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Boxoffice-January.28.1963

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FEBRUARY 18, 1963<br />

/he TuUe or ine m&ti&tL rMkly at tii Von Brunt Blvd. Kcvv<br />

City, Mo. SubKriplion rolM Sactionol<br />

•n. t3 00 par ywir; Notwool Edition, |7 SO.<br />

NATIONAL EXECUTIVE EDITION<br />

latMtnf Uw tatlOMl Nran P((« « An tillloni<br />

Change of<br />

Policies<br />

On Films to TV<br />

— Page 4


!<br />

# ^<br />

WE'RE NOT KNOCKING<br />

FORT KNOX!<br />

THERE'S gold in them thar vaults<br />

BUT weVe got a gold-mine for you too!<br />

WE recently predicted that<br />

TWO of the screen's greatest entertainments<br />

"SHOW BOAT" and "THE GREAT CARUSO"<br />

ARE destined to be among this year's<br />

TOP money-winners!<br />

WE screened them for the trade press<br />

TO see again the star-wealth and music-glory!<br />

TRADE press reaction sensational!<br />

EXHIBITOR response is<br />

terrific!<br />

HURRY! Call, write, visit your nearest<br />

M-G-M Independent Distributor<br />

GET ready<br />

GREAT<br />

PERFORMANCES<br />

AVA GARDNER<br />

HOWARD KEEL<br />

KATHARINE GRAYSON<br />

MARGE and<br />

GOWER CHAMPION<br />

M-G-M p..,.-..<br />

SHOW BOAT<br />

Sfarnng<br />

KATHRYN. AVA .HOWARD<br />

GRAYSON GARDNER KEEL<br />

JOE E. BROWN -MARGE'and GOWER CHAMPION<br />

ROBERT STERLING • AGNES MOOREHEAD<br />

WILLIAM WARFIELD<br />

cotob, TECHNICOLOR<br />

'<br />

Fram Id* lmM«#tal MutKol Play SmQW BOAr by<br />

JEROME KERN ond OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN, II<br />

«.•.


.Equipment<br />

—<br />

me 7ii^ oft/ie y?i&&on T^ictuJie //idiUPi//<br />

THE NATIONAL FILM WEEKLY<br />

Published in Nine Sectional Editions<br />

BEN SHLYEN<br />

Editor-in-Chief and Publisher<br />

DONALD M. MERSEREAU, Associote<br />

Publisher & General Manager<br />

JESSE SHLYEN . . . .Monaging Editor<br />

HUGH FRAZE Field Editor<br />

AL STEEN Eostern Editor<br />

I. L. THATCHER. .<br />

Editor<br />

MORRIS SCHLOZMAN Business Mgr.<br />

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

Kansas City a-l. Mo. Jesse Stoijen. Maoagiiig<br />

Editor; Jlorrls ScJilozman. Business<br />

Majiager; llueh KraM. tield Editor; 1. L.<br />

Ifiatcher, Editor 'llie .Modern Theatre<br />

Section. Teleiilionc CUestnut 1-7777.<br />

Editorial Offices: 1270 Slitli Ave., Kockelelier<br />

t'euter. New Vorli 20, N. V. Donald<br />

M. Mersereau. Associate Publisher &<br />

Ueneral Manager; Al Steen. Eastern Editor.<br />

Telephone CUlumbus 5-6370.<br />

Central Offices: Editorial— 920 N. Michigan<br />

Ave., Chicago 11. ill., i'rauces B.<br />

tlovv. Telephone superior 7-3a72. Advertising—580S<br />

North Lincoln. Louis Uidier<br />

and Jack Broderick. Telephone LUiigbeach<br />

1-5284.<br />

Western Offices: liMitoriul and Film Advertising—63ti2<br />

lluilyuood Blvd., Hollywood<br />

2S, lal, Syil t:.i.«yd. Telepliune Hollywood<br />

0-iiSll. Kiiuipmenl and Non-Film<br />

Adverlisine—New Voi k Ule Bldg., 2S01<br />

West SLMh St., Liis Angeles 37, Calit.<br />

Boh Wcttstein. manager. Telephone UL'nkirk<br />

S-228U.<br />

London Office: Anthony Gruiier. 1 Woodberry<br />

Way. Finchiey. No. 12. Telephone<br />

Hillside 6733.<br />

The MODEUN TIIEATltE Section is Included<br />

in the first issue of each month.<br />

Atlanta: Jean Mollis, i'. U. Box 1695.<br />

Albany: J. S. Conners, 140 State St.<br />

Baitimuie: Ueorge Browning, lit) E.<br />

25th St.<br />

Boston: tiuy Livingston, 80 Buylston,<br />

Boston, Mass.<br />

Cliarlottc: Blanche L'arr. 301 S. Church.<br />

Cincinnati: Frances Uanford, UNiverslty<br />

1-7180.<br />

Cleveland: W. Waid Marsh, I'lain Dealer.<br />

Columbus: Fred Oestreicher, 52 V4 W.<br />

North Broadway.<br />

DalUs: Mable (iulnan, 5927 Whiton.<br />

Denver: Bruce Marshall. 2881 8. Cherry<br />

Way.<br />

Des Moines: I'at Cooney. 2727 49tb St.<br />

Detroit: II. F. Ileves, 906 Fox Theatre<br />

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

Hartford: Allen M. Widem, OH. 0-8211.<br />

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

lllhvols St.<br />

Jacksonville: llobert Cornwall, 1199 Edgewood<br />

Ave.<br />

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

.Mknii: .Martha l.ummus, 622 N.E. 98 St.<br />

.Milwaukee: \Vm. Nicliul. 2251 S. l,ayton.<br />

Minneapolis: I'aul Nelson, 3220 Park Ave.<br />

8.<br />

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

St. Claude Ave.<br />

Oklahoma City: Sam Brunk, 3416 N.<br />

Virginia.<br />

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

Philadelphia: Al Ziirawskl, The Bulletin.<br />

Pittsburgh: U. V. Kllngensmith. 516 Jeanette,<br />

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

Portlaiu], Ore.: Arnold Marks, Journal.<br />

Manchester. N.H.: (Juy L.uigley. 320<br />

Phle street.<br />

St. Louts: Joe k Joan Pollack. 7335<br />

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

Salt liAke City: H. Pearson. Deseret News.<br />

San Francisco: Dolores Barusch, 25 Tay*<br />

lor St.. OKdway 3-4813; Advertising:<br />

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

2-9537<br />

Washington: Virginia li. Collier. 2308<br />

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

In Canada<br />

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

Jules Larochelle.<br />

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

Toronto: 2675 Baytlew Ave., Wlllowdale,<br />

Got. W. Gladlsh.<br />

Vancouver: 411 L.yrlc Ttieatre Bldg. 761<br />

GranvUle St., Jack Droy.<br />

Winnipeg: The Tribune. Jim I'eters.<br />

Member Audit Bureau of Circulations<br />

Second Cla.>!s postage paid at Kansas City,<br />

Mo. Sectional Edition. }3 00 per yetr.<br />

National Edition. $7.50<br />

FEBRUARY<br />

Vol. 82<br />

1 8, 19 6 3<br />

No. 17<br />

i<br />

SEVERE enough competition was created<br />

1H£ lASl S1RA\N<br />

for<br />

theatres by film company sales of pre-194u<br />

product to television and when post-"-f8 pictures<br />

were added to the lists. The competition was<br />

increased when the cream of the latter product,<br />

much of which had strong value for reissue in<br />

theatres, began hitting TV screens. Then came<br />

what might be called "the last straw"—the<br />

breakover into post-1960 product shown on TV<br />

prime time on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays.<br />

It<br />

may have been an "urgent economic necessity"<br />

at the first stage of picture companies selling<br />

their vintage films to television and when,<br />

at the same time, the promise was made that<br />

the funds thus derived would be used to increase<br />

theatrical product. Remember? But did that<br />

process of creating and increasing undue competition<br />

for their theatre customers have to be<br />

carried to the point where choice films began<br />

to be made available to TV?<br />

As letters from exhibitors, published in <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

