decision<br />

has been made on this or distribution.<br />

Small releases through United<br />

Artists, but appears to be open for discussions.<br />

Wife of Arthur Chipman<br />

Killed on Alcan Highway<br />

DETROIT— Zella, wife of Arthur Chipman,<br />

retired upstate Michigan circuit owner,<br />

was killed in an automobile accident near<br />

Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, en route to<br />

Alaska. Russell Chipman, a son who took<br />

over operations last fall, flew north. Burial<br />

was in Greenville. Ai'thur Chipman was in<br />

the theatre business about 15 years, building<br />

up a circuit that included hardtop and<br />

diive-in houses in Greenville, Ionia, Big<br />

Rapids and Lakeview.<br />

TV Stars to Ohio Fair<br />

COLUMBUS, O.—The Ohio State Fair<br />

here August 23-September 2 will feature<br />

grandstand performances by cast members<br />

from three television series — the<br />

Beverly Hillbillies, the Real McCoys and<br />

the Virginian, Donna Douglas, Irene Ryan<br />

and Max Baer of the Hillbillies will appear<br />

the first four days of the fair. The<br />

McCoys and Virginian star Doug Mc-<br />

Clure will appear the final four days.<br />

Singer Johnny Mathis will appear August<br />

27, 28 and the Rotroff all-girl auto thrill<br />

show will appear on the 29th.<br />

• Competition for the Showman of the<br />

Year award on Wednesday afternoon.<br />

• A concessions seminar and demonstration<br />

of new theatre equipment.<br />

• Special Wednesday evening preview<br />

of a major feature, scheduled 'or release<br />

at Christmastime.<br />

• Celebrity luncheon Thursday with a<br />

lineup of civic and other leaders, glamor<br />

names of the show business and speakers.<br />

• Cocktail party and dinner dance<br />

Thursday evening with music by the Zan<br />

Gilbert Orchestra.<br />

Cooperating with Michigan Allied on<br />

the convention are Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola,<br />

Pep Lines Trucking Co., L&L Concession<br />

Co., National Carbon Co., Confection Cabinet<br />

Corp. and Motion Picture Advertising<br />

Service.<br />

Cleveland Stillman<br />

Sold to Parking Firm<br />

CLEVELAND—The first theatre to dim<br />

its lights in the downtown Playhouse<br />

Square area was Loew's Stillman Saturday<br />

(22) night. Once the self-proclaimed,<br />

and rightly, "the home of the pretentious<br />

photo play," it was bought by the Airport<br />

Parking Co., which will tm-n it into a<br />

360-car garage.<br />

Being next door to the Statler-Hilton<br />

Hotel, it already has a "built-in patronage."<br />

Several of the major department stores are<br />

in this area, too.<br />

The Stillman was bmlt by Emanuel<br />

"Uncle Manny" Mandlebaum in 1916, who<br />

was one of the founders of First National<br />

Pictures. The house was acquired by<br />

Strong, Laronge & Desberg prior to prohibition,<br />

later going to Loew's which built<br />

the State, Park and Granada and also<br />

had the Liberty.<br />

With divorcement and other changes,<br />

Loew's was permitted to hold only the<br />

Stillman, State and Ohio, all in Playhouse<br />

Square, the downtown theatre section.<br />

The initial picture in the Stillman was<br />

homemade — "Snow White," played by<br />

Cleveland kiddies and filmed on several<br />

outlying estates. The final one. closing<br />

after a 14-week run, was "Lawrence of<br />

Arabia."<br />

The theatres now in Playhouse Square<br />

are Loew's State. Loew Ohio, the Stanley<br />

Warner Allen, the Hippodrome (the<br />

largest house in Ohio) and the Palace,<br />

the Cinerama house now playing "How the<br />

West Was Won."<br />

Partial demolition and changes on the old<br />

Stillman will begin August 7.<br />

Installs SuperGlo Screen<br />

CLEVELAND—A Hmley SuperGlo screen<br />

is one of the major improvements this year<br />

at the Riverside Theatre. The installation<br />

of the screen was by Ohio Theatre Supply.<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963 ME-1


was<br />

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'<br />

an<br />

DETROIT<br />

The "Proof" Rroup of some 30 suburban<br />

theatres, headed by Aldeii Smith of<br />

Cooperative TJieatres of Michigan, made<br />

the first departure from their big scale<br />

testing of a new first-run distribution pattern.<br />

"To Kill a Mockingbird booked<br />

'<br />

in the 30 situations after it had enjoyed<br />

a run of 12 weeks—nine at the Mercury<br />

and three on a transfer to the Adams.<br />

A. Milo Dellaven. former manager of the<br />

Belmont and Grand, sends a typical oldtime<br />

"Milo-Gram •— a well-packed amusement<br />

section from the Los Angeles Times<br />

William "Uncle Billy" Graham has<br />

been appointed manager of the Lincoln<br />

Theatre for the Wisper & Wetsman circuit<br />

. . . David J. Kane, exploitation ex-<br />

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Glynn W. Smyly Appointed<br />

Tuscaloosa Ritz Manager<br />

From Southeast Edition<br />

TUSCALOOSA, ALA. — With the new<br />

Capri Theatre, formerly the Ritz, scheduled<br />

to open soon, Glynn W. Smyly has<br />

been appointed manager. He came here<br />

from the Charles Theatre, which is operated<br />

by the Wilby-Kincey Service Corp.,<br />

in Montgomery. He has been with the circuit<br />

about five years.<br />

Smyly was graduated from the University<br />

of Alabama in January 1962 with a<br />

degree from the School of Commerce and<br />

Business Administration. He, his wife and<br />

their three-year-old daughter have established<br />

residence at 8 Abrams Court.<br />

COLUMBUS<br />

Qlfficulty in getting members of the city<br />

film review board to attend showings of<br />

films was back of a proposal by board<br />

chairman Victor Goodman that the requirement<br />

of five members be dropped to<br />

three. The proposal was defeated, 5-2, by<br />

city council. Goodman said he has had difficulty<br />

in getting five members to review<br />

films, many pleading "previous engagements."<br />

Board members receive no salary<br />

but are reimbursed for expenses. Ken<br />

Prickett. executive secretary of the Independent<br />

Theatre Owners of Ohio, spoke<br />

against the ordinance. He said costs of<br />

court actions in connection with appeals<br />

from board decisions would constitute<br />

heavy burdens on theatre operators. Councilman<br />

William Pornof told Goodman that<br />

perhaps new board members should be obtained<br />

if he cannot get five of the 15-member<br />

board to view a picture.<br />

The RKO Palace had a triple stagescreen-television<br />

show headlined by closedcircuit<br />

telecast of the Sonny Liston-Floyd<br />

Patterson title bout. Jimmie Luellen and<br />

His Novelaires presented a 25-minute stage<br />

show with a Sport-o-Rama on the screen<br />

. . . "Bye Bye Birdie" was becoming one<br />

of the biggest grossers in recent years at<br />

Loew's Ohio with a third big week.<br />

CINCINNATI<br />

^<br />

surprisingly large group of Golden Age<br />

Club members attended the special<br />

summer party at the Albee last week. As<br />

the day was a "sizzler," the lemonade and<br />

cookies were very much appreciated and<br />

"Come Blow Your Horn" sent them away<br />

in a gay mood.<br />

Stewart Fox, son of Phil Pox, Columbia<br />

manager, in a letter to Dale Stevens, Post<br />

and Times-Star movie critic, indicated he<br />

isn't letting any grass grow under his<br />

feet in his ambition to become a film director.<br />

Stewart, a graduate of the University<br />

of Cincinnati, is in his second year<br />

of post graduate studies in the Department<br />

of Cinema at the University of<br />

Southern California. He also is an assistant<br />

manager at the Cinema Art Theatre<br />

in Los Angeles.<br />

Dave Wilson, 62, owner of the Wilson,<br />

Miami, W. Va., and a longtime exhibitor,<br />

died July 18 . . . Joe Alexander, RKO district<br />

manager, has been elected to the<br />

board of directors of "Cincinnati Unlimited,"<br />

an organization whose main objective<br />

is to revive interest in this city's<br />

core area by presenting promotions and<br />

exciting attractions ... It was good to<br />

see Frank Schreiber, Universal salesman,<br />

back on Pilmrow after an illness of several<br />

weeks.<br />

Fay Brown, Paramount ledger clerk, has<br />

resigned to await a stork visit . . . Away on<br />

H<br />

U<br />

vacations this week were M. M. Berger,<br />

MGM office manager; bookers John Kallmeyer<br />

of 20th-Fox and Walter Merganthal<br />

of UA and Irene Marks, Warners receptionist.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Fred May, Dry Ridge, Ky.,<br />

and Prank Yassenoff, Columbus, who are<br />

infrequent Pilmrow visitors, were in last<br />

week. Other visitors included Lou Marks,<br />

MGM central division manager; Clem<br />

Perry, publicist for MGM's prt film; exhibitors<br />

Ed Hyman, Huntington, W. "Va.;<br />

E. D. Housley, Evarts, Ky.; Ohioans James<br />

Chakeres, Washington, C. H.; Ed Payne,<br />

Chillicothe; Jerry Jackson, Mount Holly,<br />

and Chalmers Bach, Brookville . . . Away<br />

during the week were Milton Gurian, AA<br />

manager, to Springfield, and E. G. Naegel,<br />

AIP salesman, to West "Virginia points.<br />

Ken Prickett, executive secretary of the<br />

Independent Theatre Owners of Ohio, and<br />

Charles Sugarman, a director, attended the<br />

ITOO board meeting at Sandusky . . . Rosemary<br />

Pearson, secretary to Ken Prickett,<br />

is vacationing in California ... It is reported<br />

that Walter Kessler, former manager<br />

of Loew's Ohio, is now general manager<br />

of the Herbert C. Rosener art theatre<br />

circuit on the west coast. Until recently,<br />

Kessler was manager of Loew's Warfield<br />

in San Francisco. The Warfield was sold<br />

by Loew's and is now operated as the Fox<br />

Warfield.<br />

It is rumored that two Columbus showmen<br />

are interested in acquiring a theatre<br />

in Lancaster, Ohio.<br />

THE BIG COMBINATIONS<br />

COME FROM<br />

Allied Film Exchange Imperial Pictures<br />

102i Fox Building<br />

2108 Payne Ave.<br />

Detroit, Mich.<br />

Cleveland, Ohio.


= Freedom<br />

buyinpr power. And also to help Americans participate<br />

in the affairs of their country. If you have a<br />

Plan in operation, why not do some extra promotinfr,<br />

particularly important if you have personnel<br />

turnover. If you have no Plan jroinjr, you'll jret all<br />

the help you need by calling your State Savings<br />

Bonds Director today, or by writing Treasury Department,<br />

U.S. Savings Bonds Division, Washington<br />

25, D.C.<br />

The one major element not shown in this "equation"<br />

of liberty is you. Liberty must be protected, preserved,<br />

and maintained by those who value it the<br />

most. That's why your company's help is needed,<br />

in the form of a Payroll Savinj^s Pl;.'.n for U.S.<br />

Savin^rs Bonds. Not just to "rai.se money," but also<br />

to encourage the kind of individual thrift that<br />

makes citizens more .self-reliant, makes communi-<br />

ties more independent, through a build-up of re.serve<br />

Keep Freedom in Your Future... U. S. SAVINGS BONDS<br />

Th« U.S. Covtrnmant do«« not poy (or thU odvtrttitmtnt. Th« Traoiitry Deparimsnl Ihonki, (or ihclr potrioliim. Th« Adverfiiing Council and Ihit mogozino. v!^<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


Intriguing Product<br />

Revives New Haven<br />

NEW HAVEN—The town was<br />

jumping<br />

for a change — Loew's College reopened<br />

after extensive remodeling and Bailey Theatres'<br />

Whalley staged a colorful premiere<br />

for Columbia's "Lawrence of Arabia." In<br />

addition, Universal bowed "A Gathering of<br />

Eagles" in at foui- theatres, day-and-date.<br />

The weather continued excessively warm.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Bowl Drive-ln A bothering of Eagles (Univ); The<br />

Traitors (Univ) 110<br />

Lincoln The L-Shaped Room (Col), 2nd wk 115<br />

Loew's College Bye Bye Birdie (Col) 1 50<br />

Milford Drjve-ln The Longest Day (20th-Fox),<br />

suburban break, 2nd wk 1 20<br />

New Haven Drive- In A Gathering of Eagles<br />

(Univ); The Traitors (Univ) 110<br />

Paramount Come Blow Your Horn (Pora),<br />

2nd wk 135<br />

Post Drive-ln Hercules and the Captive Women<br />

(Woolner); The Magic Voyage of Sinbod<br />

(Filmgroup) 90<br />

Roger Sherman—PT 109 (WB) 1 20<br />

Summit Drive-ln West Side Story (UA), suburban<br />

break 1 00<br />

Whalley Lawrence of Arabia (Col) 235<br />

Westville, Whitney A Gathering of Eagles<br />

(Univ); The Troitors (Unjv) 105<br />

POLICE SAFETY FILM ON SCREENS—A safe driving featurette sponsored<br />

by the Massachusetts state police is being shown on theatre screens in New<br />

England as a result of the cooperation of the Theatre Owners of New England.<br />

Here the featurette starts on its round. Left to right: George Lawton, Brocktown<br />

Telephone Co. office manager; Frank Giles, commissioner of public safety; Wally<br />

Ellis, manager of the Skyvue Drive-In, and Bud Wass, Avon Drive-In, all of<br />

Brockton.<br />

'Mondo' Starts Fast, 'Irma'<br />

Still Strong in Hartford<br />

HARTFORD — Times' "Mondo Cane"<br />

got a handsome send-off, advertising and<br />

promotion-wise, for its Connecticut dayand-date<br />

opening at the Rivoli and Berlin<br />

Drive-ln. UA's "Irma La Douce" continues<br />

to astound trade and public alike; it is<br />

continuing to SRO business, despite heavy,<br />

humid weather that has sent thousands of<br />

metropolitan Hartford citizenry flocking<br />

to country and shore.<br />

Allyn The Girl Hunters (Colorama); Murder Can<br />

Be Deadly (Colorama) 70<br />

Art Cinema Surftide 77 (Olympic); Ursula (SR) ..100<br />

Berlin Drive-ln Mondo Cane (Times); The Day<br />

of the Triffids (AA), suburban break 200<br />

Cinerama How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cineramo), 5th wk 1 60<br />

Cine Webb Irmo La Douce (UA), 4th wk 180<br />

East Hartford Drive-ln Flipper (MGM); The<br />

Slave (MGM), suburban break 90<br />

Elm Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 8th wk 110<br />

E. M. Loew's Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 2nd wk 120<br />

Loew's Paloce What a Woman! (SR); Violent<br />

Summer (F-A-W) 70<br />

Loew's Poll The Great Escape (UA), 2nd wk 90<br />

Manchester and Pike drive-ins (day-and-date)<br />

Tammy and the Doctor (Univ), suburban break;<br />

All the Fine Young Cannibals (MGM),<br />

revival 1 05<br />

Meadows Drive-ln The Longest Day (20th-Fox),<br />

suburban break, 2nd wk 1 65<br />

Rivoli Mondo Cane (Times); Please Turn Over<br />

(Col), revival 1 75<br />

Strand— PT 109 (WB), 2nd wk 115<br />

Pay TV Promotion Awaits<br />

Return of Vacationists<br />

HARTFORD—RKO General, backing a<br />

$10 million subscription TV experiment<br />

via Hartford's 'WHCT-TV (Channel 18),<br />

has dropped its large-scale, daily newspaper<br />

advertising for the remainder of<br />

the summer.<br />

Significantly, the station, at the season's<br />

start, suspended all rental charges<br />

for the summer months.<br />

The thinking, at least according to Filmrow<br />

somxes, seems to be that the people<br />

who regularly patronize pay -TV here have,<br />

in the main, flocked to shore and country<br />

for the warm weeks and it's useless to try<br />

to build any more listening impact until<br />

after Labor Day.<br />

At last count, subscribers totaled 2,600.<br />

The most frequently rumored figure needed<br />

to "break even" is 10,000.<br />

Mlklos Rozsa has completed the background<br />

score for MGM's "The V.I.P.s."<br />

Exhibitor's Open Letter<br />

Tells Theatres' Plight<br />

BRISTOL, R. I.—An open letter to "customers<br />

and friends" has been written by<br />

Joseph J. Modleski, owner-manager of the<br />

Pastime Theatre here and the Lyric Theatre,<br />

Warren, in an effort to keep his<br />

theatres open.<br />

"We must increase our customers or<br />

close our doors," Modleski said in the letter.<br />

"In behalf of our survival and the<br />

continuance of the two theatres, one course<br />

is left open and that is for you to become<br />

a customer again. Your children will<br />

like<br />

enjoy<br />

to have you join them and you might<br />

it."<br />

The theatreman pointed out the several<br />

difficulties besetting the motion picture<br />

theatre business, including TV competition,<br />

labor shortage, outside business and social<br />

activities of persons depended upon for<br />

patronage. He also underscored the continued<br />

increases in cost of operation.<br />

"Unlike the majority in business," he<br />

wrote, "whose commodity stays with him<br />

until sold, ours is deliverable one day, paid<br />

for and returned the next day—even if<br />

only from one to a dozen of you view it.<br />

"We have tried not to increase admission<br />

prices. For it would again hit the<br />

same few whose means are limited—and<br />

more customers are what we need. However,<br />

it is no longer possible for us to<br />

survive unless you, our former customers,<br />

help us to obtain increased revenue by<br />

your attendance."<br />

Interstate Buys, Reopens<br />

New Hampshire Drive-In<br />

SOMERSWORTH, N.<br />

H.—The Starway<br />

Drive-ln, which had been closed under its<br />

previous ownership, has been retm-ned to<br />

active exhibition following its purchase by<br />

Interstate Theatre Corp. from James Sayre<br />

jr., Salem attorney.<br />

Ernest Fitzgerald, Interstate manager,<br />

said that immediate plans for the Starway<br />

call for a complete remodeling just as<br />

soon as practical. Interstate also owns the<br />

Science Theatre and Rochester Drive-ln,<br />

both in Rochester, and several other New<br />

England theatres.<br />

Boston 'Beach Parly'<br />

For NE Exhibitors<br />

BOSTON—New England exhibitors were<br />

hosted at a "Beach Party" amid palm trees,<br />

white sand and everything "nautical" by<br />

James H. Nicholson, president of American<br />

International Pictures, at a special tradescreening<br />

at the Cinema, Kenmore Square.<br />

Accompanying the producer was Annette<br />

Funicello, who stars in "Beach Party" with<br />

Robert Cummings, Dorothy Malone and<br />

Frankie Avalon. Also in Boston for the<br />

screening, press luncheon and cocktail reception<br />

were Leon Blender, general AIP sales<br />

manager, and Milton I. Moritz, national advertising-publicity<br />

director.<br />

More than 165 exhibitors joined the fun<br />

with press, radio and television representatives<br />

at the lavishly decorated theatre and<br />

reception room at the Fenway Motor Hotel.<br />

Ai-ranging the affair was the Boston office<br />

contingent headed by Harvey Appell, branch<br />

manager; Art Moger, publicity director;<br />

Harold Levin, sales manager; and Joe Leahy,<br />

booker-sales. The Amber Room at the hotel<br />

was transformed into a veritable "beach."<br />

Exhibitors were given straw hats, photograph<br />

recordings and novelties tying in with<br />

"Beach Party."<br />

Acting Governor Francis X. Bellotti<br />

spoke at the affair and complimented producer<br />

Nicholson for "selecting Massachusetts<br />

in his first stop, since the Bay State is<br />

surrounded by beaches."<br />

Nicholson showed an AIP product reel<br />

with excerpts from forthcoming films. He<br />

was presented with a trophy by Robert<br />

Cohen, president of Randy Mfg. Co., for<br />

"promoting safety on beaches." Miss Funicello<br />

was made "honorary recruiting<br />

sergeant" for the U. S. Ai-my on her arrival<br />

at the airport in Boston and was mobbed<br />

by 10,000 fans at Revere Beach where a<br />

beach party was held in her honor.<br />

Hampton as Film Locale<br />

HAMPTON, CONN. — New York film<br />

producer William Claiborn has announced<br />

plans for filming a story backgrounded<br />

against this eastern Connecticut town.<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963 NE-1