over a long period of time, and in this<br />

issue, have pointed out, this has had a disastrous<br />

effect on their abilities to stay in business.<br />

Hundreds of others have had to close their<br />

doors. Yet, instead of lessening this unorthodox<br />

practice, its severity has been increased by film<br />

companies permitting comparatively recent releases<br />

to be shown on TV at prime time—in<br />

direct conflict with the showtimes of the vast<br />

majority of theatres.<br />

John Stembler, president of Theatre Owners<br />

of America, has made an appeal, on behalf of<br />

exhibitors in general, to film company presidents<br />

asking them to review their present policies<br />

regarding the sale of films to television. He<br />

urges them, in their own self-interest, to immediately<br />

take appropriate steps, "before the industry<br />

reaches the point of no return." That point may<br />

be closer than anyone may think. Witness, the<br />

hundreds of darkened theatres that stand as stark<br />

evidence; and also the number of recent pictures<br />

that have failed to return their investments, let<br />

alone a profit, as a result of the decimation of<br />

theatre<br />

attendance by the showings of theatrical<br />

films on television. And, with the greater competition<br />

that, now, is being created by the prime<br />

time showing of newer ])i(-tures. as well as less<br />

recent ones, it requires no imaginalioti to see<br />

how harmful this can be to all of the industry.<br />

In fact, this already has been proven bv experience.<br />

Through the years, dating hack to the very<br />

beginning of this industry, the weekends have<br />

provided it with its biggest volume of attendance.<br />

I'sually, the best films are shown on those day^<br />

and, often, at higher admission prices. That<br />

period of each and every week is of vital importance<br />

to film companies, as well as to exhibitors—more<br />

so now than ever before.<br />

In fact,<br />

for the past several years, a great number of<br />

theatres have been operating ONLY WEEK-<br />

E.NDS. Should it, therefore, be necessary to<br />

ask: What will happen, not just to those theatres,<br />

but to the entire business—if film companies<br />

persist in supphing television with product<br />

for prime time on Saturdays, Sundays and<br />

Mondays? . .<br />

Paramount's New Program<br />

The outlook for an increased output of qualitv<br />

product is considerably brightened by the recent<br />

announcement by Paramount Pictures that its<br />

production program for 196.3-64 will be greatly<br />

accelerated. Thus, not only will the company<br />

have more pictures for the ensuing year, it is<br />

working to get them to the finish line and into<br />

release, also at a stepped-up rate. As an instance<br />

of this. Barney Balaban, president and Jack<br />

Karp, vice-president and studio head, have informed<br />

that 11 pictures, currently are in active<br />

stages of production, with five<br />

of major calibre<br />

to start filming during the first (|uarter of this<br />

year.<br />

This represents a substantial increase over<br />

Paramount's production status in the same periixl<br />

of last<br />

year.<br />

While the company has concluded deals with<br />

Samuel Bronston and Joseph Levine for joint<br />

production of several outstanding properties,<br />

with negotiations underway for others, the<br />

brightened outlook is further underlined bv the<br />

news that Paramounts own studios will be<br />

more heavily engaged in filming activity than in<br />

the past several years.<br />

Further noteworthy is the company's lineup<br />

of films based on best-seller novels, popular<br />

stage plays and original stories, all of which<br />

have been placed in such expert productional<br />

hands as those of Hal Wallis. John Ford. Melville<br />

Slia\elson. Paul Jones. Jack Rose, among others.<br />

And featuring such topliners as John Wayne.<br />

Jerry Lewis. William Holden, Frank Sinatra.<br />

Dean Martin. Paul iNewman, Audrey Hepburn,<br />

Natalie Wood. Shelley Winters and Janet Leigh.<br />

The combinations implicit therein augur well<br />

for the future.<br />

But Paramount is not overlooking<br />

ibf needs for the present and more immediate<br />

future, as indicated b) Mr. Balaban"s statement<br />

that he was highly optimistic about the six pictures<br />

on which |iholograpliy has biHMi completed<br />

and are currently in preparation for early re-<br />

U^ase.<br />

This all adds up to providitig exhibitors with<br />

the prime essentials to busitiess betterment<br />

bctler pictures and more of them.<br />

\JL^ /OOUL/Z^l'^


STEMBLER ASKS DISTRIBUTION<br />

TO REVIEW TV FILM POLICIES<br />

TOA President's Plea<br />

In the Interest<br />

of<br />

Entire Industry<br />

NEW YORK—Heads of the major distributing<br />

companies were mged to review<br />

their present poUcies regarding the sale of<br />

pictures to tele\ision in a letter sent to<br />

them by John H. Stembler, president of<br />

Theatre Owners of America. He further<br />

asked that distribution provide the necessary<br />

insurance that, in the future, such<br />

sales would not affect adversely the multimillion<br />

dollar investments in current production.<br />

"It is in your own self-interest that appropriate<br />

steps be taken immediately, before<br />

the industry reaches the point of no<br />

return," Stembler wrote.<br />

The distributors were asked to carefully<br />

read again the language used by Judge<br />

Yankwich in the case of U.S. vs. 20th Century-Pox.<br />

the so-called 16mm case. The<br />

government had charged that producers<br />

and distributors were violating the antitrust<br />

laws by, in conspiracy, refusing to<br />

license 16mm films to nontheatrical users.<br />

The court found that no conspiracy existed<br />

and that the refusal to license was a<br />

reasonable restrictive procedui-e.<br />

Stembler pointed out that Judge Yankwich<br />

had enumerated some pertinent and<br />

significant facts which he considered<br />

sound motivating forces in the decision not<br />

to release their product to nontheatrical<br />

users, nor to television. These facts were:<br />

1. "The desire to protect tlie interest of<br />

the producers in the chief source from<br />

which their income was derived—the<br />

regular admission-charging theatres—and<br />

to prevent the ruinous effect on it of overlapping<br />

non-commercial exhibition of substandard<br />

ISmm films.<br />

2. "The need to protect the unique and<br />

incalculable value of the producers' backlog<br />

for reissuance and remaking, rather<br />

than dilute, dissipate and exhaust it and<br />

destroy the stories from which the pictures<br />

were made by a quickly accelerated exploitation<br />

through other than theatrical<br />

mean.s—including television.<br />

3. "The insignificance of the revenue to<br />

be derived presently from other than theatre<br />

exploitation as compared with the<br />

losses, some predictable and some unpredictable,<br />

which the wider exploitation<br />

would entail."<br />

Stembler reminded the distributors that,<br />

in 1958, Sindlinger & Co. had prepared a<br />

factual survey on the effect of pre- 1948<br />

films on the industry. The evidence was<br />

conclusive, he said, adding that since then<br />

pictures of recent release had been made<br />

available to television.<br />

"We have enough overall competition for<br />

the amusement dollar," Stembler wrote.<br />

"The added competition of almost-current<br />

attractions makes it almost impossible<br />

to get a very selective audience into our<br />

theatres. After all, why should they pay<br />

Lefko Succeeds Mochrie<br />

As MGM Sales Manager<br />

NEW YORK — Resignation of Robert<br />

Mochrie as general sales manager of<br />

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the appointment<br />

of Morris Lefko as his successor were<br />

developments that followed the recent election<br />

of Robert H. O'Brien as president.<br />

There were indications last week that other<br />

executive changes were on the horizon, although<br />

they may not be "immediate," according<br />

to one reliable source.<br />

Lefko joined MGM in July 1960 when he<br />

took over the domestic distribution of "Ben-<br />

Hur." He started in the film business in the<br />

RKO Cleveland exchange and was named<br />

Indianapolis branch manager in 1941,<br />

Pittsburgh branch manager in 1945 and<br />

east-central district manager in 1948, a<br />

post he held until 1956. He was vice-president<br />

in charge of sales on "Around the<br />

World in 80 Days" for the Mike Todd organization<br />

and handled special sales on<br />

"The Ten Commandments" and "War and<br />

Peace" for Paramount. Following "Ben-<br />

Hur," he supervised the distribution of<br />

"King of Kings" and "Mutiny on the<br />

Bounty."<br />

when they can see something comparable<br />

in their own homes at no cost?<br />

"The potential of solid boxoffice is<br />

greater than ever with an increasing population<br />

and an unprecedented construction<br />

and modernization theatre program."<br />

In conclusion, Stembler said: "Your decision<br />

is one of economics and not of<br />

legality."<br />

Recent Films to TV Hit<br />

At Texas Convention<br />

Dallas—A resolution, termed "Sunday<br />

Night Suicide," opposing the sale<br />

of recently released films to TV, was<br />

drafted at the Texas Drive-In Theatre<br />

Owners Ass'n annual convention.<br />

Specifically mentioned was the Sunday<br />

night showing of "Magnificent Seven."<br />

Other resolutions passed expressed<br />

opposition to the shortage of product,<br />

roadshows and extended runs, sales<br />

policies, methods of distribution that<br />

discriminate against drive-ins obtaining<br />

first runs, toll TV and more<br />

censorship.<br />

Resolutions were approved for more<br />

research, better relationship between<br />

exhibition and production-distribution,<br />

and a vote of thanks for companies and<br />

individuals who helped make the 1963<br />

convention a success.<br />

Morris Lefko<br />

Robert Mochrie<br />

Mochrie joined MGM in April 1957,<br />

launching "Ben-Hur" roadshows. He became<br />

vice-president and general sales<br />

manager in 1960. Previously, he had been<br />

general sales manager of RKO Radio Pictures<br />

and vice-president in chai-ge of domestic<br />

distribution. Later, he became vicepresident<br />

in charge of sales for Samuel<br />

Goldwyn Productions. He also has held executive<br />

p>osts with Producers Distributing<br />

Corp., Warner Bros, and United Artists.<br />

Reddick Is Vice-President<br />

Of W. J. German, Inc.<br />

NEW YORK—William J. Reddick has<br />

been elected vice-president of W. J. German.<br />

Inc., agent for the sale and distribution<br />

of Eastman professional motion picture<br />

film.<br />

Reddick has been on the sales staff of<br />

the Gentian company since 1952. Pi-eviously,<br />

he was with J. E. Bnilatour, Inc.,<br />

in a similar capacity for five years, having<br />

joined that organization after 11 years<br />

with the Eastman Kodak Co. in Rochester,<br />

N.Y.<br />

In addition to company responsibilities,<br />

Reddick actively participates in New York<br />

Variety Club, Tent No. 35: International<br />

Radio and Television Society, Will Rogers<br />

Hospital and the Society of Motion Pictures<br />

and Television EIngineers.<br />

Clarence Hill Quits Fox<br />

NEW YORK—Clarence Hill, director of<br />

branch operations for 20th Centui-y-Fox,<br />

has resigned after 37 years with the company.<br />

He had headed branch operations<br />

since 1947.<br />

Hill entered the film industry with Universal<br />

in 1920 and later moved to Samuel<br />

Goldwyn Productions. He started with Fox<br />

Film Corp. as assistant short subjects sales<br />

manager and next was placed in charge of<br />

the playdate department. Subsequently, he<br />

was Toronto branch manager, assistant<br />

eastern sales manager and head of circuit<br />

sales in New York.<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


Prc-sem<br />

DVOrc^<br />

,<br />

To<br />

JOSEPH E<br />

JOSEPH E.<br />

LEVINE presents<br />

CR(|V1E DOES<br />

NOT PAV"<br />

An Embassy Pictures Release<br />

LEVINE present!<br />

««/«<br />

CONS'IMIINE<br />

AMI<br />

THE CROSS"<br />

EASTMANCOLOR<br />

^"'-.p/c.,. .. V'6<br />

"•es Re/eas,<br />