Massachusetts Circuitman Bob Zeitz<br />

Asks Public to Support Family Fare<br />

BOSTON—Robert M. Zeitz, managing director<br />

ol Zeitz Theatres, has called on the<br />

public to support cultural and family-type<br />

entertamment. "Why don't those same<br />

people who are always criticizing the mass<br />

appeal type of film and are constantly<br />

Clamoring for the cultural and family-type<br />

entertainment support them when they are<br />

shown locally" he asked in letters to newspaper<br />

editors.<br />

His letter to the New Bedford. Mass..<br />

Standard Times was reproduced with the<br />

following head: "Executive Says Public<br />

Fails to Support Good Film Fare." The<br />

Zeitz letter said: "This is the season of<br />

the "10 best' movie lists. The occasion is<br />

hardly a momentous one for Mr. Average<br />

Theatreman, who usually finds little relationship<br />

between the quality register of<br />

the film critic, and the cash register in<br />

the boxoffice.<br />

"There is frequently a wide divergence<br />

between what the critics like and what the<br />

public en masse buys. Listed at the top of<br />

every "10 best' polls were such films as<br />

•David and Lisa.' Long Day's Jouiney Into<br />

Night." 'The Miracle Worker.' 'The Ugly<br />

American.' etc. The so-called critics' pictures<br />

were financial disasters at the local<br />

boxoffice. National boxoffice leaders such<br />

as 'To Kill a Mockingbird.' 'Days of Wine<br />

and Roses.' 'Music Man,' etc.. also fared<br />

below par in this area. For the theatre<br />

operator, who adds up the boxoffice take<br />

at the close of each day, these lists don't<br />

seem very helpful as a guide to meeting a<br />

payroll and he may, understandably, either<br />

ignore them or glance at them with an illconcealed<br />

grunt.<br />

"After all. it's the likes of 'What Ever<br />

Happened to Baby Jane?' 'The Birds,' 'Diamond<br />

Head.' 'Son of Flubber' and others<br />

without great artistic pretensions that keep<br />

the bulk of movie houses running. Films<br />

f<br />

BUILD<br />

YOUR<br />

BUSINESS<br />

WITH<br />

BRIGHTER<br />

PICTURES<br />

NATIONAL<br />

"35/70<br />

SPEQAL"<br />

Projection<br />

Lomps<br />

Call or write<br />

your nearby<br />

N.T.S. branch<br />

37 Winchester St.<br />

Boston 16,<br />

Massachusetts<br />

NATIONAL THEATRE SUPPLY COMPANY<br />

NE-2<br />

made for the widest possible appeal are.<br />

and always will be, a real important part<br />

uf the film business, that part of it in<br />

fact without which the whole business<br />

would collapse.<br />

"As for this constant cry from the public<br />

for more family-type entertainment, it<br />

has got to the point where the theatre<br />

owner asks—where are you hiding when<br />

these family-type films are shown on local<br />

screens? With the exception of Walt Disney's<br />

productions, such fine family-type<br />

fare as 'Jumbo.' '40 Pounds of Trouble.'<br />

'The Courtship of Eddie's Father,' and<br />

countless others were not well received by<br />

the<br />

public.<br />

"The exploitable picture, the gimmick<br />

picture geared to specific masses of people<br />

such as teenagers, form a commercially<br />

necessary foundation of the industry. Many<br />

of these pictures are ignored outright by<br />

the critics. The only value of such a product<br />

is a commercial one. to be estimated by<br />

the accountants, not the critics.<br />

"As long as the public continues to patronize<br />

this type of film fare, and often<br />

passes up the wholesome ones, it can hardly<br />

heap all the blame on the movie industry.<br />

Why don't these same people who<br />

are always criticizing the mass-appeal type<br />

of film, and are constantly clamoring for<br />

the cultural and family-type entertainment<br />

support them when they are shown<br />

locally?"<br />

Webster Realizing Need<br />

For Local Movie House<br />

WEBSTER. MASS.--Somcthing unheard<br />

of here in more than a half century is<br />

going on this summer. Webster is without<br />

a iheatre—and people sorely miss it.<br />

This state of affairs developed last<br />

month when Loew's State, set off down<br />

a long corridor behind the big marquee<br />

on Main street at Tracy court, was closed<br />

for the summer by Manager Herman Claman.<br />

who went off to Auburn to devote<br />

all his time to the circuit's Auburn Drivein<br />

on Route 20. There are no drive-ins<br />

hereabouts for Webster patronage, so for<br />

the first time since longer than most folks<br />

can recall Webster families and young<br />

people on dates have to go out of town to<br />

find motion picture entertainment.<br />

Already townsfolk are looking forward<br />

to Labor Day and hoping that the Webster<br />

will reopen then or soon thereafter.<br />

Children Regret Closing<br />

Of Rockland, Me„ Knox<br />

Hi iC'KI.ANU. me. Two local younusters,<br />

David Cunningham and Nancy Low. bought<br />

the last tickets sold by the Knox Theatre.<br />

They were pictured in the Courier-Gazette<br />

sorrowfully presenting their tickets to theatre<br />

Manager Lawrence Dandeneau al llir<br />

door.<br />

The Knox, on Park street, was shuttered<br />

late last month due to insufficient patronage.<br />

The theatre first opened In 1910.<br />

Glenn Ford will star In the Ted Richmond<br />

production. "Company of Cowards,<br />

an MOM relea.se.<br />

GOVERNOR HONORS AIP — Gov.<br />

"Chub" Pcabody commended<br />

Endicott<br />

"The Young Racers." American International<br />

Pictures production, by presenting<br />

the Otto award to AIP for contributing<br />

the most in behalf of sports<br />

car racing in America. Harvey Appell,<br />

manager at Boston for AIP. accepted<br />

the honor for James Nicholson and<br />

Samuel .Arkoff, the producers. Seen<br />

at the ceremony in the state house at<br />

Boston were, left to right: Julian<br />

Rifkin, president of the New England<br />

TOA; Governor Peabody, Appell, and<br />

Floyd Stone, executive secretary of<br />

the Sports Cars Owners of America,<br />

Inc.<br />

Springfield Center<br />

To Include Theatre<br />

SPRINGFIELD — Irving O. Preedman,<br />

head of the Springfield real estate firm<br />

bearing his name, has disclosed plans for<br />

a $5 million regional shopping center on<br />

the Boston Post road. The 56-acre tract<br />

will include a motion picture theatre. Just<br />

what interests will operate the latter is<br />

yet to be determined.<br />

Max Gitberg Associates is serving as<br />

architects and engineers. Construction<br />

will start November 1.<br />

Installs Hurley Screens<br />

PEABODY. MASS.—Hurley screens have<br />

been installed in the Cinema I and Cinema<br />

II indoor theatres by Capitol Motion Picture<br />

Supply of New York City. One is a<br />

SuperOptica 29x63 '4 -foot screen: the other,<br />

the 16'2x36-foot SupeiGlo Hurley screen.<br />

The theatres are General Drive-In Corp.<br />

operations.<br />

Natalie Wood Into Wax<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Natalie Wood will be<br />

enshrined in wax for the Movieland Wax<br />

Museum as she appeared in "West<br />

Side Stoi-y,"<br />

Quick Sefiifice<br />

Un'l Juil A Slogu With Filmack<br />

ll'« A Tradition • For B«»t Serrict<br />

S(ikI Filmack Your Neil Order For<br />

Special Ttailet^<br />

\Z17 S. Woboth<br />

Chicago, IlllnoU<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


NEW HAMPSHIRE Trend to Suburban Theatre Building<br />

Mew Hampshire theatre operators, especially<br />

those who operate the drive-in<br />

establishments, have been encouraged by<br />

reports that the summer vacation business<br />

has been booming thi-oughout the state, in<br />

spite of fickle weather, and appears headed<br />

for an alltime record. The situation was<br />

described by John Dlneen, proprietor of the<br />

famed Hampton Beach Casino, as "fantastic."<br />

Peggy Cass, who originated the role of<br />

Agnes Gooch in the Broadway hit, "Auntie<br />

Mame," and had the same role in the successful<br />

movie version, made a personal<br />

appearance in "She Didn't Say Yes" at<br />

the Lakes Region Playhouse in Gilford.<br />

Another actress also well known to moviegoers,<br />

Joan Caulfield, was costarred.<br />

Two showings of "The Silent World,"<br />

Jacques Coiasteau's Academy Award-winning<br />

underwater documentary film, were presented<br />

at the Ship Theatre at Wentworthby-the-Sea<br />

Hotel in New Castle July 24.<br />

The program was arranged as a benefit for<br />

the Radcliffe club of New Hampshire<br />

scholarship fund to enable a New Hampshire<br />

girl to attend Radcliffe College.<br />

Seldom has a stage attraction proved<br />

more of a hit at a New Hampshire drivein<br />

than did the Brandywine Singers and<br />

other folk artists at the first "Hootenanny<br />

Show" at the Bedford Grove Drive-In.<br />

The Brandywine group, formed by students<br />

at the University of New Hampshire,<br />

including three Granite Staters, has<br />

become nationally famous and will appear<br />

this fall on such television programs as the<br />

Bell Telephone Hour, the Hootenanny program<br />

and the Jackie Gleason show. They<br />

also record for Joy Records.<br />

VERMONT<br />

The state premiere of "The Longest Day"<br />

was held at the Burlington Drive-In<br />

theatre, where the management announced<br />

a special admission price of $1.25, with<br />

children under 12 years old admitted free.<br />

A new use has been found for attendance<br />

at a drive-in theatre in Winooski. When<br />

a 12-year-old South Burlington boy returned<br />

home seven houi-s after he had<br />

disappeared following a reprimand from<br />

his father, he reported he had stopped at<br />

the outdoor theatre "to see a movie and<br />

think." He telephoned his parents from<br />

the drive-in that he had decided to come<br />

back.<br />

Cron to SIB Productions<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Walter Bien, president,<br />

reports John B. Cron has joined SIB Productions<br />

of New York as vice-president in<br />

charge of sales. Cron formerly was executive<br />

vice-president of Robert Lawrence Productions,<br />

sales manager of the NBC film division<br />

and managing director of Screen<br />

Gems in Europe. SIB has executive offices<br />

and editing facilities at 609 Fifth avenue<br />

in New York and is affiliated with SIB<br />

Productions, Paramount Studios, Hollywood.<br />

Gives Industry New Career Appeal<br />

By ALLEN M. WIDEM<br />

NORTH ADAMS, MASS.—Is there an<br />

assured, profitably rewarding future for a<br />

young fellow thinking about an adult, fulltime<br />

career in motion picture exhibition<br />

these days?<br />

"Yes!" asserts Francis J. Faille, newly<br />

appointed executive assistant to Samuel<br />

Goldstein, president of Western Massachusetts<br />

Theatres, the largest independent theatre<br />

circuit in these picturesque western<br />

New England hills (18 theatres).<br />

"I say, 'yes,' because I strongly believe<br />

that anybody who wants to come into the<br />

business—even dui-ing these times when<br />

those predictors of dark and dire prospects<br />

for small and big city exhibition are arrogantly<br />

'shooting off their mouths without<br />

really thinking—SHOULD be encouraged."<br />

KNOWS SMALL TOWNS, CITIES<br />

Faille, continuing to headquarter at the<br />

Paramount Theatre in this Berkshire community,<br />

knows what it means when someone<br />

asks about smalltown exhibition as<br />

well as metropolitan showmanship.<br />

He told this <strong>Boxoffice</strong> correspondent<br />

that the greatest argument can be indeed<br />

projected against a young man's entrance<br />

into exhibition. "At the same time, the<br />

advantages of steady employment, of the<br />

excitement attendant to selling a pictui'e<br />

and seeing the lines queueing up at the<br />

boxoffice are something not readily discernible<br />

in merchandising, for example."<br />

He admitted that it's very easy indeed<br />

to "knock" motion picture exhibition as<br />

a career.<br />

"The people who seem to take great delight<br />

in such practice point to the closings<br />

of the smaller-town theatres, of the shutting<br />

down of the subsequent-run houses in<br />

even the bigger towns.<br />

THEATRES TO SUBURBS<br />

"Yet, these same people fail to realize<br />

that America—and this applies to western<br />

Massachusetts as well as western New<br />

York— is tui-ning to suburban living as<br />

never before. And it follows, very realistically,<br />

that entertainment, as well as shops,<br />

stores, et al, have to go 'with the crowd.'<br />

This explains the tremendous growth in<br />

shopping center theatres, in suburban and<br />

outlying region drive-in theatres.<br />

"Theatre construction, new projects in new<br />

regions on the general periphery of metropolitan<br />

cities, will mushroom as never before<br />

in the Sixties and far beyond. And<br />

it's a wise showman who remembers his<br />

crowds are driving greater distances."<br />

Francis Faille strongly feels that greater<br />

promotion stress should be paid to suburbanites—advertising<br />

geared to the fact that<br />

a downtown, first-run theatre, for example,<br />

is so many miles, or so many<br />

driving minutes, from a suburban community.<br />

He doesn't feel that the downtown, first<br />

run should be blithely "written off" as obsolete,<br />

merely because the city population<br />

rosters are dwindling. He adheres to the<br />

philosophy that a suburbanite sufficiently<br />

induced to drive into town WILL drive<br />

into town. It means advertising, it means<br />

promotion, it means persuasive tactics that<br />

are applicable to individual situations, individual<br />

theatres.<br />

With characteristic optimism. Western<br />

Massachusetts executive Faille has little<br />

patience with the showmen, either on the<br />

Goldstein payroll or working for other<br />

theatre circuits, who say, in effect, that it<br />

doesn't mean much to try to jell" suburban<br />

'<br />

dwellers on trekking into the cities for<br />

'<br />

motion pictures.<br />

He feels that cooperative measures, advertising-wise,<br />

with merchants, restaurants,<br />

automobile dealers, gasoline service stations<br />

I in truth, people who deal with<br />

people on-the-go), can mean much to<br />

convince subui'banites that "getting out to<br />

a movie" for the evening will reduce some<br />

of the inevitable monotony attendant to<br />

"living in the country," the charms, the<br />

isolation and relaxation atmosphere notwithstanding.<br />

But the theatre manager himself, basically,<br />

must believe in his product—motion<br />

pictures—and sell the product, aggressively,<br />

imaginatively. There are no short-cuts to<br />

enthusiasm.<br />

Francis Faille started his industry career<br />

in 1931, as assistant to Claude Frederick<br />

at the Garden Theatre, Greenfield, Mass.<br />

By 1934, he was at the Strand, Pittsfield,<br />

Mass., as manager, and from that<br />

point he's moved upward and onward, always<br />

within the Goldstein sphere of operations.<br />

"Sam Goldstein," he told <strong>Boxoffice</strong>,<br />

"is the kind of theatre owner who tells<br />

his managers to run their theatres as<br />

managers, not as pencil-pushers, or daydreamers.<br />

This is the philosophy that spells<br />

boxoffice!"<br />

Faille became manager of the Palace,<br />

Pittsfield, in 1936, and moved to the Paramount,<br />

North Adams, three years later.<br />

He will continue to be based here in<br />

North Adams.<br />

He and Mrs. Faille have three childi'en.<br />

Edward Ruff Will Handle<br />

Releases for Governor<br />

NEW YORK — Edward Ruff Film Associates<br />

has been named the representative<br />

for Governor Films in the Boston and<br />

New Haven exchange territories, according<br />

to Dave Emanuel, president.<br />

Governor pictures involved in the deal<br />

are "Carry On Nurse," "Carry On Sergeant,"<br />

"Carry On Constable," "Doctor in<br />

Love," "Incredible Petrified World," "Teenage<br />

Zombies," "Get On With It" and the<br />

latest release, "Carry On Regardless."


a<br />

Smith<br />

. . Alfred<br />

I<br />

. . . The<br />

and<br />

. . The<br />

. . . Maine<br />

Nutmeg Circuit Joins<br />

New Theatre Builders<br />

NEW HAVEN — Connecucius<br />

Fairfield<br />

County, already announced for a new theatre<br />

project joint venture by Lockwood<br />

I<br />

& Gordon Enterprises and Samuel H. Rosen<br />

for Norwalki. is to have a second facility.<br />

The Nutmeg circuit, operating the<br />

Lincoln and Crown. New Haven: Fine Arts.<br />

Westport: Norwalk, Norwalk: and County<br />

Cinema. Fairfield, has disclosed plans for<br />

a 600-seat motion picture theatre as part<br />

of the Gateway Shopping Center in Wilton,<br />

at present theatrcless.<br />

Town residents, urging planning-zoninc;<br />

commission approval for Nutmeg<br />

i<br />

owned by<br />

Leonard Sampson and Robert Spodicki.<br />

asserted that at present Wiltonites have<br />

to travel 20 and 30 miles to see a film.<br />

HARTFORD<br />

JTic de luxe 750-seat Buinside Theatre.<br />

East Hartford, built by partners Morris<br />

Keppner and Barney Tarantul a decade<br />

ago. will become a first-run outlet<br />

August 21. with the Connecticut premiere<br />

of Universal's "The Thrill of It All." The<br />

Keppner-Tarantul theatre prides itself on<br />

having one of the largest individual theatre<br />

parking lots in the region. In recent years,<br />

the theatre, booked by Brandt, New York,<br />

has concentrated on top-quality subsequent-run<br />

releases.<br />

Philip<br />

Keppner, son of the Morris Keppners.<br />

is whiling away these summer days<br />

and nights as a backstage technician<br />

Mights) at the Tappan Zee Playhouse in<br />

Nyack. N. Y. . Alperin. Meadows<br />

i<br />

Drive-In Management Co.i. set up<br />

a display of Air Force equipment through<br />

the local recruiting base, for Universal's<br />

"A Gathering of Eagles." Reserve representatives<br />

were on hand to explain various<br />

facets.<br />

Mrs. Margaret A. Mortenson. SW Capitol.<br />

Willimantic. lined up quite a "coup" through<br />

the good graces of the Willimantic Daily<br />

Chronicle. She arranged to award free<br />

theatre passes to three top participants<br />

each W'eek of a five-week ciiculation campaign.<br />

The carriers' names, plus the fact<br />

that the theatre is providing the gratis<br />

service, are getting a "good play" in the<br />

newspaper. Moreover, the recently conducted<br />

Red Cross bloodmobile campaign in<br />

the Willimantic region, the theatre providing<br />

guest tickets to participants, went<br />

well over the top, Mrs. Mortensen proudly<br />

notes.<br />

Sea Princess Candidate<br />

ROCKLAND. ME. — Mary Ann Welch,<br />

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard C.<br />

Welch, is being sponsored by the Boston<br />

& Rockland Trucking Co. as a Sea Princess<br />

in the 17th annual Maine Seafoods Festival,<br />

which will be held here August 2-4.<br />

Her father is projectionist at the Rockland<br />

Drive-In.<br />

Allied Artists' "The Boston Strangler"<br />

will be produced by Samuel Bischoff and<br />

David Diamond.<br />

NEW HAVEN<br />

^he Perakos Hi -Way, Bridgeport, playing<br />

20th-Fox's "The Longest Day." hosted<br />

the Scarlet Knights, Bridgeport's fire department<br />

junior bugle and drum corps,<br />

on a lot opposite the theatre. The stunt<br />

was arranged by James Landino. theatre<br />

manager . opening night of Columbia's<br />

"Law^rence of Arabia" at the Bailey<br />

Whalley was sponsored by the New Haven<br />

Democratic Women's club.<br />

Redstone Theatres' Milford Drive-In,<br />

playing Buena Vista's "Savage Sam," gave<br />

away several puppies to youngster patrons<br />

Perakos State, Jewett City, is<br />

closed temporarily. It is reported the company<br />

will resume operations shortly on a<br />

weekend policy.<br />

MAINE<br />

phe Lewiston Drive-In gave high-flying<br />

kites to the first 100 children attending<br />

a program which featured the MGM hit.<br />

"Flipper.<br />

" the same production firm's<br />

"<br />

"The Slave people were given<br />

another opportunity to see a film actress<br />

in person when Faye Emerson appeared<br />

at the Kennebunkport Playhouse in the<br />

Noel Coward comedy, "Hay Fever."<br />

MGM's "The Seven Paces of Dr. Lao" is<br />

based on Charles Pinlay's "The Circus of<br />

Dr. Lao."<br />

Translation for Paleface:<br />

"Don't waste time with old-fashioned<br />

way sending message. BEST way to<br />

SELL used equipment, find HELP. SELL<br />

or BUY theatres, is with<br />

BOXOFFICE CLEARING HOUSE<br />

You get year - round service."<br />

RATES: 20c per word, minimum $2.00, cosh with copy. Four consecutive insertions for price of three<br />

'<br />

BOXOFFICE, 825 Von Brunt Blvd., Kansas Cify 24, Mo.<br />

PIcose insert the fallowing od times in the CLEARING HOUSE<br />

|<br />

Classification<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

Enclosed is check or money order for $ (Blind ods 12< eitro) I<br />

NE-4<br />

jT*<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


I<br />

'<br />

Vancouver Programs<br />

Draw Heavy Support<br />

VANCOUVER—Who could call business<br />

anything but thriving when six out of<br />

eight first-run theatres report "good" ratings<br />

for their offerings? Even the two<br />

houses that didn't rate their boxoffice<br />

take as "good" at least did average business.<br />

Leading the pleasing week's business<br />

were "Lawrence of Arabia" with capacity<br />

business in its 18th week at the Odeon and<br />

"How the West Was Won," enjoying a<br />

"Very Good" week at the Strand.<br />

Capitol Spencer's Mountain (WB), 2nd wk Fair<br />

Odeon Lowrence of Arabia (Col), 18th wk. Capacity<br />

Orpheum Summer Holiday (IFD) Good<br />

Park The Fast Lady (SR), 3rd wk Average<br />

Stanley Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 2nd wk Good<br />

Strand How the West Wos Won (MGM-Cinerama),<br />

1 5th wk Very Good<br />

Studio The Wrong Arm of the Law (IFD),<br />

3rd wk Good<br />

Vogue The Great Escape (UA), 3rd wk Good<br />

Lively Business Pace<br />

Holds in Montreal<br />

MONTREAL— "Cleopatra," at the Alouette<br />

Theatre, paced good attendance at the<br />

leading Montreal motion picture theatres<br />

in the week under review. "Lawrence of<br />

Arabia" at the Seville maintained excellent<br />

boxoffice power while "How the West<br />

Was Won" at the Imperial also attracted<br />

good crowds. Other theatres also enjoyed<br />

good business.<br />

Alouette Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 4th wk Excellent<br />

Avenue Mix Me a Person (SR), 2nd wk Good<br />

Capitol The Nutty Professor (Para), 3rd wk. Good<br />

Cinema Ploce Ville Marie The Four Days of<br />

Naples (MGM), 2nd wk Good<br />

Dorval Theatre (Red Room) The Ugly American<br />

(Univ), 2nd wk Good<br />

Dorval Theatre (Salle Doree) Ben-Hur (MGM),<br />

return run, 3rd wk Good<br />

Imperial—How the West Wos Won (MGM-<br />

Cinerama), 16th wk Excellent<br />

Kent Yojimbo (SR), 2nd wk Good<br />

Loew's Hud (Para), 4th wk Good<br />

Palace Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 3rd wk Good<br />

Seville Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 1 7th wk. Excellent<br />

Snowdon Letters of a Novice (SR) Good<br />

Westmount Condemned to Live (SR) Good<br />

'Cleopatra' Toronto Leader<br />

Through Flourishing Week<br />

TORONTO— "Cleopatra" was easily the<br />

business leader in its fourth week at the<br />

Famous Players University while two new<br />

features fared nicely, these being "Irma<br />

La Douce" at the Uptown, which had the<br />

added benefit, of personal attendance by<br />

Toronto's popular actor Lou Jacobi, and<br />

"The L-Shaped Room" at the Hyland. "The<br />

Great Escape" had good support in a third<br />

week at the Carlton.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Carlton The Great Escape (UA), 3rd wk 110<br />

Eglinton How the West Was Won (MGM-<br />

Cineroma), 1 7f h wk 100<br />

Hollywood Bye Bye Birdie (Col), 4th wk 100<br />

Hyland The L-Shaped Room (Col) 115<br />

Imperiol The Nutty Professor (Para), 2nd wk. ..105<br />

Loew's Dr. No (UA), 4th wk 100<br />

Tivoli Come Blow Your Horn (Parade), 4th wk. 105<br />

Towne Murder at the Gallop (SR), 2nd wk 105<br />

University Cleopatra (20th-Fox), 4th wk 135<br />

Uptown Irma La Douce (UA) 115<br />

Ontario Censor Ratings<br />

TORONTO—The Ontario Board of Censors<br />

placed "The L-Shaped Room" in the Restricted<br />

Attendance category while Cleopatra,<br />

L'Avventura. n Grido and Swindle<br />

were classified Adult Entertainment.<br />

The board noted change of titles for three<br />

features: Black Sheep to Dr. Cadman's<br />

Secret, Voodoo Island to The Silent Death,<br />

and Amorous Prawn to Girls Take Over.<br />

Canadian Theatre Offers<br />

Broad Summer Service<br />

The customers retmn in the evening<br />

MIDLAND. ONT. — The Roxy Theatre<br />

here is providing a summer service to vacationers<br />

in this area. Too few telephones<br />

and too many appointments have converted<br />

the manager's feminine assistant into a<br />

town receptionist. The summer dwellers<br />

bring their problems to the assistant who<br />

arranges everything from beauty parlor<br />

appointments to horseback riding schedules.<br />

to attend the theatre.<br />

TORONTO<br />

H veteran of the film industry here,<br />

George H. K. Mitford, died at his home<br />

in subui'ban Leaside. He leaves his wife,<br />

two sons, a daughter and nine grandchildren.<br />

A former newspaperman, he was<br />

long Canadian editor of Pox Movietone<br />

News and active in publicity work . . . The<br />

Motion Picture Theatres Ass'n of Ontario<br />

has added two new members, the Don Mills<br />

Theatre recently opened by Barry Theatres<br />

in the Toronto area and the North<br />

Bay Drive-In, now operated by Canadian<br />

Odeon.<br />

National Film Board's "Anniversary,"<br />

made for the golden jubilee of film theatres<br />

in Canada, has already been seen by more<br />

than 250,000 persons, it is estimated by<br />

Columbia Pictm-es. distributors of the<br />

short . . . Toronto Mayor Don Summerville<br />

again aided police in the arrest of a man<br />

who was spotted when removing a coin<br />

box from a telephone booth. The mayor<br />

recalled he often helped the law when managing<br />

the Prince of Wales Theatre on Danforth<br />

avenue.<br />

"Bye Bye Birdie" is doing right well in<br />

the Toronto territory, having been held a<br />

fourth week by Manager Len Bishop at<br />

the Hollywood here. It was also continuing<br />

a fom-th week at the Tivoli in Hamilton<br />

and was good for a second week at the<br />

Breezes Drive-In, Brantford . . . The huge<br />

Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto used its<br />

Eidophor projector and 40-foot screen for<br />

the Liston-Patterson fight at prices scaling<br />

from $4 to $6. Loew's Uptown showed<br />

the fistic encounter on closed TV circuit at<br />

a flat $5.<br />

Apparently because of racial differences<br />

on this continent, Pi-oducer Jack Arthur of<br />

the grandstand show at Toronto's Canadian<br />

National Exhibition August 19-September<br />

2 has ruled that a minstrel show number<br />

Charlie<br />

will be done in white face . .<br />

Stephenson, one of the originals<br />

.<br />

with Nat<br />

Taylor's 20th Century Theatres, has been<br />

ordered back to a Toronto hospital because<br />

of a lingering illness.<br />

The historic court house at Niagara-onthe-Lake,<br />

Ont., has been converted into a<br />

350-seat theatre. It is under the direction<br />

of Brian Doherty.<br />

Dennis Morgan's Daughter Weds<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Kristin Morner. daughter<br />

of Dennis Morgan, married John Joseph<br />

Kennedy of Berkeley Satui-day, July 13, in<br />

Wylie Chapel of Hollywood First Presbyterian<br />

Church. The father gave the bride<br />

away, two brothers were ushers. The bride<br />

and groom will honeymoon in Canada, take<br />

up residence in Berkeley.<br />

MONTREAL<br />

gona Arsenault, Quebec provincial secretary,<br />

has appointed Roland Rainville<br />

as codirector of the Quebec Film Board.<br />

Rainville will have executive responsibility<br />

under the immediate authority of Andre<br />

Guerin, director of the board and president<br />

of Board of Film Censors. Rainville has<br />

wide experience in the film industry, having<br />

been for eight years with the National<br />

Film Board as regional representative and<br />

more recently as commercial director in<br />

Quebec province . . . Roland Ladouceur<br />

has been appointed deputy director of distribution<br />

at National Film Board. He<br />

joined NFB in 1953. He has been treasurer<br />

of the Canadian Federation of Cine Clubs<br />

and is at present a member of the executive<br />

board of the Canadian Film Institute.<br />

Armand Belanger has been chosen president<br />

of Montreal Moviemakers. Other officers:<br />

Fred LeClaire, past-president; Conrad<br />

Poirier, vice-president, editor and<br />

librarian; Fred Turner, treasurer and publicity<br />

chairman; H. Cherrington, secretary;<br />

Pauline Fellows, social director; Andre<br />

Spindler, program director, and Josef Reiter,<br />

club producer.<br />

The Loew's Theatre has sold its pipe<br />

organ to a lover of classical music at St.<br />

Jerome, J. R. Houle. He said he became<br />

owner of the collector item through Dr.<br />

Lawson of Montreal, who several years<br />

ago bought the organ of the Papineau<br />

Theatre . . Olivia de Havilland and Corinne<br />

.<br />

Calvet stopped here en route from<br />

Paris to Hollywood. Miss de Havilland was<br />

accompanied by her 13-year-old son Benjamin<br />

Goodrich. She had been in Paris<br />

to do some sound takes for her latest film.<br />

Speaking delightful French, Miss de Havilland<br />

charmed the local press boys. Miss<br />

Calvet said she was going to Hollywood<br />

to take part in a television series. Asked<br />

how TV compared with films. Miss Calvet<br />

said, "It separates the amateurs from the<br />

professionals."<br />

A strong: plea was made publicly here for<br />

the Quebec government to allow operation<br />

of drive-in theatres. Phyllis Mass said it<br />

is high time government authorities realized<br />

that drive-in movie theatres should<br />

be allowed to operate. She called attention<br />

to the fact that Montreal and Quebec<br />

province citizens by the thousands drive<br />

into New York state to patronize the driveins.<br />

Michele Mercier in<br />

'Global Affair'<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Michele Mercier, one of<br />