K<br />

"^'"^esfte/ea<br />

'OSEPH E.<br />

LEVINE<br />

Pf^esents<br />

mi ^^Wu<br />

'N<br />

COLOR<br />

^''""''":r'''«-e. Re/ease<br />

7^


.<br />

Buena Vista Celebrating 10th Year;<br />

To Have Eight Releases in 1963<br />

NEW YORK—Buena Vista this year is<br />

celebratiiiB lit; i>^ its tenth i/CTiii-ii year as a distributor<br />

. ,. .<br />

V<br />

Irving<br />

'<br />

Ludwig<br />

of Walt Disney product<br />

and has lined up<br />

1<br />

^ strong slate of<br />

pjf' i \ I eight releases. Irving<br />

•<br />

''Ludwig, president,<br />

said at a press luncheon<br />

at "21" here<br />

Ihursday il4i. Ludwis<br />

said that in his<br />

b 1 'J.<br />

a e s t production<br />

^^^ schedule to date. Dis-<br />

^ *<br />

^^M ney had no two pictures<br />

that fell into<br />

the same category<br />

and that Buena<br />

Vista's accelerated release pattern had the<br />

added challenge of newness in every picture.<br />

He said the 1963 keynote was diversity<br />

but that the standard of quality remained<br />

unchanged.<br />

The year started off with "Iii Search of<br />

the Castaways" w-hich proved to be a success,<br />

Ludwig stated, and now "Son of<br />

Plubber" is doing outstanding business.<br />

"Fantasia" will be rereleased nationally in<br />

October in theatres fully equipped with the<br />

modern surround-sound equipment needed<br />

to do it full .iustice, he said. It was "Fantasia"<br />

which raised the curtain on stereophonic<br />

sound in 1940. The film will have<br />

an advance engagement at the Chinese<br />

Theatre in Hollywood shortly.<br />

Ludwig said the big one for Easter would<br />

be "Miracle of the White Stallions," a story<br />

based on the rescue of the famous dancing<br />

horses of Vienna during World War II.<br />

was filmed in Technicolor on location in<br />

Austria with a cast headed by Robert Taylor,<br />

Lilli Palmer. Curt Jurgens, Eddie Albert<br />

and James Franciscus.<br />

In June. Buena Vista will release "Savage<br />

Sam," an adventui-e stoiT by the<br />

author of "Old Yeller." The July release<br />

will be "Summer Magic." with Hayley Mills<br />

becoming a teenager.<br />

For October-November. Buena Vista is<br />

bringing back "20,000 Leagues Under the<br />

Sea," and, for Christmas, the company will<br />

deliver "The Sword in the Stone," the first<br />

new cartoon feature from Disney in a long<br />

time, Ludwig said. Almost fom- years in<br />

the making, the picture relates how Merlin,<br />

the magician, guided King Arthur to the<br />

throne.<br />

Concluding his remarks, Ludwig said that<br />

1963 looked like the biggest year in Walt<br />

Disney-Buena Vista history, adding that<br />

the "first evidence already is in."<br />

Gehring Named Assistant<br />

Roadshow Sales Manager<br />

NEW YORK—William C. Gehring jr. has<br />

been appointed assistant to Joseph M.<br />

Sugar, 20th Centui-y-Fox roadshow sales<br />

manager. Until his appointment he held<br />

the post of St. Louis branch manager since<br />

July 1956.<br />

Gehring joined the company in 1954 as a<br />

salesman in the Pox Buffalo exchange. He<br />

is the son of the late W. C. Gehring, a<br />

former sales vice-president of the company.<br />

It<br />

Testimonial<br />

Luncheon<br />

To Boasberg Mar. 20<br />

New York—Charles Boasberg, newly<br />

named president of Paramount Film<br />

Distributing Corp., will be saluted at a<br />

testimonial luncheon to him in the<br />

Americana Hotel here on March 20.<br />

Presidents of all exhibitor organizations<br />

have been designated as honorary<br />

chairmen of the event. They are<br />

Jack Armstrong, Allied States Ass'n;<br />

Harry Brandt, Independent Theatre<br />

Owners Ass'n; William Forman, Southern<br />

California Theatre Owners Ass'n;<br />

Robert K. Shapiro, Metropolitan Motion<br />

Picture Theatres Ass'n, and John<br />

Stembler, Theatre Owners of America.<br />

In a joint statement, the honorary<br />

chairmen said:<br />

"There are few men in our industry<br />

who command the respect and admiration<br />

that Charlie Boasberg does. This<br />

must be attributed to the fact that he<br />

is a man of great honesty and integrity.<br />

His promotion to the highest position<br />

within Paramount's U.S. and<br />

Canadian sales organization is richly<br />

deserving of the greatest recognition<br />

by exhibitors everywhere."<br />

Stanley Warner to Mark<br />

10th Year With Drive<br />

NEW YORK — Stanley Warner will<br />

launch a tenth anniversaiy drive on March<br />

1 and will continue it for four months. To<br />

be known as the Dollar Drive, the campaign<br />

will concentrate on three main sources of<br />

income: boxoffice receipts, miscellaneous<br />

income and concession revenue, with emphasis<br />

on developing greater attendance.<br />

Prize money for winning managers will<br />

total $10,000 and there will be both national<br />

and local awards.<br />

The campaign was organized at a meeting<br />

of SW advertising men with Harry<br />

Goldberg, advertising and publicity chief,<br />

presiding. The men were addressed by<br />

Samuel Rosen, executive vice-president,<br />

and Harry Kalmine. vice-president and<br />

general manager.<br />

Attending the session were Jules Curley.<br />

Pittsburgh; Edgar Goth, Newark: Prank<br />

La Palce, Washington: Hanw Mintz, Milwaukee;<br />

Al Plough and Roy Robbins, Philadelphia,<br />

and Al Swett, New England.<br />

In addressing the meeting, Rosen said<br />

Stanley Warner was organized in 1953<br />

when the industry was at a low point but<br />

that it was gratifying to mark the tenth<br />

anniversary when the tide appeared to be<br />

turning in the circuit's favor.<br />

"Despite the fact that we have been hard<br />

pressed by new and irresponsible types of<br />

competition inside and outside of our industi-y,"<br />

Rosen said, "theatregoing is still<br />

a powerful, popular entertainment, if we<br />

give the public more frequent opportunities<br />

to see the pictures of their choice,<br />

rather than hold them back to satisfy the<br />

whims of producers."<br />

Ballantyne to Handle<br />

Norelco Projector<br />

OMAHA — A major theatre<br />

equipment<br />

sales agreement was announced February<br />

11 by North American Philips Co., Inc.,<br />

New York City, and Ballantyne Instruments<br />

and Electronics. Inc., of this city, the<br />

electronics division of ABC Vending Corp.<br />

Ballantyne will become the major distributor<br />

for the Norelco Model FP-20 projector.<br />

outlined by<br />

Terms of the agreement, as<br />

Niels Tuxen, general manager of the motion<br />

picture equipment division of North<br />

American Philips, and J. Robert Hoff, executive<br />

vice-president of Ballantyne, call<br />

for purchase by Ballantyne of a large number<br />

of Norelco 35mm projectors. In turn.<br />

North American Philips will purchase from<br />

Ballantyne certain assemblies and subassemblies<br />

for its projector line which Ballantyne<br />

will manufacture to Norelco specifications.<br />

It is reported that the agreement<br />

covered equipment in excess of a<br />

quarter-million dollars.<br />

Ballantyne will supply the projectors to<br />

a large number of indoor theatres already<br />

contracted for, and will also adapt some to<br />

accept high intensity lamps for drive-in<br />

projection. Theatres will be supplied under<br />

the existing terms applicable to the sales<br />

of the Norelco FP-20, according to Hoff.<br />

who added, that, "within a few weeks Ballantyne<br />

would announce a revolutionary<br />

new concept in the marketing of theatre<br />

equipment."<br />

The Norelco projectors are considered to<br />

be among the most advanced on the market<br />

today, and include the same engineering<br />

excellence as the well-known Norelco<br />

70-35mm model. They conform to all<br />

American standards and will contain some<br />

unique features for positioning and focusing<br />

of all makes of arc lamps. Other features<br />

include easy threading w-ith the<br />

smallest number of parts included in the<br />

film path; water-cooled film gate to eliminate<br />

film buckling: double-speed, singleblade<br />

shutters and high light efficiency.<br />

In addition, the projector can be supplied<br />

with facilities for remote focusing<br />

and framing, and provision is made for a<br />

magnetic reproducer which is optional. As<br />

a complete unit, the FP-20 incorporates the<br />

optical soundhead on the same base with<br />

the projector mechanism.<br />

Two More Stars Are Named<br />

To Present Oscar Awards<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Olivia de Havilland,<br />

two-time Oscar winner, has been named to<br />

the cast of the 35th annual awards show of<br />

the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and<br />

Sciences, Arthur Freed, producer of the<br />

program, amiounces. Miss de Havilland,<br />

who won statuettes for best performance by<br />

an actress in 1946 for "To Each His Own"<br />

and 1949 for "The Heiress," will serve as<br />

a presenter on the show'.<br />

Maximilian Schell, winner of last year's<br />

Academy Award for the best performance<br />

by an actor, has been named to present<br />

this year's Oscar to the winner in the best<br />

performance by an actress category.<br />

Prank Sinatra will be the master of<br />

ceremonies for the show, which will be<br />

held Monday, April 8, starting at 7:30 pjn.<br />

( PST<br />

I<br />

BOXOFTICE February 18, 1963


$8,000,000 Merchandising<br />

Budget for Embassy's 23<br />

NEW YORK—A budget of $8,000,000 has<br />

been scheduled for the merchandising of<br />

the 23 features to be released this year by<br />

Embassy Pictures, according to Joseph E.<br />

Levine, president.<br />

Addressing the company's first sales convention<br />

on its final day, Levine said every<br />

picture would be advertised, publicized and<br />

exploited to the utmost. He said each picture<br />

would be presold with hand-tailored<br />

campaigns.<br />

To survive and to defeat the competition<br />

for the public's leisure time, the film industry<br />

must set its sights beyond New York,<br />

raising its merchandising sights out into<br />

the nation and across national boundaries,<br />

Levine said. He contended there were no<br />

barriers for motion pictures, adding that<br />

"there isn't a theatre in the whole, wide<br />

world where a good, self-respecting picture,<br />

whatever type, can't play." He said<br />

Embassy intended to play every theatre<br />

that was humanly possible to obtain.<br />

Merchandising angles were explained to<br />

the sales representatives by Robert R.<br />

Weston, vice-president in charge of world<br />

advertising, publicity and exploitation;<br />

Charles Cohen, director of exploitation,<br />

and Carl Peppercorn, vice-president and<br />

general sales manager.<br />

Ely Landau, producer of "Long Day's<br />

Journey Into Night," discussed plans for<br />

the general release of the picture, beginning<br />

late this month.<br />

Embassy Sales-Collections<br />

Drive to Honor Levine<br />

NEW YORK—A sales and collections<br />

drive in honor of Joseph E. Levine will be<br />

conducted by Embassy Pictures, starting<br />

March 4 and ending May 31.<br />

Carl Peppercorn, vice-president and general<br />

sales manager, told the company's<br />

first national sales convention that the<br />

drive saluting Embassy's president also<br />

would mark the establishment of the national<br />

distribution organization. Branches<br />

now are operating in Chicago, Los Angeles,<br />

San Francisco. Kansas City, Atlanta, Dallas,<br />

Boston, New York, Philadelphia and<br />

Washington.<br />

Peppercorn said the objectives of the<br />

sales drive were to get the maximum playoffs<br />

of current and forthcoming product<br />

and to establish Embassy as a prime and<br />

major source of motion pictures. Special<br />

bonus incentives will be established.<br />

The drive will be competitive among the<br />

divisions, districts and branches. A fiveman<br />

committee will determine the weekly<br />

standings. It will consist of Robert Weston,<br />

vice-president for world advertising, publicity<br />

and exploitation: Charles Cohen, exploitation<br />

director: Larry Ayers, sales control<br />

manager: Julius Sprechman, controller,<br />

and Peppercorn.<br />

Film on Washington<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Actor Cliff<br />

Robertson,<br />

while in London, naiTated a short subject<br />

i-unning approximately 40 minutes on "The<br />

George Wa.shington Philosophy," which<br />

will be .shown in theatres there during the<br />

week of Washington's birthday. The film<br />

is sponsored by Cooperative American Industries<br />

in London.<br />

Chief Barker Rotus Harvey Foresees<br />

Banner Year for Variety Clubs<br />

NEW YORK—A banner year for Variety<br />

Clubs International was predicted by Rotus<br />

Harvey, international chief barker, at a<br />

breakfast meeting with the tradepress here<br />

Monday ill). Harvey said there would be<br />

activity in the establishment of tents<br />

overseas and a greater effort to acquaint<br />

the public with the charitable work of the<br />

various tents at the local level.<br />

Industry men in the larger cities of England<br />

had been interested in the London<br />

tent, Harvey said, but now they wanted to<br />

have tents of their own. Instead of just<br />

granting charters upon request, it had been<br />

decided to invite the non-London exhibitors<br />

to attend London tent board meetings<br />

in order to familiarize them with the operations.<br />

Then, after a year, they could be<br />

eligible for charters. This plan also will be<br />

put into effect in Northern Ireland where<br />

there is no tent now. Quebec, too. is interested<br />

in establishing a tent, as well as the<br />

exhibitors of Puerto Rico. Harvey said<br />

that some top Puerto Rico exhibitors<br />

would be invited to the international convention<br />

in Houston May 14-17 as a preliminary<br />

step to granting a charter for<br />

San Juan.<br />

There are now 36 active tents in five<br />

countries, Harvey said, and some of them<br />

are outgrowing their charities and are<br />

looking for other projects in need. Some<br />

tents which had slumped a bit have come<br />

back stronger than ever, he added.<br />

Harvey pointed out that the amusement<br />

business was the only industry which had<br />

its own charity activities, via the Variety<br />

Clubs. He said the various tents were the<br />

greatest public relations medium enjoyed<br />

by any industry and that greater effort<br />

must be made to keep the public informed<br />

as to what the tents are doing. On that<br />

score, Philip Gerard, international press<br />

guy, who was at the meeting, said that<br />

plans are in work for a national campaign<br />

A.C.E.-ECA DEAL SET—Max E.<br />

Youngstein, left, president of Entertainment<br />

Corp. of .Xmerica, Inc., and<br />

Sidney M. Markley, president of A.C.E.<br />

Films, Inc.. are shown at the time of<br />

announcement that A.C.E. will participate<br />

in the financing of "Fail-Safe,"<br />

ECA's initial production. Starring<br />

Henry Fonda, the production will start<br />

in New York on May 1. It will be produced<br />

and directed by Sidney Lumet.<br />

with Youngstein serving as executive<br />

producer.<br />

for public exposure throughout the year.<br />

Harvey said the women's auxiliaries, now<br />

active in approximately 70 per cent of the<br />

tents, were an important part of the international's<br />

activities and advocated the<br />

establishment of the so-called Barkerettes<br />

in evei-y tent. He said he was going<br />

to propose such a move at the Houston<br />

convention.<br />

On Pebi-uary 8. Harvey presented a<br />

plaque and gold membership card to Vice-<br />

President Lyndon Johnson in Washington,<br />

while newsreel cameras recorded the event.<br />

Harvey said that the Vice-President was<br />

notorious for never being on time for a<br />

meeting, but that he was right on time<br />

for the Variety Club event, which surprised<br />

the capital's newsmen. Before Harvey<br />

could say anything about the Variety Clubs,<br />

the Vice-President informed him that he<br />

was well-acquainted with the work of the<br />

tents, that he had been a close friend of<br />

the late Robert O'Donnell, former chief<br />

barker, and that he long would cherish the<br />

gold card and plaque.<br />

On Monday, Hai-vey presented a plaque<br />

to Johnny Carson of the "Tonight" show<br />

on NBC. Carson has been an active barker<br />

for many years.<br />

Harvey showed a page one pictui-e in<br />

color in the Washington Post, showing the<br />

presentation of a $15,000 check by the<br />

Washington tent to a local charity, as part<br />

of the Variety Club week activities.<br />

Harvey thanked the tradepress for its<br />

cooperation in publicizing the work of the<br />

Variety Clubs.<br />

Herman Cohen to Distribute<br />

British-Made 'Traitors'<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Independent<br />

producer<br />

Herman Cohen has completed a deal for the<br />

western hemisphere rights to the recently<br />

acclaimed London production. "The Traitors,"<br />

starring Patrick Allen. Jacqueline<br />

Ellis and James Maxwell.<br />

"The Traitors" was written and produced<br />

by Jim O'Connolly and directed by<br />

Robert Tronson. It was filmed at Pinewood<br />

Studios in London, and is being released<br />

in the United Kingdom by the Rank<br />

Organization. Prior to producing "The<br />

Traitors" O'Connolly was Herman Cohen's<br />

associate producer in London for three<br />

years.<br />

Cohen will be announcing his releasing<br />

plans for "The Ti-aitors" shortly.<br />

Plans for Eight Set<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Titanus Films production<br />

head Silvio Clementelli arrived here<br />

from Rome to finalize plans on eight pictures<br />

to be distributed by 20th-Fox aiid<br />

MGM. He will set deals on at least two<br />

other new films to be shot in Brazil and<br />

Capri. Starting March 15 with "Four Days<br />

of Naples." MGM will release Titanus' "The<br />

Golden Lion," "Arturo's Island," "The<br />

Days Are Numbered," "Tlkoyo and His<br />

Tiger Shark" and "Smog." Twentieth-Fox<br />

has "Sodom and Gomorrah" in release and<br />

also will handle "The Condemned of Altona"<br />

and "The Leopard."<br />

BOXOFTICE February 18. 1963


L ETTERS (Letters<br />

Again on 'The Big Ones' on TV<br />

It is not often I write a letter to any editor,<br />

but disclosure in one of the Los<br />

Angeles dailies that Warners and 20th-Fox<br />

are to release some of their "big" ones to<br />

television makes me boiling mad.<br />

It seems that our Channel 9 lan RKO-<br />

General station that telecasts in colon<br />

will shortly announce showings of "Auntie<br />

Mame," "Sayonara." "Man in the Gray<br />

Flannel Suit." etc. This was coincidental<br />

with announcement of Channel 4 lan NBC<br />

outlet' to telecast "Monday Night at the<br />

Movies" with films from 20th-Fox. All this,<br />

mind you. right along with Channel 11 's<br />

MGM Friday Night Colgate Theatre selections<br />

of too-recent releases—and last<br />

month's weekly showings of "Duel in the<br />

Sun" and "Ruby Gentry."<br />

ABC's Saturday Night messes with toorecent<br />

United Artists films, NBC's "Saturday<br />

Night at the Movies" from 20th-Pox.<br />

plus the above showings, are just too much<br />

to compete with, it seems. I, myself, plan<br />

to put a little black box with that one-eye<br />

right in my office to "catch up" on the<br />

mo\ies I missed. Why should anyone pay<br />

good hard cash to see a movie that they<br />

full well know will be on television pretty<br />

soon? For free?<br />

At one time, I naively thought that "the<br />

big ones" would never be on TV, at least<br />

not in our current era. But, it seems, that<br />

this is not to be so. This story and complaint<br />

you, no doubt, have heard countless<br />

times but, today, it is hitting hard. A clean,<br />

inviting theatre with product properly programmed<br />

and exploited will no longer suffice<br />

as long as anywhere from two to four<br />

TV channels are offering a much better<br />

selection at home for nothing.<br />

My beef is just this: When will the exhibitor<br />

organizations get together and start<br />

TELLING these film companies that "we<br />

will not buy any product from you, unless<br />

it is stipulated in the contracts that these<br />

films will not appear on TV for a selected<br />

amount of years"—say 10, 15 or even 20?<br />

Do what England does— the producer sells<br />

his stuff to TV, the theatres don't buy, so<br />

any income that the producer gets will be<br />

strictly from TV sales. And, boy, don't<br />

think THAT won't hurt! I am just a manager<br />

of a theatre in a very small organization,<br />

but when these conventions come up<br />

of TOA. etc.. etc., instead of adopting resolutions<br />

and listening to the gilded tones of<br />

film company representatives who tout<br />

their forthcoming product's points, give<br />

them—the film companies—an ultimatum<br />

and stick by it.<br />

We don't mind pictures on<br />

TV that never made any money for us<br />

originally. But. for heaven's sake, don't<br />

sell stuff to TV that will hurt us competitively<br />

that could well be saved for theatre<br />

reissue.<br />

"Giant" is soon to be reissued. How do<br />

WE know that it won't be sold to television<br />

'or already hasi within the next year, as<br />

soon as the reissue nin is over? Let TV<br />

have the two-bit pictures that never returned<br />

their producers' investments.<br />

"Auntie Mame" was never a blockbuster:<br />

OK. let TV have it. "Man in the Gray<br />

Flannel Suit." ditto. But I think that<br />

"Sayonara" should be reserved for theatres;<br />

"Duel in the Sun" the same. Look at<br />

"Gone With the Wind"—every time it<br />

must be signed. Names withheld on reauest)<br />

comes out it makes money at the theatre<br />

boxoffice. "Duel in the Sun" set a new<br />

record for TV viewing, so it proved that<br />

there was still money in it, if it was released<br />

to theatres and reserved exclusively<br />

for them.<br />

In the madness that is Hollywood and<br />

the film companies' sales offices, is there<br />

not one ray of hope or is it actually tioie<br />

what one film salesman told me (from a<br />

major company, no lessi five years ago:<br />

"We don't want to sell to the little theatres:<br />

we don't want you gu.vs to survive,<br />

you're too much trouble."<br />

The Radio City Music Hall, the Pantages.<br />

the Cinerama theatres alone are not<br />

going to keep the film companies in business.<br />

TV alone will not keep them in business.<br />

It is the bulk of the first-nin .suburban<br />

and small-town theatres and subsequent-runners<br />

that give them their<br />

profits.<br />

Isn't it time that someone tells them<br />

this?<br />

(Name withheld by request)<br />

Dilemma<br />

Small-Town Exhibitors'<br />

This morning I was supposedly privileged<br />

with another visit by one of the representative<br />

salesmen from one of the film companies.<br />

This salesman manages to get<br />

here promptly first thing in the morning,<br />

so that, by the time he leaves, I am not<br />

Hits<br />

Newspaper's Show<br />

Of Favoritism to TV<br />

New Orleans — In a letter to The<br />

Times-Picayune, Arthur L. Bamett,<br />

theatre representative, takes that newspaper<br />

to task for giving a free listing<br />

to a motion picture on television on<br />

which the paper previously turned<br />

down paid advertising when the same<br />

picture was playing at local theatres.<br />

Harnett's letter, which makes some<br />

other good points, follows:<br />

"I was certainly flabbergasted yesterday<br />

to find that the Times-Picayune<br />

carried a free listing for the TV<br />

showing of the motion picture, 'The<br />

Naked Maja,' after our having been<br />

denied many times such a listing for<br />

this picture and others in your newspaper<br />

as paid advertising for theatres.<br />

"I do not want to believe that you<br />

have a double standard, but it certainly<br />

seems so when you can extend to TV.<br />

a rival advertising media, a listing<br />

which you deny your customers.<br />

"Furthermore. I wish to point out<br />

that in advertising 'The Naked Maja'<br />

in theatres, we did not point a gun at<br />

anyone's back and compel them to<br />

come into the theatres, whereas, the<br />

word 'naked' and the entire motion<br />

picture was piped into everyone's living<br />

room for the family, including<br />

children, FREE, I wonder how many<br />

letters you will get from irate 'dogooders'<br />

about this. I venture to say<br />

NONE I"<br />

fit for anything the rest of the day.<br />

This man has made statements that must<br />

be the mutual feelings of that entire end of<br />

this great industry. He must be speaking<br />

for all film companies. Inasmuch as his<br />

statements fall so much in line with your<br />

editorial, "Point for More Return," in your<br />

Dec. 10, 1962, issue of <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, I felt the<br />