France's top acting and dancing stars, arrived<br />

from Paris to portray the leading<br />

feminine role opposite Bob Hope in "A<br />

Global Affair," Hall Bartlett production in<br />

association with Seven Arts for MGM.<br />

Prompt theatre service


. . Local<br />

. . Wilf<br />

. . The<br />

VANCOUVER<br />

Ddlitrt Uauphinee, projectionist at tlie<br />

ypc ilu'atre in New Westminster,<br />

nearly lost the sight of one eye when a<br />

carbon arc accidentally ignited while he<br />

was looking at it. It was a touch-and-go<br />

matter for awhile ... A son named Michael<br />

John was born to Jack Senior, manager<br />

here for the Harlan Fairbanks popcorn<br />

and concessions company, to go with<br />

a daughter who is about a year old.<br />

Retired<br />

Jack Mawson. a booth worker who has<br />

been ill. is reported much improved after<br />

an operation and therapy . . .<br />

ill . . Back<br />

projectionist Jack Lucas was .<br />

at work were Les Walker and Phil Deringer<br />

of Local 348 . . . Peter Reveen. the<br />

stralian hypnotist who packed the<br />

Au-<br />

Orpheum<br />

last year, will put on his show at<br />

the Queen Elizabeth in September.<br />

The mother of Dave Fairleigh was here<br />

on a visit from Seattle. Dave operates the<br />

DOMINION THEATRE EQUIP. CO.. LTD.<br />

970 DAVIE STREET VANCOUVER, B.C.<br />

(Canada's Oldest Established Iquipment House)<br />

FOR SALE:<br />

Pair of Holmes Super-Arc 16mm<br />

Sound Projectors— Rebuilt—with 3-<br />

Pt. Bases. 1-Kilowatt Arc Lamps.<br />

Your cost, $1,595.00 per pair. FOB<br />

Vancouver, B.C., Canada.<br />

These mochines ore superior to any European<br />

make. 35mm Geneva I termittent movements<br />

Guoronfeed perfect or money bock.<br />

b"B"B"8"o"(nnnnnrB"fl~B'Tnr(rrr6<br />

K-2<br />

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES<br />

For BanI or Sale: 24 lully aqulpped<br />

Brunswick lan«8, well established operoting<br />

business, choiceat location. "LaScUe,"<br />

94S Granville Street. Vancouver, B. C.<br />

g<br />

seftef/ne<br />

D 2 ycors for $5 D 1 year for $3<br />

n Rcminoncc Enclosed<br />

THEATRE..<br />

STREET ADDRESS<br />

TOWN<br />

NAME<br />

BOXOfflCI<br />

Dominion Theatre Equipment here, which<br />

is owned by the senior Fairleigh who has<br />

a similar business in Seattle .<br />

348<br />

is prepared to demand double time for projecting<br />

at Sunday shows. Although legalized<br />

by the city and provincial governments<br />

some time ago. only two theatres<br />

now are presenting movies on Sunday.<br />

Wally Hopp, former FPC manager here,<br />

was back on a visit from the California<br />

town where he now is running a theatre.<br />

He now has a family . Little<br />

of the Majestic here also has a motor court<br />

at White Rock between here and Seattle<br />

The mother of the Pantages theatre<br />

. . .<br />

family now lives in a rest home here in<br />

her 98th year. Of her 13 children, George<br />

is a booker for a California circuit, and<br />

Lloyd is in the booth at the Studio Theatre<br />

here. Others are in the cafe business.<br />

Art Lorimer, former FPC manager who<br />

lives in Long Beach. Calif., was along the<br />

Row looking up his friends . Theatre<br />

Under the Stars was enjoying crowds<br />

for a change. "Caiousel" packed em in.<br />

Nizer's 'My Life in Court'<br />

Set As Film and Play<br />

HOLLYWOOD— "My Life in<br />

Court." the<br />

book by attorney Louis Nizer. contains<br />

enough material to allow both a .screenplay<br />

for a feature film, and a stage play to<br />

get under way at the same time, on different<br />

topics in the book.<br />

Van Heflin has been sigiied by producers<br />

Roger L. Stevens and Joel Schenker to star<br />

on Broadway this fall in the sequence about<br />

Quentin Reynolds winning a suit for libel<br />

against Westbrook Pegler. titled, "Libel."<br />

The stage adaptation of this section is<br />

written by Henry Denker and will be directed<br />

by Sam Wanamaker.<br />

The other part of the book concerning<br />

the persecution of writer John Henry<br />

Faulk, who was placed on a broadca.sting<br />

black-list until cleared by attorney Nizer.<br />

is to be made into a film.<br />

Joan Crawford plays the starring role of<br />

Lucy in Columbia's "Strait-Jacket." The<br />

screenplay was written by Robert Block.<br />

ZONE<br />

n Send<br />

POSITION<br />

n 3 years for $7<br />

Invoice<br />

ItHE nation Al FIIM WEEKLY 52 issues a year<br />

825 Von Brunt Blvd., Konios City 24, Mo.<br />

STATE..<br />

Deluxer at San Diego<br />

Opened by Statewide<br />

From Western Edition<br />

SAN DIEGO—Statewide circuit's most<br />

luxurious theatre, the 1.050-seat Cinema<br />

21 built at a cost of $750,000 in the heart<br />

of a vacation motel cluster here, was<br />

opened Friday il9i with a flourish of festivity<br />

as impressive as the Cinema 2rs<br />

architecture.<br />

The San Diego Fine Arts Society, sponsor<br />

of the benefit opening: the U.S. Marine<br />

Corps, city officials headed by the mayor,<br />

and a delegation of industry notables flown<br />

from Hollywood by Fred Stein, president of<br />

Statewide Theatres, gave color and importance<br />

to the premiere.<br />

The prominent guests and audience of<br />

first-nighters saw "55 Days at Peking"<br />

after the ribbon-cutting. After the show,<br />

all guests were entertained at a dinner.<br />

Crowds jammed the entry way as<br />

Charlton Heston and his wife. Janet Leigh<br />

and party, the James Garners. Tony Bill<br />

and his wife, Marvin Miller. Jim Mitchum.<br />

Victor Buono and others of the HoUyw^ood<br />

party arrived.<br />

The Cinema 21 is located at Hotel Circle<br />

in the Mis.sion Valley section. The theatre<br />

has lobby chairs imported from<br />

Denmark, stained glass windows and a<br />

famous local artist Jim Hubbell was commissioned<br />

to do a free form piece of sculpture<br />

for the lobby and a plastic decorative<br />

screen for the focal point behind the concession<br />

counter. The entirely round theatre<br />

is set off by a beautiful circular all<br />

glass lobby surrounding two-thirds of the<br />

theatre and is 180 feet in length.<br />

Parking facilities for over 400 cars has<br />

been provided along with a gorgeous display<br />

of trees, shrubs and flowered landscaping<br />

completely surrounding the theatre.<br />

Cinema 21 is claimed to be the first and<br />

only theatre in America constructed for<br />

the showing of all types of motion picture<br />

entertainment from Cinerama to Todd-<br />

AO. 70mm. CinemaScope and 35mm films.<br />

Perfect surround-stereo sound has been installed<br />

and a 74x40-foot super-widescreen<br />

is featured.<br />

The entire auditorium is draped from<br />

floor to ceiling, and all loge type seating<br />

has been installed using the same style<br />

chair as installed in the Lincoln Center of<br />

Performing Arts in New York City. Each<br />

row of seats is on a raised tier and<br />

staggered for the most perfect vision to the<br />

screen of any theatre In the country.<br />

Plan Peace Film Festival<br />

In Los Alamos. N. M.<br />

f rum Western Edition<br />

LOS ALAMOS. N.M.—In this small town<br />

in the mountains that was the birthplace<br />

of the Atomic Age. plans are being formulated<br />

to present the first annual International<br />

Peace Film Festival. The proposed<br />

dates for the festival are November 9-11.<br />

Awards will be offered in most of the<br />

usual categories, with a special award to<br />

the feature, or short subject, that best<br />

furthers the cause of peace. Entries in the<br />

Los Alamos International Peace Film Festival<br />

are being solicited now. Inquiries<br />

should be directed to Robert W. Kunce. Box<br />

748. Los Alamos, N.M.<br />

BOXOFFICE July 29, 1963


Million-Dollar Twin<br />

For Newlon, Mass.<br />

From New England Edition<br />

BOSTON—Plans for another twin theatre<br />

in this area were revealed when New<br />

England Drive-In Theatre Corp. petitioned<br />

the city of Newton for a zoning change that<br />

would permit construction of a $1,000,000<br />

twin theatre on Route 9. near Langley<br />

road, Chestnut Hill.<br />

A public hearing will be held. New England<br />

Drive-In told the aldermanic claims<br />

and rules committee of Newton that the<br />

proposed facility would contain two theatres<br />

in one building. The same feature<br />

would be shown in each theatre, but the<br />

screening times would be staggered.<br />

Haley Brothers Marking<br />

50 Years With Frontier<br />

From Western Edition<br />

ALBUQUERQUE—The only known set<br />

of brothers in the theatre business in New<br />

Mexico contribute a total of more than<br />

50 years of experience to the management<br />

of five theatres in two communities in<br />

the southern part of the state for Frontier<br />

Theatres. The two are Al and B. L. "Bernie"<br />

Haley, Texas-born brothers who have<br />

been with the chain since the mid- 1930s.<br />

Their employment, in fact, dates back to<br />

the time when Frontier was part of the<br />

Griffith Amusement Co. circuit of Oklahoma<br />

City and was headed by the three<br />

Griffith brothers, L. C, H. J. and the late<br />

R. E.<br />

The Haley boys started with the Griffiths<br />

in Clarksville, Tex., where Bernie worked as<br />

a combination doorman-janitor and music<br />

changer. Al served in a similar capacity,<br />

and also filled in occasionally as a substitute<br />

projectionist.<br />

Aside from about seven years away from<br />

Frontier, the Haleys have been employed<br />

steadily by the firm. Al tried his hand for<br />

a couple of years with a drygoods firm,<br />

and Bernie worked for a five-year period<br />

with another southwestern chain.<br />

Al, the elder of the two—he's 51, has<br />

been city manager for Frontier for the<br />

past year in Carlsbad in charge of the<br />

Fiesta Drive-In and the Cavern and Mexican-language<br />

Cactus theatres.<br />

Bernie, 50, Is Frontier's city manager in<br />

the nearby town of Lovington where he<br />

helms the Lee Theatre and the Wildcat<br />

Drive-In.<br />

The Haley brothers, lifelong theatremen,<br />

are active in the New Mexico Theatre Ass'n,<br />

and find the yearly conventions one sure<br />

place to hold a family reunion. They were<br />

both active in the recent convention held<br />

in Albuquerque.<br />

Steeleville Webster Adds<br />

Air Conditioning Unit<br />

From Central Edition<br />

STEELE'VILLE, ILL.—Installation of a<br />

new cooling system has been completed in<br />

time to build summer attendance at the<br />

Webster Theatre.<br />

H. E. Webster, owner of the theatre, said<br />

the air-cooled system formerly employed<br />

has been replaced with a refrigeration and<br />

dehumidifying type. The 40-ton capacity<br />

of the new system cools the theatre to a<br />

comfortable degree even when it is filled<br />

with people on a hot, humid day.<br />

OTTAWA<br />

^heatres in Ottawa are getting important<br />

pictures for the summer trade which<br />

has been increased by a record flow of<br />

tourists, principally from the United States,<br />

who are attracted by the picturesque shopping<br />

mall, morning military parade on Parliament<br />

Hill and scenic driveways. The<br />

array of theatre attractions includes "The<br />

Longest Day" at the big Capitol, "The<br />

Great Escape" at the Elgin, "The Wonderful<br />

World of the Brothers Grimm" at the<br />

Regent, "55 Days at Peking" at the Britannia<br />

Drive-In, "Lancelot and Guinevere" at<br />

the combined Elmdale and Somerset, and<br />

"Hud" at the Rideau, as well as "LawTence<br />

of Arabia" in a long run at the Nelson.<br />

Never before have local theatres had so<br />

many special features in hot weather and<br />

no complaints are heard.<br />

Police in the neighboring city of Hull<br />

took a hand in the flourishing series of<br />

bingo nights by calling a halt to the game<br />

Monday night < 15 1 , when a large crowd<br />

of would-be players were turned away at<br />

. .<br />

the door of the hall. The sponsoring organization<br />

complained that the games had<br />

been held regularly for years without<br />

hindrance . The heavyweight championship<br />

bout between Liston and Patterson<br />

was given free by closed-circuit telecast<br />

from Las Vegas to all Cable Vision subscribers<br />

in Cornwall.<br />

The Aladdin Drive-In joined other theatres<br />

in Ontario in presenting a "Best of<br />

Hitchcock" double bill. The top picture<br />

was "The Birds" . . . The revival of "Mom<br />

and Dad," which has been making the<br />

rounds in this area, was featured at D. B.<br />

Stapleton's Centre here, managed by Frank<br />

Gallop. Prices for the pictui-e, plus lecturer<br />

Elliot Forbes, were 75 cents for matinees<br />

and $1 at night.<br />

The Rialto, a neighborhood house of 530<br />

seats operated by B. Swedlove, has been<br />

getting plenty of juvenile business. The<br />

theatre had lineups last week for a program<br />

of three jungle features.<br />

Art of Film Dubbing Is Described<br />

By Bernard Grant; Hes Tops at It<br />

From Centra! Edition<br />

CHICAGO—the dubbing of motion pictures<br />

from one language to another is a<br />

thriving business. If it is not also an art,<br />

perfectly executed, the results can be<br />

ludicrous, relates entertainment editor Ann<br />

Marsters in a recent Sunday issue of the<br />

Chicago American.<br />

Bernard Grant, a handsome actor known<br />

to millions of daytime TV viewers as Dr.<br />

Paul Fletcher of the Guiding Light series,<br />

is in constant demand in the dubbing field.<br />

Over the last ten years he has provided a<br />

great deal of English dubbing for foi-eign<br />

films, voicing the words of such stars as<br />

Vittorio DeSica, Pernandel, Yves Montand,<br />

Rossano Brazzi and Vittorio Gassman. He<br />

has distinct talent for this, and a remarkable<br />

control of his voice which enables him<br />

to change its tone and personality to suit<br />

various characters.<br />

Grant stopped off in Chicago the other<br />

day en route to a summer theatre engagement.<br />

He has been starring in "Critic's<br />

Choice" at the Little Theatre in Sullivan,<br />

111., and will do the same play at the Cherry<br />

County Playhouse at Traverse City, Mich.<br />

He said most of the dubbing work for the<br />

more important foreign films is done in<br />

New York at the Titra company. If it's<br />

really good dubbing, the audience won't be<br />

aware of it, for the English words will fit<br />

perfectly the lip motions of the actors who<br />

are speaking a different language.<br />

"Of course the translation," he said, "is<br />

the most vital part of the technique. There<br />

are only about four writers who are expert<br />

at it. Lee Kressel is one. Then the actor<br />

must memorize the English script. He cannot<br />

read it because, in the dubbing process,<br />

he must watch closely the lips of the actor<br />

for whom he is speaking. The film is shown<br />

on a monitor in the studio where the sound<br />

is recorded."<br />

Let's suppose a French actor says, in the<br />

French script. "Ouvre la porte." The actor<br />

cannot give it a literal translation and say<br />

simply " Open the door." Perhaps he could<br />

get away with "The door is open," or even<br />

"Enter, please." But thank goodness it is<br />

not our problem. The translator must<br />

juggle vowels and consonants, labials, and<br />

fricatives ( if you know what THETV are )<br />

and the actor, in turn, must be capable of<br />

flawless lip-timing. A fascinating business,<br />

no doubt.<br />

"I provided the voices of both Jules Dassin<br />

and another character for 'Rififi,' " he<br />

said. "And for the punchdi-unk fighter in<br />

'Rocco and His Brothers,' for DeSica in<br />

'General Delia Rovere,' for Fernandel in<br />

'The Cow and Prisoner,' for the flamboyant<br />

attorney in 'Divorce—Italian Style.' to<br />

name just a few. I'm especially proud of<br />

the dubbing I did for two Japanese films,<br />

'Ugetsu' and 'Rashomon.' "<br />

Incidentally, Grant had to be written out<br />

of the Guiding Light script for a couple of<br />

weeks so he could do a little summer theatre.<br />

The show is televised live 52 weeks a<br />

year, and he has been with it for seven<br />

years.<br />

He also does two weekly radio programs,<br />

the Eternal Light and the Ave<br />

Maria Hour, as well as occasional off-<br />

Broadway plays. He must be the workingest<br />

actor in all New York.<br />

"Robin and the 7 Hoods" is a joint venture<br />

of Warner Bros., Sinatra Enterprises<br />

and Dean Martin's Claude Productions.


: July<br />

i<br />

Sell<br />

and Sell<br />

Scores of busy little messages<br />

go out every week to a tremendous<br />

audience— and they get a tremendous<br />

response!<br />

Every exhibitor is<br />

busy— buying,<br />

selling, renting, hiring. All this is<br />

made easier<br />

and more profitable<br />

with the classified ads in Clearing<br />

House each week.<br />

READ • USE • PROFIT BY—<br />

Classified Ads<br />

in<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

Greatest Coverage in the Field—Most Readers for Your Money<br />

Four Insertions for Price of Three<br />

K-4 BOXOmCE :<br />

29, 1963 1


• ADLINES & EXPLOITIPS<br />

• ALPHABETICAL<br />

INDEX<br />

• EXHIBITOR HAS HIS SAY<br />

• FEATURE RELEASE CHART<br />

• FEATURE REVIEW DIGEST<br />

• SHORTS RELEASE CHART<br />

• SHORT SUBJECT REVIEWS<br />

• REVIEWS OF FEATURES<br />

• SHOWMANDISING IDEAS<br />

THE GUIDE TOM BETTER BOOKING AND B U S I N E S S - B U I L D I N G<br />

HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR SHOWMANSHIP<br />

Seek Ideas in<br />

Showmandiser and Send<br />

In Your Own, Circuit<br />

Head Advises<br />

R. E. Agle, general manager of the<br />

Statesville Theatres circuit in North Carolina,<br />

is a wise showman who not only<br />

knows the tricks of showmanship but also<br />

vmderstands how to inspire other showmen<br />

to improve their skills.<br />

In brief, Agle is urging his managers<br />

to "seek and you shall find," a bit of wisdom<br />

that is as useful in mastering a trade<br />

as it is in religious life, from which the<br />

quotation comes. His office communication,<br />

addressed personally to each manager<br />

recommends:<br />

Please read the Showmandiser sec-<br />

27; tion of BOXOFFICE each week.<br />

Did you see Don Coffey's (manager<br />

of the Dixie Theatre in Scotland<br />

Neck, N. C.) writeup in a recent issue?<br />

Please send us any of your promotion<br />

material and activities that you<br />

can for sending in to BOXOFFICE<br />

magazine. We feel that the Showmandiser<br />

section gives us a lot of good<br />

ideas and that we should contribute.<br />

Will you help us?<br />

We reprint general manager Agio's communication<br />

not as a puff for <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

Showmandiser (although we feel pride in<br />

the mention) but to emphasize what we feel<br />

is the superlative value of a weekly interchange<br />

among working theatremen of<br />

ticket-selling ideas.<br />

The note also serves as an opportune<br />

occasion to extend our commendation to<br />

those showmen who take the time to send<br />

in their promotions to this tradepaper and<br />

share their successes with other exhibitors.<br />

The pui-pose of the Statesville supervisor,<br />

we have no doubt, in asking his<br />

managers to write in reports of their activities<br />

is solely to improve the quality and<br />

quantity of individual showmanship in the<br />

circuit, since his appeal is based on sound<br />

time-proven psychology, which is: to improve,<br />

it is first necessary to will, to want<br />

to do better; to learn you first have to admit,<br />

willingly or otherwise, that you don't<br />

know everything you need to know! Then<br />

(and only then) comes action—a search<br />

for ideas and ways to progress.<br />

Perhaps, Agle also has the belief that<br />

you really don't know anything completely<br />

until you can put it in words.<br />

* • • •<br />

Crazy Night . . . Other Ticket-Selling ideas<br />

One of the Statesville managers, James<br />

S. Howard, manager of the Airvue at<br />

Goldsboro, came up with some horseplay<br />

for Friday, June 21, calling it "First Summer<br />

Night . . . The Shortest Night of the<br />

Year But the Longest on Pun Time."<br />

Friday nights are normally "Buck Night"<br />

at Airvue, when all cars and their occupants<br />

are admitted for a dollar. On Jime 21,<br />

Howard added an extra feature, making<br />

three for the night. Via public address,<br />

circulars, etc., he asked the Friday night<br />

patrons to bring any crazy thing lying<br />

around the house, such as a broken rake,<br />

bucket of manure, prong eating fork, a<br />

ham bone, or what not. Prizes were offered<br />

for the craziest items, such as passes,<br />

silver dollars, etc.<br />

The introduction of the crazy items was<br />

announced as a Moment of Fun. Of com-se,<br />

the people were given the opportunity to<br />

buy or trade the crazy items. Sort of goofy?<br />

On circulars, displayed all spring, Howard<br />

advertised the giveaway of a Simca motor<br />

car at his big, annual Free July Fourth<br />

Celebration. Patrons were invited to fill<br />

out registration blanks and tui'n them in<br />

as often as they attended the airer. The<br />

giveaway was by a drawing on the July 3<br />

July Fourth Moviethon.<br />

Attractive cards, approximately 3 '74x5 "A,<br />

were mailed to all high school graduates<br />

in the county by Manager Renato Danneri,<br />

reading:<br />

"The Playhouse Theatre, Statesville,<br />

N. C. congratulates you upon your graduation<br />

(name of graduate) . . . This card<br />

(presented to doorman) is valid for one<br />

free admission. Void after July 15, 1963."<br />

Names of high school girls were posted<br />

in the boxoffice of the Colonial Theatre<br />

in Canton prior and current for "A Girl<br />

Named Tamiko." Ad copy read:<br />

"A GIRL NAMED TAMIKO, you don't<br />

(Continued on next page)<br />

Horror on Stage<br />

Watson Davis, the droll, quietmannered<br />

advertising director for<br />

Malco Theatres of Memphis, Term.,<br />

who established a reputation among<br />

showmen in acting out some of his<br />

promotions, particularly in sciencehorror<br />

stunts, has become a star in<br />

his own right. He appears on a<br />

Memphis television station as Sivad,<br />

professor of the black arts.<br />

Sivad and Elton Howard, manager<br />

of the Malco Theatre in Memphis,<br />

built the above monster around a<br />

steel frame with lumber, chicken<br />

wire, beaverboard, papier-mache, excelsior<br />

and steel wool. Pour ushers<br />

inside the monster move the mouth,<br />

arms and operate the sound system<br />

that reproduces monster roars, all to<br />

the tune of Sivad's new record<br />

"Sivad Buries Rock 'n' Roll," which<br />

Davis has put out on the Tom Tom<br />

label.<br />

The monster appeared nightly on<br />

the Malco stage in behalf of "King<br />

Kong Vs. Godzilla." That's Davis on<br />

the ladder pointing up at the<br />

monster.<br />

At Montclair Wellmont Now<br />

Harry A. Wiener writes that he has rejoined<br />

Stanley Warner Theatres as manager<br />

of the Wellmont Theatre in Montclair,<br />

N. J.<br />

BOXOFFICE Showmandiser July 29, 1963 — 117 1


Getting Once -in -Lifetime Break. Ohioan<br />

Comes Through With a<br />

A once-ln-a-lifctime break for Ben<br />

Geary, manager of the Athena Theatre in<br />

Athens. Ohio, resulted in one of the top<br />

campaigns "ever to come out of the Schine<br />

cuxuit." The quotes are from Schine's Reel<br />

News, the showmanship publication of the<br />

Schine publicity department. The campaign<br />

was in behalf of Bob Hope's "Critic's<br />

"<br />

Choice.<br />

Ohio University at Athens had been trying<br />

to secure an appearance of Hope on the<br />

campus for three years, and finally the<br />

deal was made a few weeks ago for the<br />

comedian to appear there. The date was<br />

shortly before Geary's showing of "Critic's<br />

Choice." It was Geary's break of a lifetime.<br />

When Manager Geary got word of the<br />

appearance, he immediately contacted the<br />

committee in charge of the project and<br />

through many visits and talks, Hope's agent<br />

agreed that Hope would make an appearance<br />

at the theatre. After the okay was<br />

received. Geary went to work on a multitude<br />

of projects. First, he used a very extensive<br />

away-from-the-theatre campaign<br />

in several stores.<br />

An office supply company gave Geary<br />

its full window for a solid week with displays<br />

of typewriters and stills of Bob and<br />

Lucy, playdates, etc. The Firestone store<br />

featured a window tying in TV sets and<br />

other equipment with stills of Hope.<br />

On top of the marquee, Geary featured a<br />

beautiful portrait of Bob Hope painted<br />

by the foreign student who does this gratis<br />

work for the Athena Theatre, and which<br />

read: "'Welcome to Ohio U. Bob Hope . . .<br />

Don't Miss His Latest Fun Hit . . . etc."<br />

This marquee resulted in many compliments<br />

from other merchants on the street<br />

and a vote of thanks from the luiiversity<br />

officials!<br />

With the assurance of Bob Hope's appearance<br />

at the theatre, and with the laying<br />

of the groundwork for it, Ben decided<br />

to look for a piece de resistance that would<br />

set the visit way above the basics described<br />

previously. The idea hit him that<br />

a search for Miss Critic's Choice might<br />

be just the thing and he Immediately contacted<br />

all the sororities and dorms.<br />

Geary asked for each girls' unit to<br />

Top Campaign<br />

/^ BOB HOPE<br />

I - - ^SEE HIS NEW HIT<br />

\ CRITICS CHOICE<br />

A beautiful portrait of Bob fHope, painted gratis<br />

by a local university student, brightened the marquee<br />

of the Athena (Ohio) Theatre. Below Monager<br />

Ben Geary is shown as Bob Hope presents a<br />

loving cup to the winner of a Miss Critic's Choice<br />

contest, which Geory arranged with all the sororities<br />

and girls dormitories.<br />

produce a candidate to represent their<br />

house, and the winner would be crowned<br />

by Hope the night of his stage appearance<br />

at Grover Center in front of more<br />

than 7,000 persons! The only cost to the<br />

theatre for the whole contest was merely<br />

a loving cup.<br />

Now, the stage was set and the only<br />

thing which remained was for things to<br />

materialize and that they did! '"We certainly<br />

believe that Ben took advantage of every<br />

opportunity to sell 'Critic's Choice', and<br />

especially this once-in-a-lifetime break of<br />

having the star of the attraction in person<br />

at the theatre!" comments Reel News.<br />

Shoe Store Gives Slips Good for 'Savage Sam'<br />

Phil Rapp of Proctor's Theatre at Schenectady,<br />

N. Y., hit the news columns of the<br />

Union Star again with a story about his<br />

merchant-sponsored ticket giveaway. This<br />

time the Junior Bootcry gave out slips to<br />

youngsters purchafllng shoes good for free<br />

admission to see "Savage Sam" at Proctor's.<br />

The Union Star estimated some 600<br />

Juniors saw the film free as a result of<br />

the ticup.<br />

Previously, Rapp had a deal with the<br />

Junior Bootery, In which Todd Armstrong,<br />

a star of "Jason and the Argonauts," made<br />

a personal appearance at the store to give<br />

out a few autographed books to boys. The<br />

''nlon Star published a photo of Armstrong<br />

and the Bootery owner.<br />

For $3.50 and four labels from any<br />

Friskies canned dog food, an El Paso, Tex.,<br />

boy or girl could be a proud owner of a<br />

colorful genuine handmade "Indian Chief<br />

Headdress." A leaflet, placed in the lobby<br />

of Interstate's downtown Plaza Theatre,<br />

together with an attractive display of the<br />

famous Friskies products, carried full details<br />

of the offer and an application form.<br />

The tieup was for "Savage Sam."<br />

Clnebox, capable of showing 40 different<br />

sound films, has been developed by United<br />

Press International.<br />

Crazy Night .<br />

. .<br />

'Continued from preceding page)<br />

have to be—to be one of the luckiest<br />

girls in Canton. If your name is posted in<br />

the boxoffice window at the new Colonial<br />

Theatre you will be admitted free."<br />

BONUS DAY<br />

A Bonus Days stimulant was employed<br />

at the Center Theatre in 'Weldon this<br />

.spring. Carl Cannon arranged the big giveaway<br />

and plugged it from all sides from<br />

May 10 to June 12. when a long list of<br />

prizes was given away, headed by a "real,<br />

live pony." Patrons dropped ticket stubs<br />

in a container for the big drawing— the<br />

more times they attended the Center, the<br />

more chances to win a prize. During the<br />

Bonus Days, "specials" were offered, such<br />

as free Pepsi, popcorn, records, candy bars,<br />

Krab bags and two-for-one passes, given to<br />

|)ersons whose names were posted at the<br />

theatre.<br />

On one Monday. Cannon advertised a<br />

free silver dollar would be presented to<br />

every 20th person. His two-for-one passes<br />

are given to every person attending on a<br />

specific day. The passes, admitting a second<br />

person free with a paid adult admission,<br />

are good only the same day as presented,<br />

such as Wednesday, or the next<br />

Wednesday.<br />

LETTER FOR GRADUATES<br />

Cannon sent a three-paragraph letter,<br />

with a pass printed on the bottom of each<br />

mimeographed form, to his high school<br />

graduates. It read:<br />

DEAR GRADUATE:<br />

t would like personally to shoke your tiond and congrotulote<br />

you on completinig your high school education<br />

Since thot's impossible, I am taking this means ot<br />

conveying my sincerest congratulotions and best wishes<br />

for o hoppy and successful future.<br />

Whether you continue in higher education or embark<br />

immediately upon your chosen occupation, you<br />

will need reloxotion and diversion. Entertainment being<br />

my business, it seems only natural I should remind you<br />

that movies are the best medio for satisfying this<br />

need os well os the most inexpensive form of entertainment.<br />

Furthermore, they are ovailable wherever you<br />

may go. Pordon the plug, but I just couldn't resist<br />

the temptation to refresh you on o fact no doubt you<br />

already know.<br />

Enclosed herewith a complimentary ticket to the<br />

CENTER OS o slight token of recognition of your<br />

scholastic accomplishments. We shall be honored to<br />

have you as our guest at ony time selected by you.<br />

Clever 8x3-inch leaflets featuring girls<br />

in provocative poses were effective handouts<br />

for "Dr. No" at the Parkway Theatre<br />

in West Jefferson, managed by Dale Baldwin.<br />

Fine Kresge Ad on 'Birds'<br />

For Samia, Ont., Odeon<br />

A three-column Kresge ad shouted lin<br />

large typei: "LOOK OUT! The Birds Is<br />

Coming ! ! . . . We're welcoming them with<br />

these outstanding specials!"<br />

The ad, in the Sarnia. Ont., newspaper,<br />

over 13 inches deep, features several bargains<br />

in its pet department and included<br />

a scene mat and playdate on "The Birds"<br />

at the Odeon Theatre. Manager A. AUin<br />

reports his tiein with Kresge was "most<br />

successful and was very timely."<br />

Allin lined up windows at two Kresge's,<br />

another in a bird store and a fourth at the I<br />

Hudson Bay Co. store: also had bumper '<br />

strips on ten lunch trucks and other cars,<br />

and three-sheets all over town.<br />

Radio station CHOK gave him three free<br />

spots for every paid spot he bought for<br />

one week before playdate. Several live<br />

budgies he displayed In the lobby on loan<br />

were sold to customers.<br />

— 118 — BOXOFFICE Showmandiicr : : July<br />

29, 1063


'^<br />

Try Lefler io Editor<br />

For Good Family Film<br />

A different, one-shot approach did the<br />

promotion job up well for "The Courtship<br />

of Eddie's Father" at Gloria, a Chakeres<br />

operation in Urbana, Ohio, for J. E. Frazee,<br />

manager.<br />

Frazee's aim was reach those persons<br />

who are forever preaching "family entertairmient,"<br />

but never show up at the boxoffice<br />

when a good family-type program<br />

is playing. He wrote a letter to the editor<br />

of approximately 630 words!<br />

"Believe me, I must have hit home to a<br />

lot of people as the results were very<br />

gratifying and comments have been wonderful,"<br />

he reports.<br />

GOOD FOR ONE TRY<br />

"I know there are many more persons<br />

in this business like myself who would be<br />

most happy to get back the families again,<br />

and with the trend changing in upcoming<br />

releases, an article such as the attached<br />

Letter to the Editor might help. 'Tammy<br />

and the Doctor' is another 'Coui'tship'<br />

that needs extra help, as well as others<br />

to come.<br />

"I'll admit that this Letter to the Editor<br />

bit is good for a one-run promotion, but<br />

it certainly did the job for me on 'The<br />

Courtship of Eddie's Father'."<br />

Frazee's letter opened with a statement<br />

that he had attended a screening<br />

of the film and went on to describe it as<br />

"good family entertairmient, wholesome<br />

without being dull, occasionally light and<br />

hmnorous without being risque."<br />

"It all gets back to public support. We<br />

27; hear cries for censorship. Screams fill the<br />

air concerning "Depraved . . Obscene . . .<br />

.<br />

Smutty . . . Degenerate' motion pictures.<br />

Along comes an excellent family picture,<br />

and what happens? It dies at the boxoffice.<br />

"Motion pictures are a business. Big<br />

Business. It makes sense that they gravitate<br />

toward those themes which ultimately<br />

make money. What other position could<br />

the industry take?<br />

"The public position? It's the same as<br />

casting a vote. Here, it's the dollar vote.<br />

(How many times have you heard . . .<br />

'If you do not vote, don't complain about<br />

government'.<br />

TICKETS ARE VOTES!<br />

"The public must support those films<br />

it believes are the type which should be<br />

produced. If this support is lacking, as<br />

was the case with


Five high school k,ds he pcd m a l.ttle promotion which was rated a good success m behalf of "The<br />

L.St of Adrian Messenger" at the Roxie Thcotrc in Oakland, Calif. Jerry Ayers, assistant manager Is<br />

seen at the wheel of the borrowed<br />

Buick.<br />

Imagination and Little Cash Perform<br />

Ticket-Selling Promotion for Adrian'<br />

Imagination with a little cash sometimes<br />

will work wonders. This is the comment of<br />

M. R. Medelros. manager of the Roxie Theatre<br />

on 17th street in Oakland. Calif.<br />

Medeiros refers with pride to a promotion<br />

by Jerry Ayers. his assistant manager,<br />

which is pictured above, hailing "The List<br />

of Adrian Messenger."<br />

"The entire cost was under $30 and yet<br />

the results at the boxoffice were well over<br />

what we expected." Medeiros reports.<br />

Ayers promoted a free Buick convertible<br />

from the local dealer, and rounded up some<br />

high school kids who wanted to ride around<br />

town all day for the fun of it and a couple<br />

of theatre passes each. The signs on the<br />

side of the car and some masks, wigs. etc..<br />

from a novelty store were the only expense.<br />

Little booklets, with pictures of the five<br />

stars in disguise, supplied by Universal.<br />

were handed out to people all over the city<br />

by the Buick riders.<br />

"The car was driven around town all day<br />

and really got attention. Many patrons<br />

asked that night if we really had film<br />

stars in town." Medeiros concludes.<br />

Small Dixie Clicks With<br />

Varied Booking Policy<br />

Bill Crosby, who operates the Little<br />

River Drive-In at Wright City, Okla., books<br />

a good second-run picture for each Wednesday<br />

night and cuts his admission to 50<br />

cents a carload. The airer has 225 in-car<br />

speakers, plus a loudspeaker in the rear<br />

which he turns on when the 225 ramp<br />

places are filled. On Sunday through Wednesday<br />

he presents the biggest attraction<br />

he can get, on Thursday and Friday the<br />

next best while on Saturday he runs three<br />

pictures, one of which is a western.<br />

He has added a cafeteria style concession<br />

stand, twice the size of his first<br />

snack bar.<br />

His policy is paying off at the boxoffice.<br />

'<br />

Oldtime Guns Highlight<br />

'West Was Won' Display<br />

The HcUman Theatre in Albany. N. Y.,<br />

obtained the cooperation of New York<br />

State Education Department for the loan<br />

of two oldtime guns with bayonets and of<br />

two sabers, for a striking window display<br />

at downtown Flah's store for women in advance<br />

of "How the West Was Won." A<br />

neatly printed card acknowledged the cooperation<br />

of State Education Department.<br />

The guns and sabers were arranged in<br />

graphic fashion, between an old. highly<br />

painted wagon wheel and a miniature<br />

tree trunk. One of the bayonets artistically<br />

pierced a "How the West Was Won" window<br />

card, which had been laid flat on a<br />

grassy substance. A slanting board carried<br />

nine color stills from the Cinerama production,<br />

with star names attached.<br />

Above and to the back was a sign which<br />

stated that Flah's was exhibiting a group<br />

of summer fashions, "inspired by the Cinerama<br />

production."<br />

David Weinstein manages the<br />

Hellman.<br />

A 'Dear Patrons' Letter<br />

A "Dear Patrons" letter was displayed<br />

on a double crown 'approximately a threesheet<br />

» board by Michael J. Sparks, manager<br />

of the Villa Cross Theatre in Handsworth<br />

section of Birmingham. England, endorsing<br />

"Lover Come Back," which he had<br />

enjoyed at a preview. His endorsement<br />

read in part, "This is one of the funniest<br />

films I have seen for a long time and I<br />

would really like you to share with me this<br />

happy entertainment.<br />

Films on Car Racing<br />

A trio of films devoted to car racing and<br />

sports car design is being released August<br />

1 by the Ford Motor Co. for national distribution.<br />

They include "Monte Carlo Rallye."<br />

devoted to the famed endurance test<br />

in Monaco on sharp mountain roads;<br />

"The Winning Ride." on the 1963 running<br />

of the major event at Boynton Beach, and<br />

"Mustang." setting a precedent in filming<br />

each stage in the creative development<br />

period of a special experimental ear.<br />

. -Li<br />

..^«- wa^<br />

Adrian Messenger, in tui end top hat walked 66<br />

mile» from Adrion, Mich , to Detroit's Grand Circus<br />

Pork, to present his list to Alden Smith, executive<br />

heod of Cooperotivc Theatres of Michigon Smith<br />

spearheaded the group of "Proof" theatres which<br />

played the picture in Detroit. It wos a hot day, to<br />

Mnsenger then went into the pork pool to cool off.<br />

Proof refers to o first run booking arrangement<br />

tried out b|f Universal in Detroit in which top<br />

ighborhood theatres play the new releoiet<br />

I'oneoutly<br />

Copy for 'Bounty '<br />

A two-column ud on "Mutiny on the<br />

Bounty" at the Whalley Theatre In New<br />

Haven, Conn., had this copy:<br />

"A HIT! • • • s Takes you out of today's<br />

humdrum everyday world to the island<br />

paradise of Tahiti . . . Not even Cinerama<br />

has captured the beauty and excitement of<br />

a motion picture such as this." Frank<br />

Ferguson of Bailey Theatres prepared the<br />

ad.<br />

Subruns in metropolitan neighborhood areas can<br />

promote profitobly. Bob Copes, manager at the<br />

Westlakc Theotre in Los Angeles, proves this.<br />

For "The Birds," he come up with a "Name the<br />

Bird" stunt, for which he tied in with two nearby<br />

merchants—a photographer and a leweler. Seen<br />

above are the outer lobby posters ond disploys,<br />

with a stuffed raven set on lop of the boxoffice.<br />

Patrons were asked to nome the raven. Winners<br />

were awarded fromed portraits of themselves.<br />

— 120 — BOXOFFICE Showmondisor : : July 29, 1963


An interpretive analysis ot lay ond tradeprcss reviews. Running time is in parentheses. The plus and<br />

minus signs indicate degree or merit. Listings cover current reviews, updated regularly. This department<br />

also serves os an ALPHABETICAL INDEX to teature releoses. k&; is for CinemoScope; v Vista Vision;<br />

ig) Panovision; j) Technirama; ^; Other anamorphic processes. Symbol KJ denotes EOXOFFICE Blue Ribbon<br />

Aword; © color photography. Legion of Decency (LOD) ratings: A1— Unobjectionable for General Patronage;<br />

A2— Unobjectionable for Adults or Adolescents; A3— Unobjectionable for Adults; A4—Morally<br />

Unobjectionable for Adults, with Reservations; B— Objectionable in Part for All; C—Condemned. For<br />

listings by company in the order of release, see FEATURE CHART.<br />

i^EVIEW DIGEST<br />

AND ALPHABETICAL INDEX<br />

H Very Good; + Good; — Fair; — Poor; — Very Poor. In the summary H is rated 2 pluses. — as 2 minuses.