statements should be brought to the attention<br />

of all fellow exhibitors who are trying<br />

to make a living in this day and age.<br />

these .state-<br />

It would appear to me that, if<br />

ments were made to me. they were made<br />

similarly to other exhibitors. "As far as all<br />

film companies are concerned." the statement<br />

goes, "it would be better and more<br />

economical, by far, if all .small-town theatres<br />

across the nation, including all subrun<br />

neighborhood houses in your key cities,<br />

were to close their doors today. The film<br />

companies would be saving money, if such<br />

an operation were put into immediate<br />

effect."<br />

The plight of the .small -town exhibitor<br />

must, therefore, be in vain and we must be<br />

knocking our heads against a brick wall.<br />

Our struggle, then, is a total waste, according<br />

to the salesman, since we are just a heavy<br />

load for the companies to cari-y, producing<br />

no extra revenue "as it is the top key, firstrun<br />

situations that are keeping the film<br />

companies going." It seems to me that the<br />

struggle of the small-town exhibitor is<br />

something to make the motion picture industry<br />

proud in that these theatres have<br />

been kept in operation, when many a time<br />

the exhibitor would have liked to put a key<br />

in the door never to open it again.<br />

Your editorial clearly defines this situation.<br />

It seems to me that the film companies<br />

would long desire to be rid of all<br />

these "extra loads" they are said to be<br />

carrying, notwithstanding the fact that we<br />

have to scrape the bottom of the barrel<br />

both at the boxoffice and in getting features<br />

dated from the film companies. We<br />

are left to the last, allowed to date a picture<br />

when it may be anywhere from two<br />

to six months old, after the first-runs have<br />

played the feature and most people forgotten<br />

what it may be about.<br />

This sales representative also said that the<br />

government would be glad to get rid of the<br />

extra load we are to them. It seems to me<br />

that, in an economy such as ours today,<br />

when it is necessary to make as many jobs<br />

per year as possible, the government could<br />

not possibly benefit from the closing of all<br />

such theatres. Here is a plan which would<br />

eliminate thousands of jobs across the nation—in<br />

film companies' sales, booking and<br />

shipping staffs, the delivery services. National<br />

Screen Service, not to mention utility<br />

companies that service us. candy concessionaires,<br />

popcorn companies, etc.. which<br />

would no longer need to look for our business.<br />

It would appear that every dollar that<br />

can be kept circulating in our economy<br />

would be of benefit to the government. Yet.<br />

it seems this is not the case.<br />

Then, too. there are the teenagers who.<br />

in a small town, look to the theatre as a<br />

mecca of entertaimnent and social gathering.<br />

These youngsters, who strive for independence<br />

from the TV monster in the living<br />

room, would be left to hang out at the<br />

corner drugstore or in more remote,<br />

trouble-seeking gatherings, which would be<br />

no asset to the already growing problem of<br />

juvenile delinquency.<br />

Here is a mass plan which would eliminate<br />

thousands of jobs, be of no use to our<br />

economy or the film companies. No doubt<br />

8 BOXOFFICE :: February 18. 1963


.<br />

we are a burden to such a company as<br />

United Artists with their individual production<br />

companies who, after squeezing<br />

eveiy dollar they can from the theatres,<br />

let theii- 1960 product go to television. I am<br />

referring to "Solomon and Sheba" and the<br />

many other not-much-older pictures that<br />

have been shown on TV.<br />

I'm calling all exhibitors' attention to<br />

David E. Milgram's letter in the Jan. 21,<br />

1963, issue of <strong>Boxoffice</strong>, which shows what<br />

we are up against. This same feature was<br />

shown over channel 33 through our general<br />

viewing area.<br />

What is the small-town exhibitor supposed<br />

to do? I've been here for seven years,<br />

starting out in this business at the age of<br />

25, having totally redecorated a iiin-down<br />

theatre into a condition where it is one of<br />

the nicest small-town theatres you would<br />

find anywhere. After starting from scratch<br />

and sacrificing much, we have accomplished<br />

a great deal, but it seems it has all<br />

been a waste of time and this great industiT<br />

doesn't care whether I, lor others<br />

like myself > , close our theatres this very<br />

day.<br />

I have great hopes for the motion picture<br />

industry, in that it is the greatest form of<br />

entertainment, but my giadual climb upw-ard<br />

is certainly in vain, if I am just a<br />

burden to this great industi-y that feels it<br />

no longer needs me or others like myself.<br />

The theatre organizations appear to have<br />

achieved nothing in theii- fight for the theatre<br />

owners, since we have not even been<br />

gi'anted the courtesy of being serviced with<br />

the respect that the small businessman<br />

down the streets gets from the companies<br />

who sell him their products.<br />

Gem Theatre,<br />

Villa Grove,Ill.<br />

HAROLD G. RAMAGE<br />

Wants Films Exclusively for Theatres<br />

How would you, Exhibitors of America,<br />

like to have movies on youi- screen which<br />

would NEVER be shown on TV? This can<br />

be accomplished, if we would all band together<br />

and refuse to buy any pictui-es unless<br />

stated in om- contracts with the companies<br />

that "This Picture Will NEVER Be<br />

sold to TV."<br />

Why shouldn't we have pictui-es made<br />

exclusively for our theatres? After all, we<br />

are all paying for them. Why should we<br />

allow the producers and distributors to continue<br />

selling the saine pictuies to us and<br />

then also to TV? How unfair can they get?<br />

Let them make product for the theatres or<br />

for TV. but let's stop them from selling the<br />

sa7ne product to both.<br />

The only way we will ever get people back<br />

in the theatre is by having something they<br />

will not see on TV. Too many people stay<br />

home waiting to see the movies on TV. But,<br />

if they once knew the pictui-e showing at<br />

the theatre would not be handed to them<br />

free in a few years, it would eventually<br />

make a difference.<br />

Are there any theatre owners willing to<br />

go along with this idea? If so. we need<br />

help in reaching all the theatre owners as<br />

we must all stick together, if we are to accomplish<br />

this feat. It can be done!<br />

We have tried eveiT available gimmick to<br />

bring people back to the theatre in oui- own<br />

small town. We have kept our theatre<br />

clean. We have a "cry room" for mothers<br />

and small children. We have catered to<br />

church groups, school groups, scout troops.<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18. 1963<br />