REVIEW DIGEST<br />

AND ALPHABETICAL INDEX In the lummorr ^ < rated 2 plinei, - a> 2 minuiei. " Very Good; + Good; — Fair; — Poor; — Very Poor.<br />

*=<br />

- = S -5 £- 2<br />

a. ^ cc »-oK__i<br />

. . . Hoffbcrg 12-24-62<br />

2694 Lo>e in • Hot Clinute<br />

(70) Rommtic Onmi<br />

2712 OLme It i Ball (111) if Comcdy-UA 3-11-63 A3<br />

2687 Lonn on a Tight Ra«t (S3)<br />

Sufoensc Drama . Etiil<br />

—M<br />

12- 3*62 B<br />

2711 OMadame (111) CT 70 Com-Dr. Embassy 3-11-63 B<br />

2715 0Ma«ic Voyage o( Sinbad. The<br />

(79) S Ad> Spect Filmgroup 3-2S-63<br />

2728 OMagnidcent Sinner (91)<br />

Cng-dubbed Period Drama .<br />

Film-Mart 5- 6-63 A3<br />

2730 Majd (or Murder (89) Comedy Janus 5-13-63<br />

2739 0*'ain Attraction. The (85) Dr.MGM 6-17-63 B<br />

2732 Man and Hrs Woman (83) Or. .Starkey-SR 5-20-63<br />

2720 Man From the Diners' Club, The<br />

(96) Farce Comedy Col 4- 8-63 Al<br />

2677 MancJiurian Candidate. The (126)<br />

Suspense Drama UA 10-29-62 A3<br />

2739 0Marilyn (S3) (c Coitipilation 20th.Fox 6-17-63 B<br />

2687 Maiime (93) Comedy-Drama Ellis 12- 3-62 B<br />

2731 OMill of the Stone Women (94)<br />

Horror Drama Parade 5-20-63<br />

2715 Mind Benders. The (99) Dr AlP 3-25-63 A3<br />

2719 uOMiracle o( the White Stallions<br />

(118) Drama BV 4- 8-63 Al<br />

2721 OMondo Cane (102) Documentary. .Times 4-15-63 A4<br />

2735 0Mo


Feoture productions by compony in order of release. Running time is in parentheses. @ is for CinemaScope;<br />

® VistoVision; (g) Ponavision; (t) Technirama; (§) Other anamorphic processes. Symbol ij denotes BOXOFFICE<br />

Blue Ribbon Award; © Color Photography. Letters and combinations thereof indicate story type—(Complete<br />

key on next page). For review dotes and Picture Guide page numbers, see REVIEW DIGEST.<br />

^EATURB<br />

CHART<br />

ALLIED ARTISTS | ti


'<br />

(120)<br />

FEATURE<br />

CHART<br />

EMBASSY I gj|M-G-M to PARAMOUNT<br />

The key to letlen and combinations thereof indicating itory type: (Ad) Adventure Drama; (Ac) Action<br />

Oiamo; (An) Animated-Action; iC) Comedy; (CD) Comcdy-Dromo; Xr) Crime Dromo; (DM) Drama<br />

with Music; iDoci Documcnlary; |Dr) Drama; (F) Fantasy; iHo) Horror Drama; iHi) Historical Drama; (M) Musicol;<br />

My) Mystery; (00) Outdoor Drama (S) Spectacle; (SF) Science-Fiction; vW) Western.<br />

5- 20TH-FOX is UNITED ARTISTS<br />

s UJ<br />

o<br />

J}Const*ntint ind tht Crou<br />

(120) * Ad.<br />

IVrttel Wilde. nirUllrx Kiufnuim<br />

OOBilly Rose's Jumbo<br />

(125) (g M..310<br />

I>orU l>ar. Jinny Durante, Martha<br />

Itaje, Stephen Boyd. Iteao Jaeger<br />

OSwordsman of Siena (96)<br />

© Ad. .304<br />

8. (Jrancer, S. Koadna, C Kaufmann<br />

OWoiiderful to Be Young<br />

(92) (Si C/M..6209<br />

I'lirr Richard, lloberl Morley<br />

It's Only Money (84) ...C..6206<br />

Jerry Lenls, Zachary Scott, Joan<br />

O'Brien<br />

©Gigot (104) C..220 Two for the Seesaw<br />

Jackli- (;io«.- I. . Iiirlmli .Mun-llo Mulrouuml (116) CO.. 305 (93) « C..6207 Slewai I (iraiiRer, I'lcr Angell<br />