POINTS TO PONDER<br />

Your "Missing Links" editorial<br />

premise is well put. I am wondering<br />

just when this dawdling industry will<br />

rise to the challenge and realize that,<br />

like newspapers and other public-service-minded<br />

endeavors, it is a 52-week<br />

activity that gets people into the habit<br />

of moviegoing.<br />

Apathy and asserted despair do little<br />

to convince anyone, anywhere, that the<br />

film industry is booming. Moreover,<br />

the idea of cultivating tomoiTOw's<br />

audiences would be aided and abetted<br />

through a stepped-up production slate<br />

from major and minor studio sources,<br />

since the sole way of convincing the<br />

discerning and the far from discerning<br />

that it's, indeed, worth a trip downtown<br />

is the availability, week after<br />

week, of top-calibre entertainment not<br />

to be seen elsewhere.<br />

It's all well and good for us to say<br />

that picture quality has never been<br />

surpassed, as witness the hard-ticket<br />

product. But let us never forget that<br />

this industry came into the big leagues<br />

as a mass medium, catering to the<br />

audiences not particularly caring about<br />

mass movements of troops; they<br />

wanted, in the long ago of the silent<br />

films, to view escapist entertainment.<br />

We have to think and think ahead.<br />

I am reminded of the boy whose dad<br />

was in the toy business. The father<br />

went bankrupt. Could we say, in all<br />

good sense, that the boy had lost all<br />

his marbles?<br />

Yours, for better showmanship and,<br />

equally important, industry-wide confidence<br />

in the industry.<br />

ALLEN M. WIDEM<br />

Amusements Editor,<br />

The Hartford Times,<br />

Hartford, Conn.<br />

etc. We have given "free" passes to patrons,<br />

and past patrons, for Christmas gifts<br />

and most of them are not even used. These<br />

are not the answer, even though they are<br />

good will builders.<br />

The answer lies in having PRODUCT,<br />

once again, on our screens that is for the<br />

theatre screen and theatre screen only.<br />

Theatre owners of America, are any of<br />

you willing to go along with this? If so,<br />

the next time you buy a picture, insist that<br />

the pictures you buy have stated in the<br />

contract: "These Pictm-es Will Never Be<br />

Sold to TV." If all the theatre owaiers will<br />

do this,<br />

we can once again have something<br />

in our theatres that people will want to<br />

come see and, maybe, we will all still have<br />

a fighting chance to sui-vive.<br />

How about it. exhibitors: shall we at<br />

least put up a fight for our rights? We<br />

would like to know how you feel about this.<br />

Pearl Theatre,<br />

Buena Vista, Colo.<br />

MRS. JOHN L. GROY<br />

AB-PT Dividend<br />

NEW YORK—A quarterly dividend of<br />

25 cents per share on American Broadcasting-Paramount<br />

Pictures common stock was<br />

declared by the board last week, payable<br />

March 15 to stockholders of record on February<br />

25.<br />

Sales Expert to Speak<br />

At Show-A-Rama<br />

KANSAS CITY—Capsule briefings on<br />

personal sales psychology >sy ao as apfiieu applied to wj running<br />

a theatre again<br />

is included in the<br />

schedule of the Heart<br />

of America Show-A-<br />

Rama here March<br />

5-7.<br />

Bob Bale of the<br />

Bale Institute of<br />

Develop-<br />

Personal<br />

ment. Phoenix, Ariz.,<br />

who conducts sales<br />

clinics under the<br />

sponsorship of the<br />

National Sales Executives<br />

Club, will<br />

Bob Bale<br />

speak at the closing luncheon Thursday (<br />

7i<br />

Previously scheduled was Robert Cox, who<br />

will speak on opening day. He is with the<br />

Pepsi-Cola international public relations<br />

department.<br />

Registrations for the three-day show<br />

sponsored by the United Theatre owners of<br />

the Heart of America were running far<br />

ahead of 1962, when a record total of 904<br />

exhibitors and trade representatives were<br />

listed from 29 states. Fred Souttar, Show-<br />

A-Rama VI president, and Doug Lightner,<br />

convention chairman, completed a threeday<br />

program filled with glamor, showmanship<br />

and the latest in trade developments.<br />

The tight schedule will bring approximately<br />

40 personalities, stars, producers,<br />

theatre operations executives and a full<br />

complement of advertising and promotion<br />

directors before the convention.<br />

The equipment and supply section will<br />

contain more than 60 booths, a number<br />

rarely smpassed except at the TEDA-<br />

TESMA shows.<br />

Eugene V. Klein, president of National<br />

General Corp., Los Angeles, will deliver the<br />

keynote talk. "Make Way for Tomorrow."<br />

at the opening luncheon Tuesday, sponsored<br />

by the four local ciixuits—Fox Midwest,<br />

Dui-wood. Commonwealth and Dickinson—and<br />

the Heart of America UTO.<br />

The Pepsi-Cola Co., New York, is sponsoring<br />

a reception and buffet-dance, "An<br />

Evening With the<br />

Stars," on Wednesday<br />

preceded by a cocktail<br />

party in the grand<br />

ballroom of the Hotel<br />

Muehlebach. Sandra<br />

Dee and Jack<br />

Lemmon. recipients<br />

of the Star of the<br />

J^^^^.^^^ Year awards, as<br />

^M^^tJO^^^^ ^^^^ actress and ac-<br />

^m' i^^^B tor,<br />

^" ^^^^^ this event. Peter<br />

Peter Fonda Fonda, who will receive<br />

the Most Promising<br />

Star of Tomorrow award, may be<br />

present also.<br />

Jim Nicholson, president of American<br />

International Pictures, and Leon Blender,<br />

general sales manager, will sponsor a<br />

"country breakfast" with Alexander Film<br />

Co. of Colorado Springs on Wednesday.<br />

The convention is sprinkled with merchandise<br />

giveaways, cash giveaways, and<br />

a special giveaway—a vacation trip for two<br />

to Acapulco. The latter prize is being<br />

awarded by Nathan E. Jacobs, publisher of<br />

Movie Guide magazine.<br />

9


'No Producl Shortage/<br />

Says Sidney Pink<br />

NEW YORK—Sidney Pink, who recently<br />

still<br />

pi-oduced "The Castilian" in Spain, is<br />

an exhibitor and has<br />

also been in the advertising<br />

and exploitation<br />

field, claims that<br />

there is no product<br />

shortage, 'only a<br />

shortage of top pictures—but<br />

this has<br />

been a complaint<br />

since movies were in<br />

v^ ^— their infancy." Pink<br />

'*'<br />

^<br />

blames most exhibitors<br />

for not doing<br />

Sidney Pink their utmost to promote<br />

and merchandise<br />

the regular 'meaning not blockbuster) films<br />

Pink, who bought a chain of theatres in<br />

1957 and owned 16 theatres by 1959. when<br />

he returned to production, still owns three<br />

houses, two of them drive-ins in Las Vegas.<br />

He would even be willing to go back to<br />

block-booking for "at least exhibitors were<br />

assured of a steady flow of product and<br />

the industiy was healthier then," he<br />

maintains.<br />

To date. Pink has produced a total of 29<br />

films, including "The Angry Red Planet."<br />

which introduced the four-dimensional<br />

process of Cinemagic in 1959, followed by<br />

six features made in Sweden, including<br />

"Journey to the Seventh Planet" and<br />

"Reptilicus." which American International<br />

released in November 1962.<br />

In January 1962. Pink went to Spain,<br />

where he signed a deal with Spartaco Santony,<br />

head of Producciones M.D.. to make<br />

a Spanish-American co-production dealing<br />

with the 10th Centui-y hero. Fernan<br />

Gonzalez. First titled "Valley of the<br />

Swords." the pictuie went into production<br />

in May and was completed at a cost of $1.-<br />

600.000. Although Pink is not an advocate<br />

of runaway production, he claims that "The<br />

Castilian" had to be made on actual Spanish<br />

locations to ensure its authenticity. One<br />

village location is still exactly as it was in<br />

the Middle Ages and has never seen television,<br />

a telephone or even a motion picture,<br />

Pink said.<br />

Although the director. Javier Sieto. and<br />

the romantic leads, Spartaco Santony and<br />

Teresa Velasquez (who met during the<br />

making of the picture and are now<br />

married ' . and Fernando Rey and Julio<br />

Pena are Spanish actors. Pink imported<br />

three Hollywood names. Frankie Avalon.<br />

Cesar Romero and Broderick Crawford,<br />

from the U.S. and cast Alida Valli, Italian<br />

actress who has also made Hollywood films,<br />

as Queen Teresa of Leon. Avalon plays a<br />

young minstrel and sings three songs,<br />

which will be recorded in a Chancellor album<br />

in 1963.<br />

Warner Bros, will distribute "The Castilian"<br />

nationally late in May 1963. following<br />

the picture's world premiere May 15 in<br />

Caracas. Venezuela, the native city of Santony,<br />

who plays the title role. He, as well<br />

as Avalon and Romero will attend this<br />

event. WB did not participate in the<br />

financing of "The Castilian" but the company<br />

has the western hemisphere rights.<br />

Following the completion of the filming.<br />

Pink brought the print to Hollywood for<br />

final editing and scoring, thus spending<br />

about ten per cent of the production cost<br />

TOA Contest First<br />

Prize<br />

To Missouri Exhibitors<br />

New York— Shelby Bourne and Jack<br />

Kempton of the Commonwealth circuit's<br />

theatres in Columbia, Mo., were<br />

the first prize winners in the managers'<br />

promotion contest on Theatre Owners<br />

of America's Hollywood Preview Engagement<br />

of "What Ever Happened to<br />

Baby Jane?" First prize was $500.<br />

Runners-up were John Corbett,<br />

Strand Theatre, Scranton, Pa., second<br />

prize. $300; W. P. "Bill " Minnich, Ritz,<br />

Corpus Christie, Tex., third, $250; H. F.<br />

Rastetter, Warner, Erie, Pa., fourth,<br />

$200; H. Rubin and S. Geller, Community,<br />

Toms River, fifth, $150; A. A.<br />

Haley, Cavern, Carlsbad, N. M., sixth,<br />

$100; Frank Shaffer, Stanley Warner<br />

Dixie, Staunton, Va., seventh, $100;<br />

Dave Levin, RKO Keith's Syracuse.<br />

N. Y., eighth, $50; Larry Knee, Stanley,<br />

Pittsburgh, ninth, $50; A! Plough,<br />

Stanton, Philadelphia, tenth, $50.<br />

There will be two contests for managers<br />

on TOA's next Hollywood Preview<br />

Engagement picture, MGM's "The<br />

Courtship of Eddie's Father," one for<br />

exhibitors in cities above 100,000 population;<br />

the other for communities<br />

under that figure.<br />

in the U.S., he said.<br />

"The Castilian" is the first film to be<br />

made in Panacolor, a new process which<br />

effects a 20 per cent saving from other color<br />

processes and "has remarkable sharpness<br />

and depth." Pink said.<br />

For the future. Fink plans four more features,<br />

all to be filmed in Panacolor. including<br />

"Pyro." to star Barry Sullivan, and<br />

"The Invisible City," both to be made in<br />

Spain, plus two to be shot in the U.S. Pink<br />

has made a deal with Panacolor, Inc.,<br />

headed by Harry E. EUer, to use the company's<br />

entire output of Panacolor for 1963.<br />

Pink has not made a fuither distribution pact<br />

with Warner Bros, but he praised Richard<br />

Lederer. head of publicity and advertising,<br />

and said the company "was the industry's<br />

finest distributor."<br />

Nathan Golden Retiring<br />

From Commerce Dept.<br />

WASHINGTON—Nathan D. Golden, veteran<br />

Commerce Dept. authority on motion<br />

pictures, will retire from government service<br />

after 38 years in that field. He plans to<br />

open a law office here.<br />

Golden will quit as director of the Scientific.<br />

Photographic and Business Equipment<br />

Division of the Commerce Dept. after<br />

his plamied visit to the International<br />

Photographic Trade Fair in Cologne. Germany<br />

March 16-24. During the last ten<br />

years he served the Scientific Instruments<br />

Industry.<br />

Among Golden's many awards is the<br />

Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor.<br />

NT Winners to Hawaii<br />

LOS ANGELES—As winners of National<br />

Theatres' district managers' week drive.<br />

Bob Smith. Los Angeles: Oscar Nyberg.<br />

Seattle: Ray Davis, Denver, and John Meinardi.<br />

St. Louis, and their wives left via<br />

Pan American jet to Hawaii for a week's<br />

vacation.<br />

Morris Agency Expanding<br />

Global Film Licensing<br />

NEW YORK — The William Morris<br />

Agency is expanding its global operations<br />

in its representation of international<br />

clients in the licensing of distribution<br />

rights to completed theatrical features and<br />

short subjects. In addition to the domestic<br />

market, sales frequently cover worldwide<br />

distribution rights.<br />

The agency announced that in recent<br />

months it had represented nine completed<br />

features produced in Britain. France, Italy,<br />

Germany, Sweden, Israel and Tahiti.<br />

Licensing arrangements already have been<br />

completed for five of the pictures, with<br />

negotiations continuing on the others.<br />

In concluding distribution contracts to<br />

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. William Morris<br />

represented producer Leonardo Bercovici<br />

on "Square of Violence." The agency<br />

finalized sales arrangements for "Pagan<br />

Hell Cat." made in Tahiti with a native cast<br />

by Bonsignore Productions, with Jean<br />

Goldwurm's Times Film Corp. "Time of<br />

the Heathen" was sold to British Lion by<br />

Emschwiller Productions. "Sinaia," an<br />

Israeli film coproduced by Coproduction,<br />

Ltd.. and Du-Or Films. Ltd., was acquired<br />

by Jerome Balsam. A short subject. "The<br />

Gift," made in the United States and directed<br />

by Herbert Danska, was acquired by<br />

Brandon Films.<br />

Warner Votes Dividend;<br />

Re-elects All Officers<br />

NEW YORK—The board of directors of<br />

Warner Bros. Pictures. Inc., has declared a<br />

dividend of 12 4 cents a share on the company's<br />

common stock, payable May 6. to<br />

stockholders of record April 12.<br />

The board also re-elected Jack L. Warner<br />

as president and principal executive officer.<br />

Also the following were re-elect€d:<br />

Benjamin Kalmenson. executive vice-president;<br />

Harman Starr. Wolfe Cohen. Steve<br />

Trilling. Edmond L. DePatie and William<br />

T. Orr, vice-presidents; Howard Levinson,<br />

secretary; Thomas J. Martin, treasurer;<br />

Walter Meihofer, controller and assistant<br />

treasurer; Harland E. Holman, assistant<br />

treasurer; Roy J. Obringer, assistant secretary,<br />

and Fi-eston & Files, general counsel.<br />

Bette Davis. Chamberlain<br />

Win Photoplay Awards<br />

NEW YORK—Photoplay magazine's annual<br />

Gold Medal awards this year will go<br />

to Bette Davis and Richard Chamberlain<br />

as the best actress and actor of 1962. Jack<br />

Podell. editorial director of MacFadden-<br />

Bartell Publications, amiounced Wednesday<br />

(13). The awards will be presented on<br />

February 28.<br />

Suzamie Pleshette was named most<br />

promising new actress and Gary Clarke was<br />

voted the most promising new actor. "The<br />

Miracle Worker" was selected as top pict»ire<br />

of the year. Miss Davis won for her performance<br />

in "What Ever Happened to Baby<br />

Jane?" and Chamberlain was selected for his<br />

television performances in the Dr. Kildare<br />

series.<br />

Retitle Mirisch Film<br />

NEW YORK— "Kings of the Sun" has<br />

been set as the new title for the Mirisch<br />

Co. production now being filmed in Mexico,<br />

which was first called "The Mound Builders."<br />

10<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18. 1963


SHARP NEGATIVES RATE SHARP PRINTS! That's the only way to get and hold audience attention-to<br />

do full justice to a script. Answer: Go Eastman all the way-negative and print-stock. And give the<br />

print-maker time to do his job right. Also, in the case of questions— production, processing, projection—always<br />

get in touch with Eastman Technical Service.<br />

For more information, write or phone: Motion Picture Film Department, EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY,<br />

Rochester 4, N. Y.<br />

•I<br />

Or-for the purchase of film: W. J. German, Inc. Agents for the sale and distribution<br />

of Eastman Professional Film for Motion Pictures and Television,<br />

^^^^^j^^^^^^^<br />

Fort Lee, N. J., Chicago, III., Hollywood, Calif.<br />

^^^^^^^^^Q^^^<br />

BOXOFTICE February 18, 1963<br />

11


. . . MGM<br />

. . Darlene<br />

"i^Mfu/^Md ^c^t^ytt<br />

«^RITER-PRODUCER Joe Bigelow and<br />

Robert Q. Lewis have formed Quagga<br />

Productions, Inc., to function in stage,<br />

screen, television and record production,<br />

beginning with recording of "Nize Baby."<br />

genre stories by the late Milt Gross. Recording<br />

rights have been acquired from<br />

Mrs. Gross, and the first album will feature<br />

Sheila Rogers and Jerry Hausner. Quagga<br />

also is working on a comedy television<br />

series, tentatively tagged "Nameless." and<br />

on a motion picture biography of English<br />

clown Joseph Grimaldi, titled "Joey."<br />

Stuart Whitman's B&W Productions and<br />

producer Bob Finkel's Teran Productions<br />

have joined forces to produce their first<br />

motion picture, Mai-cia Davenport's "My<br />

Brother's Keeper," based on the story of<br />

the New 'Vork recluses, the Collier brothers.<br />

Whitman will star as one of the brothers<br />

and Montgomery Clift is being sought for<br />

the other. Production is scheduled to start<br />

the first of September.<br />

Herakles Productions Ltd.. formed by<br />

director Bernard Wiesen. production designer<br />

Wade B. Rubottom and Martin<br />

Rubenstein. has set as its first film. "The<br />

Devil Came From Dublin," from Paul Vincent<br />

Carroll's play. CanoU will screenplay<br />

the film, slated to shoot this summer on<br />

locations in Ireland. Wiesen will direct.<br />

The trio will go to England within the<br />

month to prep the film . . . Produceractress<br />

Margia Dean has disclosed she has<br />

charted on her 1963 production slate another<br />

picture, to be called "Gringo." her<br />

own original, and to be released by 20th<br />

Centiu-y-Fox.<br />

Producer Sy Weintraub and director<br />

Robert Day have begun filming on Metro-<br />

Goldwyn-Mayer's "Tarzan Faces Three<br />

Challenges." near Bangkok. Thailand, with<br />

Jock Mahoney again in the title role. The<br />

film has a two-month shooting schedule<br />

with locations extending into northern<br />

Thailand only a few miles below the Communist<br />

China border. Also on location with<br />

the picture are Woody Strode. Tsu Kobayashi<br />

and Ricky Der. The picture is set<br />

tentatively for summer release.<br />

FMlm rights to "The Cavern," original<br />

World War II story and screenplay by<br />

Michael Pertwee and Jack Davis, have been<br />

acquired by Martin Melcher, who simultaneously<br />

set Edgar Ulmer to direct for his<br />

Martin Melcher Productions . . . Producsr<br />

Robert L. Lippert has acquired for his production<br />

slate "The Eyes of Annie Jones"<br />

by novelist and short story writer Henry<br />

Slesar, to be released by 20th Century-Fox.<br />

Lloyd Nolan has been inked by producer<br />

Robert Fellows to star in his independent<br />

feature, "The Girl Hunters," which will be<br />

lensed in its entirety in Dublin. Ireland.<br />

Roy Rowland will direct. The picture is<br />

scheduled to begin filming February 18 . . .<br />

Actor-singer Bruce Yamell has checked off<br />

the Samuel Goldwyn lot after completing<br />

his featured role in the Billy Wilder production.<br />

"Irma La Douce," thus ending a<br />

seven-month engagement<br />

Cooper joins Audrey<br />

. .<br />

Hepburn<br />

. Gladys<br />

and Rex<br />

Harrison in the Warner Bros, picture, "My<br />

Fair Lady," playing the part of Mrs. Higgins.<br />

George Cukor will direct. Shooting<br />

starts in June.<br />

W<br />

Rock Hudson has been engaged by 20th<br />

Century-Fox to narrate "Marilyn," the<br />

feature highlighting the screen career of<br />

Marilyn Monroe, according to Richard<br />

Zanuck. studio production head. Under an<br />

agreement with Lee Strasberg, executive of<br />

Marilyn's will. Hudson's salary for the assignment<br />

will be used to establish a Marilyn<br />

Monroe Memorial Fund at the Actors' Studio<br />

in New York, which Strasberg operates. The<br />

fund will be used for the encouragement of<br />

yoimg actors at the Studio and in the theatre<br />

generally.<br />

George Hamilton is being borrowed from<br />

MGM to play the Moss Hart role in "Act<br />

One," a Dore Schary, Inc.. production for<br />

Warner Bros. Schary wrote the script from<br />

the late playwright's autobiography and<br />

will produce and direct . . . Director Tay<br />

Garnett has disclosed he is negotiating<br />

with New York stage star Robert Loggia,<br />

who starred in "Toys in the Attic." to play<br />

one of the top roles in his projected independent<br />

production. "Man of Trust."<br />

if<br />

Carol Lynley has made a new arrangement<br />

with 20th-Fox. calling for one picture<br />

a year over the next six years. Her<br />

original pact called for ten pictures over<br />

the next five years. The actress, who got<br />

$30,000 for "The Stripper." her last for<br />

20th-Fox. is guaranteed $100,000 for the<br />

sixth picture in the new setup. Miss Lynley<br />

also has a four-picture deal with Otto<br />

Pi-eminger, following her current co-starring<br />

role in the producer-director's "The<br />

Cardinal," shooting in Boston and Rome<br />

recording star Connie Francis<br />

arrived over the weekend from Las Vegas<br />

to view the answer print on her current<br />

"Follow the Boys" for MGM. She has completed<br />

recording the title song in five<br />

languages, French, Spanish, Italian, German<br />

and Japanese. While here she was to<br />

meet with studio executives to plan promo-<br />

DGA AWARDS GIVEN—Sam Spiegel,<br />

left, accepts director David Lean's award<br />

for "m o s t outstanding directorial<br />

achievement" for "Lawrence of Arabia"<br />

at the Directors Guild of .\inerica annual<br />

awards dinner at the Beverly Hilton<br />

Hotel on February 9 from Guild president<br />

George Sidney. David Friedkin was<br />

recipient of a similar award for television<br />

for his direction of "The Price of<br />

Tomatoes" from the Dick Powell Show.<br />

Seven Arts to Make 4,<br />

for MGM Release<br />

All<br />

NEW YORK—Seven Arts Productions<br />

will put four pictures before the cameras<br />

in New York, Hollywood and Europe<br />

during the next five months, according<br />

to Ray Stark and Eliot Hyman, heads of<br />

the company. All of these pictures will<br />

be distributed by MGM.<br />

The first will be "Of Human Bondage,"<br />

which will be directed by Henry<br />

Hathaway, starting in Dublin March 4,<br />

with Kim Novak and Laurence Harvey<br />

starred and a screenplay by Bryan<br />

Forbes. Set for spring production in<br />

New York and Hollywood will be "Sunday<br />

in New York." based on Norman<br />

Kiasna's Broadway stage hit, with Jane<br />

Fonda and Cliff Robertson starred. Next<br />

will be "A Global Affair," a Hall Bartlett<br />

production, which will star Bob<br />

Hope, and then "Night of the Iguana,"<br />

film version of the Tennessee Williams<br />

Broadway play, which Stark will<br />

personally produce.<br />

tion activities, including a late-February<br />

personal appearance tour in the East.<br />

Rory Calhoun. Ruta Lee. Rod Lauren and<br />

Rod Cameron will star in Bern-Field Productions'<br />

"The Gun Hawk." a big color<br />

western for Allied Aitists. producers Richard<br />

Bernstein and Edward Critchfield announce.<br />

The film, which rolls February 20 under the<br />

direction of Edward Ludwig at Republic<br />

Studios, will be produced by Bernstein, with<br />

Critchfield as executive producer. The script<br />

is by Jo Heims .<br />

Tompkins, who<br />

played a featured role as one of the young<br />

beauties in a previous Elvis Presley film,<br />

"Blue Hawaii," will appear with him again<br />

in Hal Wallis' "Fun in Acapulco," directed<br />

by Richard Thorpe for Paramount release.<br />

Chicago-born blonde Miss Tompkins won a<br />

record 20 Southern California beauty contests<br />

out of 25 she entered, and was a<br />

finalist in the other five.<br />

. . .<br />

Robert Bloch, author of the novel,<br />

"Psycho," has been signed by producerdirector<br />

William Castle to screenplay<br />

"Strait-Jacket," his next Columbia production,<br />

slated to roll in April . . . Thelma<br />

Howell, head of the University of California<br />

dental extension, has been hired by<br />

Hal Wallis as technical advisor to coach<br />

Janet Leigh for her role as a dental<br />

hygienist in "Wives and Lovers." John Rich<br />

Leon<br />

directs the Paramount release<br />

Fromkess has signed Herbert Luft as assistant<br />

production supervisor on "The Long<br />

Corridor. " the first of five pictures he will<br />

make for Allied Artists. Samuel Fuller, who<br />

will produce and direct, also wrote the<br />

original screenplay. The film is slated to<br />

roll February 18.<br />

Chauncey Haines has been set by producer<br />

Herman Cohen to double at the console<br />

for actor Michael Gough on the sound<br />

track of "Black Zoo." Haines played the<br />

dramatic organ solos in the score for "El<br />

Cid." "Zoo," to be released by Allied<br />

Artists, stars Gough, Jeanne Cooper, Rod<br />

Lauren and Virginia Grey under direction<br />

of Robert Gordon.<br />

12 BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


TESMA-TEDA Join<br />

In TOA Tradeshow<br />

NEW YORK—For the first time since<br />

1957, Theatre Equipment and Supply<br />

Manufactui'ers Ass'n and Theatre Equipment<br />

Dealers Ass'n will team up with Theatre<br />

Owners of America on a convention<br />

tradeshow this year. The National Ass'n of<br />

Concessionaires already had agreed to join<br />

with TOA on the 1963 convention, which<br />

will be held in New York at the Americana<br />

Hotel the week of October 28.<br />

This means that the 1963 tradeshow will<br />

combine all four organizations into one<br />

of the biggest of its kind in many years.<br />

TESMA and TEDA last participated with<br />

TOA in a convention and tradeshow at the<br />

Americana Hotel in Miami Beach in 1957.<br />

The foui--way event was hailed by the<br />

presidents of the associations, TOA's John<br />

Stembler stating that the setup "insures<br />

a tradeshow that will make its mark as the<br />

most successful, most rewarding and most<br />

educational in history for all concerned."<br />

Augie J. Schmitt, president of NAC, said<br />

the addition of TESMA and TEDA as cosponsors<br />

of the 1963 NAC-TOA tradeshow<br />

was a logical development which NAC welcomed.<br />

TESMA 's Larry Davee said his organization<br />

was "most happy" to again join with<br />

TOA and its other tradeshow partners.<br />

"Our manufacturer members believe that<br />

now is the right time for theatre owners<br />

of America to become more closely acquainted<br />

with the great strides made over<br />