Tony CurtLs. Yiil Itrynner<br />

i»i;i.>ii KiiccA<br />

Ulrk BoKirde. Maria Perachy<br />

lieaji Martin, Uuia Turner,<br />

<<br />

tMille Albert. Mta Talbot ©Young Guns of Texas<br />

A Child Is Waiting (102) D..6305<br />

Cairo (91) D..316<br />

(78) (C) W..303 Itiirt Ijinc.ister, Judy Garland<br />

<<br />

Jill St. John<br />

Polly Bergen, JaiiLs Paltte<br />

The Passionate Thief (100). CD<br />

Secret Passion (formerly<br />

Anna »la*i»nl. Btn Otziara, Toto titled "Freud) D..6301<br />

(JcoTRc Sanders, Richard Jotuison Where the Truth Lies<br />

James .Mltchiim, Jody McCrea<br />

(81) ® D..6211<br />

QMutiny on the Bounty<br />

Juliette Greco, Ulo Pulver<br />

The Day Mars Invaded Earth<br />

(179) eih Taylor. Richard Burton.<br />

t/>ili Jrairdan, R1


B.<br />

.Alain<br />

.Yumeji<br />

FEATURE<br />

CHART<br />

UNIVERSAL<br />

Freud (139) D..6301<br />

(Special Release)<br />

Montgomery Clift, Susannah York,<br />

I^irry Parks. Susan Kohner<br />

(Also see "Secret Passion"<br />

©40 Pounds of Trouble<br />

(105) (H) C..6304<br />

Ton>' Curtis, Suzanne Pleshette,<br />

Phil Silvers, I^arry Storch<br />

Mystery Submarine (92) . .Ac. .6305<br />

Edward Judd. Laurence Payne,<br />

James Robertson Justice<br />

QTo Kill a Mockingbird<br />

(129) D..6306<br />

Oregory Peek. Mary Badham,<br />

Phillip Alfofd, John Megna<br />

©The Birds (120) D..6307<br />

Rod Taylor, Suzanne Pleshette,<br />

Jessica Tandy, Tlppl Hedren<br />

tS©The Ugly American<br />

(120) D..6308<br />

Marlon Brando, Sandra Church, Eljl<br />

Okada, Pat Hlngle, Jocelyn Brando<br />

Paranoiac (80) D..6309<br />

Janette Scott. Oliver Reed,<br />

Sheila Burrell<br />

Showdown (79) 0D..6310<br />

Audie Murphy, Kathleen Crowley,<br />

Charles Draie, Harold J. Stone<br />

©Tammy and the Doctor<br />

(S9) CD.. 6311<br />

Sandra Dee, Peter Fonda<br />

©Lancelot and Guinevere<br />

(116) ® Ad.. 6312<br />

Cornel Wilde. Jean Wallace,<br />

Brian Aheme<br />

©A Gathering ' of Eagles<br />

(115) D..6313<br />

liock Hudson. Rod Taylor<br />

The List of Adrian Messenger<br />

(98) My.. 6315<br />

(TOA Hollywood Preview May 29)<br />

George C. Scott. Dana Wynter,<br />

pins several surprise guests<br />

©King Kong vs. Godzilla<br />

(91) Hoc. 6314<br />

Michael Keith. Harry Holcomb<br />

©The Thrill of It All<br />

(108) C..6316<br />

Doris Day, James Gamer,<br />

Arlene Francis. Edw. Andrews<br />

The Traitors (69) D . .6317<br />

Patrick Allen. James Maxwell,<br />

Jacqueline Ellis<br />

Secret Passion (formerly titled ....<br />

Freud) (139) D..6301<br />

Montgomery Gift, Susannah York.<br />

(General release)<br />

©Kiss of the Vampire<br />

(..) Ho..<br />

Clifford Bvaas, BVlward De Souza<br />

©For Love or Money (10S)....C.<br />

Kirk Douglas. Mitzi Gaj-nor,<br />

Gig Young. Thelirra Ititter<br />

©Charade (g MyC.<br />

Gary Grant, Audrey Heptmrn<br />

©Man's Favorite Sport? C.<br />

Rock Hudson. Paula Prentiss.<br />

Maria Perscly<br />

WARNER BROS.<br />

©Gypsy (143) ® IVI..254<br />

Uosalind Itiissell. Natalie Wood,<br />

Karl Maiden<br />

Term of Trial (113) D..255<br />

Laurence Olivier. Simone Signoret.<br />

Terence Stamp, Sarah Miles<br />

©Critic's Choice (100)<br />

Bob Hope, Lucille Ball<br />

C..259<br />

©Island of Love (101) ® C..264<br />

Robert Preston. Tony Randall,<br />

Georgia Moll<br />

Black Gold (98) D..263<br />

Philip (^ley, Diane McBain<br />

©Spencer's Mountain<br />

(118) (B D..265<br />

Henry Fonda, Maureen O'Hara,<br />

James MacArthur, Wally Cox.<br />

Donald &isp, Mimsy Farmer.<br />

©PT 109 (140) ® D..266<br />

Cliff Koberlson. Ty Hardin, James<br />

Gregory. Robert Oiip, Grant<br />

Williams<br />

Rcl.<br />

Date<br />

ASTOR (APEX)<br />

The Quarc Fellow (85) D.. Feb 63<br />

Patrick McGoohan. Sylvia Syms<br />

During One Night (S4) . .0..<br />

Don Borisenko. Susan Hampstilre<br />

Five Minutes to Live (SO) Cr..<br />

Johnny Cash. Donald Woods<br />

The Trial (118) D.. Feb 63<br />

Anthony Perkins. Romy Schneider,<br />

Orson Welles, Elsa Martinelli<br />

ATLANTIC PICTURES<br />

West End Jungle (60) . .Doc. .Feb 63<br />

London's prostitution problem<br />

AUDUBON FILMS<br />

I Spit on Your Grave<br />

(100) D.. Sep 62<br />

Chilstian Marauand<br />

BRIGADIER FILM ASSOCIATES<br />

Smashing of the<br />

Reich (84) Doc.. Oct 62<br />

Kamikaze! (S9) Doc. Oct 62<br />

The Night They Killed Rasputin<br />

(87) D..0ct62<br />

Edmund Purdom, Gianna Canale<br />

CARI RELEASING<br />

The Scarface Mob (106) . . D . . Aug 62<br />

Robert Stack. Keenan Wynn<br />

Days of Wine and Roses<br />

(117) D..256 COLORAMA<br />

Jack Lemmon, Lee Remick<br />

©The Trojan Horse<br />

©The Castilian (129) ® AD.. 352<br />

Cesar Romero. Frankie Avalon.<br />

Broderick Crawford. Alida Valli<br />

Wall of Noise (112) Ac .351<br />

Suzanne Pleshette. Ty Hardin.<br />

Dorothy Provine<br />

©Rampage<br />

Ad.<br />

Robert Mitchum. Elsa Martinelli.<br />

Jack Hawkins. Sabu<br />

America America 0.<br />

Stathls Giallelis, Elena Karam<br />

©Palm Springs Weekend CD..<br />

Troy Donahue. Connie Stevens<br />

BOXOFFICE BooldnGuide July 29. 1963<br />

(105) © D.. Jul 62<br />

Steve Reeves. John Drew Barrvmore<br />

©The Mongols (112) (§) Jul 62<br />

Jack Palance, Anita Ekberg<br />

^Joseph and His Brethren<br />

(103) BiD..Dec62<br />

Geoffrey Home, Belinda Lee<br />

The Girl Hunters (103). .My. .Jun 63<br />

Mickey Spillane. Lloyd Nolan<br />

CROWN-INTERNATIONAL<br />

Stakeout (81) D.. Oct 62<br />

Bing Russell, Bill Hale<br />

Varan the Unbelievable<br />

(70) 0.. Oct 62<br />

Myron Healy. Tsumko Kobayashi<br />

©First Spaceship on Venus<br />

(81) ® D..0ct62<br />

Yoko Tanl. Oldrick Lutes<br />

Terrified (8U Ac. May 63<br />

Rod Lauren, Tracy Olsen<br />

As Nature Intended (64) D.. May 63<br />

Pamela Green<br />

DAVIS-ROYAL<br />

©Nude Odyssey (97) ® Ad.. Oct 62<br />

Enrico Maria Salemo<br />

The Reluctant Saint (105). CD..<br />

Maximilian Schell, RIcardo Montalban<br />

The L-Shaped Room (124)<br />

Leslie Cssm, Tom Bell<br />

D. .Jun 63<br />

ELLIS<br />

Two Before Zero (78) . . Doc. .Oct 62<br />

Lovers on a Tight Rope<br />

(83) D.. Dec 62<br />

Annie Girardot, Francois Perier<br />

Maxime (93) CD.. Nov 62<br />

Charles Boyer, Michele Morgan<br />

EMERSON FILM ENTERPRISES<br />

The Creation nf the<br />

Humanoi'is (75) Ho.. Oct 62<br />

Don Megnwan. Erica Elliot<br />

Silent Witness (70) Ac..0ct62<br />

Tris Coffin. Marjorie Reynolds<br />

DENMARK<br />

A Stranger Knocks (81) . . 4-22-63<br />

(Trans-Lux) . .Blrgltle Federspiel<br />

FRANCE<br />

Army Game, The (87) .... 5-27-63<br />

(SR) C. de Tlliere. Ricet-Barrler<br />

Candide (90) 2-18-63<br />

(Union) . .Jean Pierre (tassel, Pierre<br />

Brasseur. Dahlia La\i. Nadla Gray<br />

Cleo From 5 to 7 (90) ..10-20-62<br />

( Zenith 1 Corinne Marchand<br />

Counterfeiters of Paris (99) 4-22-63<br />

(MGM) . .Jean Gabin. Martlne Carol<br />

Crime Does Not Pay (159) 11-26-62<br />

(Embassy) . .Michele Morgan. C.<br />

Marqnand. Danielle Darrleux<br />

Cross of the Living (90) . . 4-22-63<br />

(Carl).. Karl Boehm. Pascale Petit<br />

Lola (90) 12- 3-62<br />

(F-A-W) Anouk Almee. Marc<br />

Michel<br />

Love at Twenty (113) 4- S-63<br />

(Embassy) Jean-Pierre l^eaud.<br />

Eleonora Rossi Drago. Christian<br />

Doermer<br />

©Lovers Teruel (90) . . 3-11-63<br />

of<br />

(Cont'l) Ludmllla Tcherlna<br />

Paris Belongs to Us (120) 1-14-63<br />

(Merlyn) . Schneider. F. Prevost<br />

Passion o' Slow Fire (91) . .11-26-62<br />

(Trans-, .ux) . .Je.an DeSaiUy<br />

7 Capital Sins (113) © .. 2-18-63<br />

(Embassy) . .Jean-Pierre Aumont,<br />

Dany Sava!, Eddie Constantine<br />

. 2-11-63<br />

. . 7-29-63<br />

Sundays and Cybele (110) .<br />

(Davis-Ro.vaI| Hardy Kruger,<br />

Patricia (5nzzi. Nicole Courcel<br />

Talcs of Paris (85) 10-15-62<br />

(Times).. F. Amonl. C. Marnuand<br />

Third Lover, The (85)<br />

(Atlantic) . .Jacques Charrler<br />

MISCELLANEOUS<br />

A Swingin' Affair (85) . . M . . May 63<br />

.Arllne Judge. Bill Wellman jr.,<br />

Dick Dale & the Dell Tones<br />

©The King's Musketeers<br />

(96) Ac. Jul 63<br />

Sebastiion Cabot. Jeffrey Stone,<br />

Marina<br />

Berti<br />

Two Living, One Dead<br />

(..) D.. Jul 63<br />

FAIRWAY INT'L<br />

Wild Guitar (87) M . . Nov 62<br />

Arch Hall jr., Nancy Czar<br />

The Sadist (94) Ac. Jun 63<br />

Arch Hall jr., Helen Hovey<br />

FILMGROUP<br />

©Mermaids of Tiburon<br />

(75) ® Ad.. Dec 62<br />

Diane Webber, (Seorge Rowe<br />

GOVERNOR<br />

A Kind of Loving (112) . . D . . Oct 62<br />

.\lan Bates, June Ritchie<br />

HERTS-LION INT'L<br />

A Matter of WHO (90) CD.. Aug 62<br />

Terry- Thomas. Sonja Ziemann<br />

Carnival of Souls (91) . . D . .Sep 62<br />

CandJice llilligoss, Frances Feist<br />

The Devil's Messenger<br />

(72) F.. Sep 62<br />

Lon Clianey, Karen Kadler<br />

©Daughter of the Sun God<br />

(75) Ad.. Oct 62<br />

Lisa .Montell, Bill Holmes<br />

©Roommates (91) C. Oct 62<br />

James R. Justice, L. Phillips<br />

Escape to Berlin (75) . .D. .Aug . 63<br />

OuLsIian Doermer, Suzanne Korda<br />

©Dungeons of Horror<br />

(SO) Ho. .Aug 63<br />

Russ Harvey<br />

©Gorilla (90) © Dr.. Sep 63<br />

Gia Petry<br />

JANUS<br />

Crooks Anonymous (57) . .C. .Feb 63<br />

Leslie Phillips. Stanley Baxter<br />

The Fruit Is Ripe (90).. D..<br />

(Eng-dubbcdl . .Scllla Gabel<br />

Maid for Murder (89) . . C. . Mar 63<br />

Bob Monklinuse. Hattie Jacques<br />

©The Playboy of the Western<br />

World (100) CD.. Apr 63<br />

Sioblian McKenna. Gary Raymond<br />

Sparrows Can't Sing<br />

(93) C. Jun 63<br />

Windsor<br />

Heavens Above (..) C. Jul 63<br />

James Booth, Barbara<br />

Peter Sellers. Cecil Parker<br />

JOSEPH BRENNER ASSOCIATES<br />

Karate (SO) Ad..<br />

Joel Holt. Frank Blaine<br />

The Seducers (88) ....D.. Dec 62<br />

Nuella Dierklng, Mark Saegers<br />

LOPERT FILMS<br />

©Stowaway in the Sky<br />

(82) Ad. Jul 62<br />

Pa:4cal Lamorlsse, Andre Gille<br />

Phaedra (115) D . . Nov 62<br />

MeJlna Mercourl, Anthony Perkins<br />

©The Mouse on the Moon<br />

(82) C. Jun 63<br />

Margaret Rutherford. Terry-TTionias<br />

MACO FILM CORP.<br />

©Ufayette (110)<br />

© 70 HiD..May 63<br />

"oat: FOREIGN LANGUAGE<br />

GREECE<br />

Alice in the Navy (90) 4- 1-63<br />

(GMP) Allkl Vouyouklakl<br />

Antigone (88) 10-15-62<br />

(Ellis) . .Irene Papas<br />

Electra (110) 1-14-63<br />

(Lopert) . .Irene Papas<br />

Policeman of the 16th<br />

Precinct 5-13-63<br />

(GMP) . .C«t,as Hadiichristos<br />

We Have Only One Life<br />

(116) 7-29-63<br />

(Greek M.P.) . .Dimitri Horn,<br />

Y'vonne Sanson<br />

INDIA<br />

Devi (The Goddess) (95) 11-12-62<br />

(Harrison) . . C. Biswas. S. Chatterjee<br />

Two Daughters (114) 5-27-63<br />

(Janus).. A. C!hatterjee. C. Banerjee<br />

ITALY<br />

Arturo's Island (90) 1-21-63<br />

(M(i'\I) . .Reg Kerman. Key<br />

Meersman<br />

Divorce Italian Style<br />

(105) 10- 1-62<br />

(Embassy I , .Marcello Mastroiannl<br />

Eclipse (123) 2-11-63<br />

(Times) . Delon. Monica Vitti<br />

Everybody Go Home (115) . .12-10-62<br />

(Davis-Roval) . .Alberto Sordl<br />

S'/2 (135) 7-15-63<br />

(Emb.assy) . .Marcello Mastroiannl<br />

Four Days of Naples.<br />

The (124) 3-25-63<br />

(MGM).. Jean Sorel. Lea Massari,<br />

Georgia Wilson. Itegina Biancbi<br />

II Grido (The Outcry)<br />

(115) 11-12-62<br />

(.Vstor) . .Steve Cochran, VallL<br />

B. Blair<br />

Lady Doctor, The (103) 10- 1-62<br />

(Governor) Toto, Abbe Lane<br />

U Viaccia (103) 10-22-62<br />

lEng-dubbed) . .Jack Hawkins,<br />

Orson Welles. Lllo Pulver,<br />

Edmund Purdom<br />

MEDALLION<br />

Rel.<br />

Date<br />

©Cleopatra's Daughter<br />

(93) ® Ad.. Feb 63<br />

Debra Paget, E Manni, Kobt. Alda<br />

Bomb for a Dictator (73) Ac. Feb 63<br />

Pierre Fresnay. Michel Auclair<br />

MPA FEATURE FILMS<br />

.<br />

Four for the Morgue (84) . .<br />

Stacy Harris, Louis Slrgo<br />

OLYMPIC INT'L FILMS<br />

The Festival Girls (80) . .C. .Sep 62<br />

Barbara Valentine, Alex D'Arcy<br />

Surftide 77 (,5) C. .Apr 62<br />

Tom Newman. Virginia (Jordon<br />

PARADE RELEASING ORG.<br />

©Mill of the Stone Women<br />

(94) Ho.. Mar 63<br />

(Eng-dubbed) Scllla Gabel<br />

TIMES FILM<br />

©Mondo Cane (102) .. Doc . Feb 63<br />

. 63<br />

"Wurld-wide film portrayal of<br />

real life"<br />

Eva (..) D.. Mar 63<br />

Jeanne .Mureau. Stanley Baker<br />

Defiant Daughters (92) . D . . Apr<br />

Barbara Rutting. Fred Taimer<br />

©Pagan Hellcat (62) ...D.. Apr 63<br />

Tumata Teuiau<br />

Violent Midnight (90) . My . . May 63<br />

.<br />

Lee Pliilips. Shepperd Strudwick<br />

TOPAZ<br />

FILMS<br />

Atom Age Vampire (87)Ho. .Jun 63<br />

Albert Lupo. Susanne Ijoret<br />

©Battle of the Worlds<br />

(84) SF..Jun63<br />

Claude Rains, Bill Carter<br />

TRANS-LUX<br />

Secrets of the Nazi Criminals<br />

(84) Doc. Oct 62<br />

Horror Hotel (76) Ho.. Oct 62<br />

Dennis Lotis. Christopher Lee<br />

ULTRA PICTURES CORP.<br />

©Rice Girl (90) © D.. Feb 63<br />

Elsa .Martinelli (Eng-dubbed)<br />

Fatal Desire (80) D.. Feb 63<br />

Anthony Qulnn. May Britt.<br />

Kerima. Ettore Manni (liig-dubbed)<br />

A Day in Court (70) Ep-C..May63<br />

Sophia Lnren. Alberto Sordl<br />

©2 Nights With Cleopatra<br />

(. .) ®. .Jun63<br />

(Eng-dubbed) Sophia Loren.<br />

Alberto Sordi, Ettore Manni<br />

UNION FILM DISTRIBUTORS<br />

Two and Two Make Six (89).. C.<br />

George Chaklrls. Janette Scott<br />

UNITED PRODUCERS (UPRO)<br />

Hot Money Girl (81) ...D.. Oct 62<br />

Eddie Constantine, Dawn Addams<br />

WOOLNER BROS.<br />

©Haunted World (89) O D.. Oct 63<br />

Cliristopher Lee. Reg Parks,<br />

Leonora Uuffo<br />

©Hercules and the Captive<br />

Women (93) ® Ad.. Apr 63<br />

Reg Park. Fay Spahi<br />

ZENITH INT'L<br />

No Exit (85) D.. Dec 62<br />

Viveca Lindfors, Rita Gam<br />

Review<br />

Date<br />

(Embassy)<br />

. .Jean-Paul Belmondo,<br />

Claudia Cardinale<br />

Love and Larceny (94) .... 3-11-63<br />

(Major) . .Vlttorio Gassman, Anna<br />

Maria Ferrero. Peppino de Fllippo<br />

Psycosissimo (88) 10-29-62<br />

(Ellis) . .l"go Toznazzl<br />

JAPAN<br />

Bad Sleep Well, The<br />

(135) 2-25-63<br />

(Toho) . .Toshiro iMlfune<br />

Happiness of Us Alone<br />

(133) 9- 3-62<br />

(Tohn) . Keiiu Kebayaehi<br />

Island, The (96) © 9-24-62<br />

(Zenith) Nobuko Otowa<br />

Sanjuro (96) 7- 8-63<br />

(Toho) . .Toshiro Mlfiuie<br />

©Temptress and the Monk.<br />

The (S7) 7-15-63<br />

(Hakim) . Tsukloka<br />

Yojimbo (110) 10-29-62<br />

(Seneca) . .Toshiro Mifune<br />

POLAND<br />

Partings (101) 12- 3-62<br />

(Telepis) . .Maria Wachowlak<br />

RUSSIA<br />

Apartment in Moscow (70) 11-12-62<br />

(Artkino) . .B. Burenkov<br />

Grown-Up Children (75) . . 6-13-63<br />

(.Vrtkino) . .A. (Jrlbov, Z. Fedorova<br />

SPAIN<br />

Lazarillo (lOO) 5-13-63<br />

(Union) . .Marco Paolettl. Juan Jose<br />

Menendez. Memmo (^rotenuto<br />

SWEDEN<br />

Of Love and Lust (109) . . 7-29-63<br />

(F-A-W).. M.ai Zetterling,<br />

Anita Bjork<br />

Winter Light (SO) 5- 6-63<br />

(Janus)<br />

Bjomstrand,<br />

. .Ingrid Thulln,<br />

Max<br />

Gumtr<br />

Sydow von<br />

f<br />

|<br />

9


. No»<br />

Jan<br />

Nov<br />

1 7306<br />

. Mar<br />

Shorts chart<br />

0-O e»<br />

ceo<br />

BUENA VISTA<br />

M-G-M<br />

(All in color)<br />

TOM AND JERRY CARTOONS<br />

FnturflK Sorcial<br />

All 1751 Ralio<br />

S049 YtllMslont Cults (47) Miy 63<br />

(Color—All New)<br />

REISSUE CARTOONS<br />

(7 min$. ><br />

17110 Mickty's Driaytd Pile Oct 62<br />

17U1 Chickm Lilllt Nn62<br />

17112 Two Chips and a Miss Dtc 62<br />

COLUMBIA<br />

ASSORTED & COMEDY FAVORITES<br />

( Rtitsud)<br />

7431 Stroc. Look and Listoi<br />

(IS'i) Oct 62<br />

7422 Gmiral Nuisance (18) Nn 62<br />

7432 Tall. Dark and Gruesome<br />

(161 Not 62<br />

7423 Hook a Crook (16) Dec 62<br />

7433 Training for Trouble<br />

(ISj) Dec 62<br />

7434 He Pooped His<br />

Piilol (16) Jan 63<br />

7424 So's Your Antenna<br />

(17) Feb 63<br />

7435 Wife Decoy (17) Mar 63<br />

7425 She's Oil Mine<br />

(IT"!) Apr 63<br />

7426 Meet Mr. Miscliief<br />

(IT",) May 63<br />

7436 Partlon My Terror<br />

(16" 2) June 63<br />

.<br />

.<br />

CANDID MICROPHONE<br />

(Reissues)<br />

7552 No. 2. Series 4(11) 62<br />

7553 No. 3. Series 4 (10) 63<br />

7554 No. 4. Series 4 (gi/,) Mar 63<br />

7555 No. 5. Series 4 (11) Mav 63<br />

7556 No 6 Series 4 (9" i) Jul 63<br />

COLOR FAVORITES<br />

(Technicolor Reissues)<br />

7603 Willie the Kid (7) Oct 62<br />

7604 Little Ro»«r (9) Nov 62<br />

7605 Christopher Crumpet (7) No» 62<br />

7606 A Boy and His Dog (7) Dec 62<br />

7607 Rooty Toot Toot (8) Jan 63<br />

7606 Snowtime (7) Jan 63<br />

7609 The Emperor's New<br />

Clothes (P/j) Feb 63<br />

7610 Litlle Boy WHh a<br />

Bil Horn (7) Mar 63<br />

7611 The Fo«y Pup (614) Mar 63<br />

7612 Let's Go (T'/j) Apr 63<br />

7613 Gerald McBoing Boing<br />

• 7) May 63<br />

7614 Bon Bon Parade (8) Jun 63<br />

7615 Madeline (7)<br />

LOOPY de LOOP<br />

Jul 63<br />

(Color Cartoons)<br />

7702 Chicken Fracas-See (7) .. Oct 62<br />

7703 Rancid Ranson (7) . Nor 62<br />

7704 Bunnies Abundant (7) Dec 62<br />

7705 Just a Wolf at Heart<br />

'7) Feb 63<br />

7706 Chicken-Hearted<br />

Wolt (7) Mar 63<br />

7707Watcha Watchin' (7) Apr 63<br />

7708 Fallible Fable (7) May 63<br />

7709 Sheep Stealers<br />

Anonymous (7) Jun 63<br />

7710 Wolf in Sheep's Clothing<br />


Opinions on Current Productions<br />

^EATURE REVIEWS<br />

Symbol O denotes color; © CinemaScopc; ® VistoVision; ® Technirame; © Other onomorphic processes. For story synopsis on each picture, see reverse side.<br />

Lilies of the Field<br />

United Artists ( ) 94 Minutes<br />

Ratio:<br />

1.S5-1<br />

Drama<br />

This is one of the most entertaining and timely films to<br />

come along in many a year. Before release here, it already<br />

has won several awards for Sidney Poitier, named "the<br />

best actor at the Berlin Film Festival for his starring role,<br />

and this, doubtless, is only the beginning. His performance<br />

as an itinerant worker who becomes involved with five<br />

strangely dressed women who turn out to be nuns, has<br />

humor, pathos, and all the additional elements which<br />

scored such a hit in "Going My Way." Ralph Nelson, who<br />

produced and directed, dared to cast a Negro in an honest<br />

role, as a semi-villain with spunk and courage, who risks<br />

the wrath of the nuns and, though he dislikes ties and<br />

being bossed around he completes their chapel in the<br />

desert. The haughty role of Lilia Skala as the Mother<br />

Superior, Stanley Adams as Juan, Dan Frazer as Father<br />

Murphy and Lisa Mann, Isa Crino, Francesca Jarvis and<br />

Pamela Branch as the other nuns whom Poitier teaches to<br />

speak English, make this low-budget "sleeper" into the<br />

"charm" picture of the year and a cleanup at the<br />

boxoffice.<br />

Sidney Poitier, Lilia Skala, Lisa Mann, Isa Crino,<br />

Francesca Jarvis, Pamela Branch, Stanley Adams.<br />

in'<br />

The Checkered Flag<br />

Ratio:<br />

1.85-1<br />

Racing<br />

©<br />

Drama<br />

Motion Picture Investors 83 Minutes Rel. July '63<br />

.'ing ^<br />

el p'<br />

The widely popular interest in racing stories alone<br />

guarantees the boxoffice success of this film, which was<br />

photographed against authentic race track backgrounds<br />

in the Bahamas and in and around Sebring, Fla.,<br />

where the amiual sports car endurance race takes place.<br />

The Eastman Color photography adds to the attractiveness<br />

of these picturesque surroundings and provides an<br />

additional selling point. The numerous exploitation tieups<br />

afforded, both in the racing runs in the picture, which are<br />

excellently recorded, and the scenic investure, open wide<br />

these possibilities with sports car clubs, sports wear shops,<br />

other merchant tieups and newspapers. The story concerns<br />

a faithless millionaire racing enthusiast, his alcoholic<br />

two-timing wife who plots, with her lover, to have<br />

her husband killed in a racing accident. While this is<br />

accomplished, the end result takes a surprising turn.<br />

"Flag" is being coupled with "Trigger Happy" (formerly<br />

"The Deadly Companions"), runs 92 minutes, also in<br />

color, with Maureen O'Hara, Brian Keith, Steve Cochran<br />

and Chill Wills. The combination has done above average<br />

in area saturation bookings.<br />

Charles G. Martin, Evelyn King, Joe Morrison,<br />

Peggy Vendig.<br />

Violated Paradise<br />

Times Film<br />

67 Minutes<br />

Ratio: Documentary<br />

1.8B-1 ©<br />

Rel. July '63<br />

A beautifully photographed exploitation film which<br />

concentrates on female nudity yet is far above the usual<br />

picture made for and relegated to the downtown sex<br />

houses in the key cities. Filmed entirely in the Orient in<br />

color, this was produced and directed by Marion Gering,<br />

who directed many features for Paramount and Columbia<br />

in the 1930s, and is based (in part) on Fosco Maraini's<br />

"Meeting With Japan," a Book-of-the-Month Club selection<br />

last year. The English narration throughout is by<br />

Thomas L. Row, spoken for the Japanese heroine by<br />

Paulette Girard. The story starts out innocently enough b<br />

'<br />

as a provincial Japanese girl, well played by Kazuko<br />

Mine, leaves her village in search of adventure. In Tokyo,<br />

she encounters the night life, with its startling barebreasted<br />

showgirls and dancers, and is dismayed by the<br />

mixed bathing and other diversions of city life. Eventually,<br />

her fisherman lover from back home finds her and<br />

they return to the village. At this point, there is some<br />

added material which shows nude Ama maidens diving<br />

for pearls or deep sea delicacies. This is strictly documentary<br />

stuff, designed mainly to shock patrons, and,<br />

with the Tokyo nightclub revelations, make the picture<br />

strictly adult fare—informative though much of it is.<br />

The average exhibitor cannot be blamed if he uses sensational<br />

promotion—there's little else to exploit.<br />

Ratio:<br />

Drama<br />

Greenwich Village Story<br />

Shawn International 93 Minutes Rel. July '63<br />

A modest-budget feature<br />

entirely filmed in and about<br />

New York's Greenwich Village by Jack O'Connell, who<br />

wrote, produced and directed in most capable fashion,<br />

this is a first-rate example of realistic, strikingly original<br />

independent filmmaking. Although the off-broadway<br />

players in the cast lack marquee value, the picture can be<br />

exploited on its title and theme. New York's Bohemian<br />

section being known the world over. O'Connell, who<br />

gained film experience with Federico Fellini and Michelangelo<br />

Antonioni in Italy, has achieved some of these<br />

masters' off-beat authenticity and appeal, especially in<br />

his love story, which borrows its artists' life theme from<br />

"La Boheme" and a downbeat finale which is reminiscent<br />

of the memorable "The L-Shaped Room." His use of<br />

actual Village locations, including an opening during a<br />

Washington Square folk-sing and the crowded beatnik<br />

bars and hangouts, is superb and the photography by<br />

Baird Bryant is striking. The picture may be better suited<br />

to adult audiences, but it can play most regular situations<br />

and merits extra selling.<br />

Robert Hogan, Melinda Flank, Tani Seitz, James Frawley,<br />

Sunja Svendsen, James Cresson, John Avildsen.<br />

itrictN<br />

'<br />

In<br />

arecTi<br />

^xcha<br />

TT I T - » . Ratio: Action Drama<br />

Harbor Lights<br />

issi<br />

20th-Fox (317) 68 Minutes Rel. July '63<br />

A fair enough example of a fast-vanishing film commodity,<br />

the modest-budget, black-and-white supporting<br />

programmer, this Maury Dexter production has too little<br />

to hold the attention of moviegoers who are accustomed<br />

to seeing similar fare on their TV screens almost every<br />

night. Kent Taylor, the juvenile lead of 30 years ago who<br />

has more recently played in dozens of action films, is the<br />

sole marquee name in this Associated Producers film<br />

which was entirely filmed in Puerto Rico in association<br />

with La Cooperativa de Artes Cinematograficas of San<br />

Juan. As directed by Dexter from a story by Henry Cross,<br />

the picture opens with a murder and has a moderate<br />

amount of suspense as a professional gambler and a<br />

Puerto Rican girl follow clues to the killing in the streets<br />

and hotel rooms of San Juan. Taylor, still handsome<br />

enough to can-y the film's romantic interest, turns in a<br />

capable acting job as does Jeff Morrow, the only other<br />

American actor in the cast. But Miriam Colon, a Latin<br />

actress who was seen in support of Marlon Brando in<br />

"One Eyed Jacks," is barely adequate and some of the<br />

other native players have difficulty with their English<br />

dialog. The Puerto Rican locations will have some<br />

interest to travelers.<br />

Kent Taylor, Miriam Colon, Jeff Morrow,<br />

Antonio Torres Martino, Jose de San Anton.<br />

Double Deception<br />

UMPO<br />

Ratio:<br />

1.S5-1<br />

Suspense<br />

Melodrama<br />

101 Minutes<br />

Rel. July '63<br />

Some of Europe's finest talent contribute some memorable<br />

moments in this excellent adaptation, by Francois<br />

Boyer and Bernard Revon, of the novel by Boileau-<br />

Narcejac (latter, of course, responsible for "Diabolique")<br />

and where the world of suspense has traditionally meant<br />

top grosses, this surely won't disappoint. It contains, to<br />

be sure, all of the surefire, built-in ingredients that the<br />

armchair detectives in particular seem to relish—suspense,<br />

intrigue, and, at the climactic fadeout, the thread<br />

of doubt in the hero's mind, and, in turn, transferred t()<br />

the viewer's mind, that what has transpired may well<br />

have occurred in yet another way. The Michael Safra-<br />

Speva Films coproduction lists Henri Baum as production<br />

manager and Serge Friedman as director, the latter conveying<br />

a mood only rarely encountered in this genre.<br />

For starring principals, they have Jacques Riberolles, as<br />

a pianist, newly arrived on the scene of his late magician<br />

father's tent show, falling in love with identical twins,<br />

Alice and Ellen Kessler, the latter participating in an act<br />

of illusion. Riberolles finds his attention drawn to both<br />

girls, the girls quarrel over his affection, and there's a<br />

suicide.<br />

Jacques Riberolles, Alice Kessler, Ellen Kessler,<br />

Ginette LeClerc. Jean Mercure, Daniel Sorano.<br />

The reviews on these poges moy be filed for future<br />

loose-leaf binder; (2) individually, by company, in<br />

GUIDE three-ring, pocket-siie binder. The latter,<br />

may be obtained from Associated Publicotioni,<br />

reference in any of the following ways: (1) in any standard three-ring<br />

ony rtondard 3x5 card index file; or (3) in the BOXOFflCE PICTURE<br />

Including a year's supply of booking and doily business record sheets,<br />

825 Van Brunt Blvd., Kansas City 24, Mo., for $1.00, pottage paid.<br />

2752<br />

BOXOFFICE BookinGuide July 29, 1963 2751


FEATURE REVIEWS Story Synopsis; Exploifips; Adiines for Newspaper and Programs<br />

TIIESTOKY:<br />

"The Checkered Has" iMPI)<br />

In Scbring. Fla.. an unfaithful, alcoholic wife conceives<br />

a plan to murder her playboy, millionaire husband, who is<br />

a racmg enthusiast. She connives with one of her lovers am<br />

who loses courage and fails to consummate the plan. She ',"" '<br />

hires a skillful young driver she has seen on TV, who has<br />

raced against her husband, to attempt to kill him in a<br />

racing accident. Tlie second attempt fails also, but the<br />

driver brawls with the husband and their enmity grows<br />

when they clash at a druiiken party involving other<br />

women. In a strange and ironic ending the millionaire<br />

dies in a wreck, but the wife and her young accomplice<br />

are injured and crippled for life.<br />

EXPLOITIPS:<br />

Decorate marquee, front and lobby with racing pennants<br />

and checkered flags: offer a free trip to the annual<br />

Sebring races, in Sebring, Fla.. through promotion of a<br />

contest: post lucky numbers in a display in lobby and rim<br />

some license numbers every day in advance campaign; use<br />

some of the many novelties available in pressbook.<br />

CATCHLCSES:<br />

The Thrill-a-Minute Story of Men Behind the Wheel<br />

. . Fighting for Sharp Curves and Soft Shoulders!<br />

.<br />

. . . Thundering Wheels . . . Screaming Tires . . . and the<br />

World's Most Daring Drivers ... A Thundering Story of<br />

the Race Tracks


. . Guaranteed to sell . . .<br />

|<br />

ATES: 20: per word, minimum $2.00, cash with copy. Four consecutive insertions for price<br />

{ three. CLOSING DATE: Monday noon preceding pubhcation date. Send copy and<br />

answers to Box Numbers to BOXOF7ICE, 825 Van Brunt Blvd., Kansas City 24, Mo. •<br />

HELP WANTED<br />

SALESMAN wanted to represent firm<br />

,elhng outdoor advertising in conjunction<br />

w^ith ihealre display frame service. Opportunity<br />

to build for future. Exclusive terri-<br />

;ory available. Contact Romar-Vide Co.,<br />

;^hetek, Wisconsin.<br />

NOWl Opportunity for aggressive, conjcientious,<br />

experienced manager. Indoor<br />

and outdoor operation. Armstrong Circuit,<br />

In c.. P.O. Box 337. Bowling Green. Ohio.<br />

Wanted: Aggressive, experienced theatre<br />

manager, Man or woman for new conventional<br />

theatre to open eclrly fall, near<br />

Wilmington, Delaware. Art house experience<br />

desirpble. Excellent opportunity for<br />

a long term career with established circuit.<br />

Write background details to: Capitol<br />

Theatre, Box 567, Dover, Del.<br />

POSITIONS WANTED<br />

Manager or supervisor. Experienced,<br />

family man, sober. Conventional or drivein.<br />

Available two week. BOXOFFICE,<br />

9691<br />

Experienced, mature theatre manager.<br />

Good at promotions, exploitation and<br />

gimmicks. Either drive-in or conventional<br />

theatre. Good references, prefer Midwest.<br />

BOXOFFICE, 9695.<br />

Projectionist, 30 years experience. Also<br />

maintenance, janitor man, non-union. Married,<br />

wants yecrr 'round job. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>,<br />

9711.<br />

Commission sales position in Florida.<br />

Promotions, advertising, etc. Available in<br />

October. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9708.<br />

Projectionist. 33 years repair and maintenance<br />

of booth and sound. Go any pla'ce<br />

now (have ticket)! <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9707.<br />

Projectionist and technical supervisor.<br />

Expert on 35mm, well experienced on<br />

70mm, capable of complete booth installations.<br />

Twenty years experience, best of<br />

references. Single, reliable, sober and<br />

dependable. Will travel. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9706.<br />

Wanted: Job as projectionist! 30 yecfrs<br />

experience booth maintenance. Indoor<br />

house preferred. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9712.<br />

BUSINESS STIMULATORS<br />

Bingo, more action $4.50 M cards. Other<br />

games available, on, off screen. Novelty<br />

Gomes Co., 106 Rogers Ave., Brooklyn,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Build attendance with real Hawaiian<br />

orchids. Few cents each. Write Flowers oi<br />

Hawaii, 670 S. Lafayette Place, Los Angeles<br />

5, Calif.<br />

Bingo Caids. Die cut 1, 75-500 combinations.<br />

1, 100-200 combinations. Can be<br />

used for KENO, $4.50 per M. Premium<br />

Products, 339 West 44th St., New York<br />

36, N. Y.<br />

Burlesk or Exploitation features (35mm)<br />

available. Mack Enterprises, Centralia,<br />

Illinois.<br />

BUY! SELL! TRADE!<br />

FIND<br />

HELP OR POSITION<br />

Through<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

Classified Advertising<br />

Greatest Coverage in<br />

Field at<br />

Lowest Cost<br />

Per Reader<br />

the<br />

4 insertions for the price of 3<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

GENERAL EQUIPMENT—NEW<br />

SAVE S92.001 Brand new BB-66 Simplex<br />

iniermittent movements, only $100. Independ-ent<br />

Theatre Supply, 2750 East Houston,<br />

San Antonio 2, Texas.<br />

GENERAL EQUIPMENT—USED<br />

Lamphou^es, Magnarc. Simplex Hi-<br />

Slrong, also Standard Simplex mechanisms<br />

and a pair of Wenzel mechanisms,<br />

also pair supports for 5-point bases (new),<br />

bargains. LOU WALTERS SALES AND<br />

SERVICE CO., 4207 Lawnview Ave., Dallas<br />

27, Texas,<br />

For Sale: All steel frame movie screen,<br />

65x120'. Practically new\ Dismantled and<br />

marKed for easy erection. Blue prints available.<br />

Approximate v/eight 25 tons! Cohen<br />

& Green Salvage Co., Fayetteviile, N. Car.<br />

Ph: 433-3171.<br />

All equipment lor sale. $2,000. Contact;<br />

W. M, Hession, Sunset, La. Phone; 662-<br />

5230.<br />

Theatre closingl Must sell all equipment<br />

including Bodiform seats. Best offer.<br />

Will separate. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9705.<br />

EQUIPMENT WANTED<br />

Wanted: Used theatre booth equipment.<br />

We dismantle. LEON JARODSKY, Paris,<br />

111.<br />

Equipment and scope lenses wantedl<br />

35mm FILMS for sale. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9697.<br />

Wanted: Projection equiiinient. Highest<br />

prices paid! LOU WALTERS SALES &<br />

SERVICE CO., 4207 Lawnview Ave., Dallcfs<br />

27, Texas.<br />

Wanted: Tube type, selenium or silicon<br />

rectifiers, 70-135 amp. Also 100-135 amp<br />

lamps. Harry Meicher Enterprises, 3238<br />

West Fond Du Lac Ave., Milwaukee 10,<br />

Wise. Ph: HI 2-5020.<br />

Wanted: Used theatre equipment. Frank<br />

Rogers, 1122 Winton, Speedway, Indiana.<br />

EQUIPMENT FOR SALE<br />

HEAVY DUTY bases, Magnarc lamps,<br />

Super-Simplex heads, RCA sound, 18'<br />

magazines, B-L scope lenses guaranteed,<br />

$995. Strong-Simplex HI lamps, $99 pr.<br />

Simplex 50 amp rectifiers, $99 pr. Bases,<br />

heads, soundheads cheap. Thousands of<br />

Powers parts. Richard DeToto, 550 S.<br />

Salina St , Syracuse, New York,<br />

EQUIPMENT REPAIRING<br />

All makes, all models projection equipment<br />

repaired. LOU WALTERS SALES 6<br />

SERVICE CO., 4207 LAWNVIEW AVE.,<br />

DALLAS 27. TEXAS.<br />

GATORHIDE your broken reflector. Save!<br />

Kwik-shipped kit; $2.95 postpaid. GATOR-<br />

HIDE, Box 1271, loplin. Mo.<br />

SOUND-PROJECTION<br />

MAINTENANCE MANUAL &<br />

MONTHLY SERVICE BULLETINS<br />

STOP—LOOK—LISTEN: You can SAVE<br />

$$ in vour projection room operation. You<br />

can obtain better projection and sound<br />

quality if you own copy of Trout's Sound<br />

& Projection Loose-Leaf Service Manual<br />

and MONTHLY SERVICE BULLETINS.<br />

Used by leading theatre circuits, projec-<br />

ONE ONLY: GIANT 800,000,000 CANDLE-<br />

POWER GE Searchlight, generator mounted<br />

on I'A-ton truck. Newly overhauled. tionists, managers, theatre-owners, NA-<br />

American Searchlight Advertising, 1945 TIONALLY, Covers New Transistors Sound<br />

Staunton Rd., Cleveland 18, Ohio. Ph.: 216<br />

—FA 1-1795.<br />

Systems, New Xenon lamps, screens, projectors,<br />

arc lamps, rectifiers, generators,<br />

sound heads, speakers, etc. Pictures,<br />

Schematics. Only $7.50 cash, check or<br />

PO. No CO ds. Edited by the writer. Over<br />

25 years of experience in servicing and<br />

repairing. Send TODAY at special price,<br />

$7.50; includes monthly bulletins. Wesley<br />

Trout, Editor, Publisher, Box 575, Enid,<br />

Oklahoma.<br />

THEATRE TICKETS<br />

Prompt Service. Special printed roll tickets,<br />

100.000, $40,75; 10.000, $13.75; 2,000,<br />

$5.95. Each change in admission price, including<br />

change in color, $4.75 extra. Double<br />

numbering extra. F.O.B. Kansas City,<br />

Mo. Cash with order. Kansas City Ticket<br />

Co,, Dept. 11, 109 W. 18th Street, Kansas<br />

City 8. Mo.<br />

INTERMISSION TAPES<br />

.<br />

Drive-In'a: Increase your snack bar receipts<br />

. . . Pre-show and intermission tapes<br />

that sparkle<br />

Personalized . . . Free sample. Commercial<br />

Sound Service, P. O. Box 199, Cheyenne.<br />

Wyoming.<br />

cuiiRine HOUSE<br />

THEATRES FOR SALE<br />

We&t Coast theatres ior sale. Write lor<br />

list. Theatre Exchange Company, 260<br />

Kearney Street, San Francisco 8, California.<br />

300-car drive-in, south central Kentucky.<br />

Large drav/ing area, no competition, showing<br />

25% net profit yearly. Price, $60,000<br />

Only interested persons need apply. <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

9681.<br />

Bargoinl S0'xl20' steel and concrete<br />

theatre in Mission near Vancouver, B.C.<br />

$35,000, $5,000 cash, balance 10 years. S.<br />

A. Lechtizier, 945 Granville, Vancouver,<br />

B.C.. CANADA-<br />

New drive-in theatre, first season.<br />

Partners disagree. Northwestern<br />

BOXOFFICE, 9694.<br />

Ohio.<br />

For sale: Theatres in small towns in<br />

Florida) Good for family operations. 20%<br />

down. If interested call or write: Harlow<br />

Land, Mayo, Florida. Phone: 794-3721.<br />

For sale: 600 seat indoor theatre, No.<br />

Central Minnesota. County seat in heart<br />

of tourist area. All equipment in excellent<br />

condition, large growing territory. L, E.<br />

Belief euille, Aitkin, Minn.<br />

For sale: 300-car drive-in theatre in<br />

Southwest Louisiana! Year-round operation.<br />

Priced to sell as owner has other<br />

interest. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9698.<br />

SELL building, will GIVE you equipment.<br />

Retiring, family operation. Vanlaningham<br />

Business Brokers. Anderson, Ind.<br />

For Sale: 300-seat indoor theatre, adjoining<br />

office space for rent. Good family<br />

operation. In Fort St. John area of Peace<br />

River country on Alaskan Highway mile<br />

37. Lux Theatre, Box 26, Taylor, B.C.,<br />

Canada.<br />

For Sale: Oklahoma, 300-car drive-in:<br />

400-seat indoor. Combination makes ideal<br />

year operation. Large trade territory, ideal<br />

family operation doing nice business.<br />

Must sell immediately to settle an estate<br />

Some terms. Box 630, Bristow, Okla.<br />

250-car-drive-in, in progressive irrigated<br />

farming district in West Texas. XL-Simplex<br />

equipment In A-1 condition. Reason for<br />

selling, other business interests. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>,<br />

9704.<br />

Open and operating theatre! 1,260 seats,<br />

air conditioned, CinemaScope, Stereophonic,<br />

large concession stand, parking<br />

lot on grounds for 150 cars. Population cily<br />

32,000. Only interested persons need reply.<br />

Victor A. Maunn, c/o Park Theatre,<br />

Houmq, La.<br />

200-car drive-in theatre. Opened 1953<br />

1,500 sq, ft. brick veneer house. 1,500 sq.<br />

ft, brick and tile cafe, both built 1962.<br />

Cafe fully equipped. On 5.8 acres. Sacrifice<br />

due to illness, $36,000. Joe D. Blinka.<br />

Schulenburg, Texas.<br />

THEATRES WANTED<br />

Wanted to Buy or Lease: Indoor theatre<br />

in metropolitan areas, population at<br />

least 75,000. Contact William Berger,<br />

Metropole Hotel, Cincinnati, Chio.<br />

Wanted to Buy or Lease: Indoor theatre<br />

in Metropolitan area. Population at least<br />

200,000. Contact Harry Wald, 506 Si.<br />

Charles St., St. Louis, Mo.<br />

Buy. leasel Indoor, outdoor Florida Theatre.<br />

Ample finances. BOXOFTICE, 9592.<br />

Small town theatre vranted. Prefer Cali<br />

forma. Open or closed. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9702.<br />

Buy or lease drive-in in Florida. Must<br />

gross over $30,000. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9709.<br />

Drive-in in southwestern Michigan. Have<br />

one, want two. <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9710.<br />

THEATRES FOR LEASE<br />

Modern theatre, seating 600. Located in<br />

established shopping center in hig[hest income<br />

section of city of 70,000; with Metropolitan<br />

area population of 250.000; in<br />

Memphis exchange territory. Present owner<br />

retiring from business. Only responsible<br />

theatre operators need reply. No agents or<br />

brokers. Reply, <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, 9701.<br />

For Lease: Modern theatre, 750 seats,<br />

fully equipped, excellent location. Moderate<br />

rent, population city and suburban<br />

over 600,000. Available now. NEWPORT<br />

DEV. CORP., 201 Lenox Ave., Norfolk, Va.<br />

THEATRE SEATING<br />

We specialize in rebuilding opera chairs.<br />

Our 40 years experience is your guarantee.<br />

Factory trained men do the job<br />

properly. Write for our low prices. We go<br />

anywhere. Sewed covers to fit your seats,<br />

$1.65 each. Chicago Used Chair Mart, 829<br />

So. State St., Chicago 5, Illinois. Phone<br />

WEbster 9-4519.<br />

Specialists in rebuilding chairs. Best<br />

workmanship, reasonable prices. Have<br />

men, will travel. Neva Burn Products<br />

Corp., 262 South St., N.'.C.<br />

Do your seats need recovering? Latge<br />

selection—Low prices! No Tare leatherette,<br />

elastic back vinyls, corduroys, mohairs,<br />

nylons sold by yard or precut squares-<br />

Sewed covers priced from 95c- Write to<br />

Manko Fabrics. 49 West 38th. New York<br />

18. N. Y. for complete samples and price<br />

lists.<br />

1.336 Bodiiorm. 8,000 plywood seals. Lone<br />

Star Sealing, Box 1734, Dallas, Texas.<br />

POPCORN MACHINES<br />

Brand new counter model, all electric.<br />

Capacity, hundred portions per hour,<br />

$199.00. Replacement kettles all machines<br />

120 S. Hoisted, Chicago 6, 111.<br />

ANTI-THEFT<br />

SPEAKER PROTECTION<br />

ANTI-THEFT SPEAKER CABLE PRICE RE-<br />

DUCED! Protect your speakers-heaters for<br />

less than 75c per unitl Complete satisfaction<br />

reported by chains and exhibitors.<br />

Write; Speaker Security Company, 1650<br />

Willow, Hoboken, N.J.<br />

Handy<br />

Order<br />

BOXOrnCE:<br />

825 Van Brunt Blvd.,<br />

Kansas City 24, Mo.<br />

Subscription<br />

Form<br />

Please enter my subscription to<br />

BOXOFFICE, 52 issues per year<br />

(13 of which contain The MODERN<br />

THEATRE Section).<br />

$3.00 FOR 1 YEAH<br />

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Q Remittance Enclosed<br />

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THEATRE<br />

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POSITION<br />

July 29. 1963<br />

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I<br />

BUY<br />

When you get from $1.70 to $2.46 worth of abaolute<br />

value for each dollar you spend in trade paper advertising<br />

to U.S.A. and Canadian exhibitors, your best bet is obviouHj<br />

—and beyond any sound argument.<br />

THE<br />

^ ou uclualiy gel from 70% to 146% greatiT coverage of INorlh<br />

American exhibitors—theatre owners, managers, circuit executive*<br />

—the people who do the buying—through B

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