the past several years in research and development,<br />

most necessary to conduct the<br />

business of successful motion picture theatres<br />

in today's hard competition," Davee<br />

said.<br />

Texas Board of Review<br />

Rates 279 Films in '62<br />

DALLAS—The Texas Motion Picture<br />

Board of Review screened and rated 279<br />

feature pictures dming 1962. it was reported<br />

this week by Kyle Rorex, executive<br />

director of Texas COMPO. which distributes<br />

the audience designations.<br />

Largest recommended audience category<br />

was that rated for young people with 91<br />

pictures, approximately one-third of those<br />

released. Second largest was the family<br />

category with 71 pictures, followed by the<br />

mature young people classification with 66<br />

pictures. The recommended for adults category<br />

had the least number of pictures with<br />

51. Of the total number of films rated, 180<br />

pictures had the Code Seal of the Motion<br />

Picture Ass'n of America, while 99 did not.<br />

The non-Code films are those independent<br />

produced domestically and foreign imports.<br />

The Texas Board of Review is made up<br />

of a voluntary group of 12 women, and the<br />

group's audience recommendations are published<br />

twice monthly and distributed by<br />

Texas COMPO to its membership, newspapers,<br />

magazines and interested church<br />

and civic groups.<br />

Protestants Rate 'Lawrence' High<br />

HOLLY-WOOD—The February bulletin<br />

of the Protestant Motion Picture Council<br />

rates "Lawrence of Arabia" A.MY.Y., meaning<br />

suitable for everyone over 12. The Sam<br />

Spiegel-David Lean production is a Columbia<br />

release.<br />

To Unveil 'Love Is a Ball'<br />

In 3-Day Las Vegas Fete<br />

NE-W YORK—Martin Poll's "Love Is a<br />

Ball" will be unveiled in Las Vegas by<br />

United Artists in a three-day celebration<br />

on March 1, 2 and 3. Film stars, press representatives<br />

and radio and television personalities<br />

will be flown to the resort city<br />

from the major cities of the countiT and<br />

the premiere will be followed by one of the<br />

most lavish balls ever held in the Nevada<br />

city, according to UA.<br />

Glenn Ford and Hope Lange, stars of the<br />

picture, will be the guests of honor, along<br />

with Ricardo Montalban and Telly Savalas,<br />

costars; Poll, the producer, and David<br />

Swift, the director. Guests will stay at the<br />

Dunes Hotel. In addition, celebrities not<br />

associated with the film will be on hand.<br />

A highlight of the event will be television<br />

coverage provided by the Steve Allen show.<br />

At a press meeting at UA's home office.<br />

Poll said that he had a four-picture deal<br />

with UA, but that "Love Is a Ball" was<br />

not part of the contract, being separate and<br />

apart. His first under the agreement will<br />

be "Love and Taxes," based on the stage<br />

play "Janus." Others, not necessarily in<br />

this order, will be "Abby and the Girls," "A<br />

Twist of Sand" and a property still in negotiation.<br />

"Love Is a Ball" will have its first regular<br />

playdate in Miami on March 6. General<br />

release will follow.<br />

Harry Reinhardt Retires;<br />

With 20th-Fox 45 Years<br />

NE-W YORK—Harry Reinhardt, who had<br />

been in charge of newsreels and short subjects<br />

for Movietone News for the last 15<br />

years, has retired. He had been with the<br />

parent company. 20th Century-Fox. for<br />

45 years.<br />

Prior to joining Fox in 1918 as disbursement<br />

auditor. Reinhardt was a sports reporter<br />

for the New York World. At Fox. he<br />

also supei-vised Terrytoon cartoons and<br />

special featurettes for theatrical distribution.<br />

A "good luck" luncheon was given him<br />

by Robert Conn, executive assistant in<br />

charge of domestic sales, and the company's<br />

sales staff.<br />

Paramount to Distribute<br />

Olivia de Havilland Film<br />

NEW YORK—Paramount Pictures has<br />

made another distribution deal, the fourth<br />

in the past two weeks, with American Entertainment<br />

Corp., which will produce<br />

"Lady in a Cage," starring Olivia de Havilland.<br />

which will be filmed independently<br />

on the Paramount lot in February, according<br />

to Jack Karp. vice-president and<br />

studio head.<br />

Miss de Havilland will fly from Paris to<br />

Hollywood for her starring role in the<br />

picture, which will be produced and written<br />

by Luther Davis and directed by Walter<br />

Grauman.<br />

Garst Joins NTS<br />

NEW YORK— Paul Garst. who had been<br />

with Alexander Smith carpets from 1927<br />

until his retirement at the end of last year,<br />

has joined National Theatre Supply Co.<br />

He will work in close cooperation with J.<br />

W. Servies, vice-president, in National's<br />

expanding carpet activities.<br />

CALENDARoEEVENTS


BOXOFFICE BAROMETER<br />

This chart records the performance of current attroctions in the opening week of their first runs in<br />

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

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

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

the figures show the gross rating above or below thot mark. (Asterisk * denotes combination bills.)


-<br />

Goldstein Pays Tribute<br />

To Tradepress Service<br />

NEW YORK—Maurice "Razz" Goldstein<br />

held his first tradepress conference since<br />

becoming head of Warner Bros.' distributing<br />

organization on Thursday il4i and he<br />

passed out a number of tributes during his<br />

parley. Over coffee and orange juice in the<br />

Warner Bros, board room. Goldstein lauded<br />

the tradepress for its service to the industiT<br />

and expressed appreciation of exhibitors'<br />

support of the sales di'ive in his honor.<br />

Goldstein said that the tradepress "does,<br />

has and always will serve a vital puiTDOse"<br />

for the industry and that, belatedly, he was<br />

thanking the papers for their cooperation<br />

with him.<br />

The last week of the Goldstein drive, he<br />

said, was second only to the Jack Warner<br />

Week in billings. For the week ending last<br />

February 2, billings amounted to $1,400,-<br />

000. The goal of having the Warner label<br />

on every screen during that week batted<br />

100 per cent in several territories and,<br />

overall, 90 per cent of theatres played Warner<br />

product. Of the 416 theatres in the<br />

New Orleans area, for example, 415 played<br />

a Warner feature or short subject, he said.<br />

Billings on "What Ever Happened to<br />

Baby Jane?" in the final week of the Goldstein<br />

drive amounted to $250,000, Goldstein<br />

said, predicting that the film would<br />

gross $4,000,000 in the United States and<br />

Canada.<br />

Goldstein said a manager was only as<br />

good as the product he had and that he had<br />

been fortunate to have stepped into the<br />

company when it had a string of hit pictures<br />

and a flow of excellent product on the<br />

way.<br />

International Classics<br />

Name of 20th-Fox Firm<br />

NEW YORK—International Classics has<br />

been selected as the name for the recently<br />

formed 20th Century-Fox company which<br />

will distribute specialized foreign-made<br />

films, according to William Shelton. the<br />

operating head.<br />

Shelton, who formerly was president of<br />

Cameo International, is a specialist in marketing<br />

foreign films in the U.S. and helped<br />

to introduce "Devil in the Flesh," "One<br />

Summer of Happiness" and "The Game of<br />

Love" to the U.S. market. He was vicepresident<br />

of Times Film Corp. at one time<br />

and also was in charge of domestic sales<br />

for Cinemiracle's "Windjammer."<br />

International Classics was formed in<br />

recognition of the impact in recent years<br />

of a number of top-grossing foreign films<br />

on the American market. Audience tastes<br />

have broadened over the past several years<br />

so that these films have the widest possible<br />

acceptance in areas where they previously<br />

had only limited appeal, Shelton said.<br />

Maryland Theatre Owners<br />

Offering $1,000 Reward<br />

BALTIMORE — The Allied<br />

Motion Picture<br />

Theatre Owners of Maryland carried<br />

a back page ad in the local press, offering<br />

up to $1,000 reward for information leading<br />

to arrest and conviction of anyone<br />

caught defacing theatre property or equipment,<br />

or assaulting any employe of a member<br />

theatre or illegally entering theatre<br />

premises.<br />

Jack L. Whittle is executive secretary of<br />

the Allied association.<br />

Construction Is<br />

Started<br />

On Long Island Studio<br />

Baltimore Solon Would<br />

End State Censorship<br />

BALTIMORE — City delegate Sol J.<br />

Friedman, (Dem., 5th district) states there<br />

"really is not any need" for the state movie<br />

censorship board and he proposes to<br />

abolish it. He said he will introduce appropriate<br />

legislation during the current<br />

session of the Maryland assembly to eliminate<br />

the censor board because "the motion<br />

picture industry has an excellent policing<br />

system within itself."<br />

He was referring to the Johnston office<br />

which awards an industry seal of approval<br />

to acceptable films. He said religious<br />

groups that maintain close scrutiny of<br />

morality in films "should be able to take<br />

care of their own houses," in passing on<br />

films for their members.<br />

Last year the censor board cut scenes<br />

from 50 films out of 6,683 it reviewed.<br />

A POINT IS<br />

'A/o<br />

If<br />

MADE AT PROTESTANT SEMINAR:<br />

NEW YORK—Michael Myerberg has concluded<br />

negotiatloris with William Zeckendorf<br />

sr. for property at Roosevelt Field, L.I..<br />

on which he will build a 12-stage studio for<br />

the production of theatrical, television and<br />

documentary films. Construction was<br />

scheduled to start today Monday ( » . Negotiations<br />

for the property have been in<br />

progress for more than a year.<br />

The Long Island studio will represent a<br />

strong bid to make New York a production<br />

center. To be known as the Michael Myerberg<br />

Studios, the construction cost has been<br />

estimated at $2,500,000. The first picture to<br />

be made there wUl be "The Frog Pond."<br />

Under an arrangement with the various<br />

guUds. the studio wiU operate on a profitsharing<br />

basis. The deal calls for an eighthom-<br />

day, starting at noon. The studio also<br />

will have a school for acting and other<br />

phases of motion picture art.<br />

Myerberg has been both a motion picture<br />

and stage producer and has had a long<br />

career in the amusement business.<br />

Need for Film Clossification Bill<br />

Green Sheet Widens Circulation<br />

ALBANY—The Green Sheet,<br />

which reports<br />

each month an evaluation and classification<br />

of current films by the Film Estimate<br />

Board of National Organizations,<br />

could do a better job if it were circulated<br />

more widely.<br />

This was perhaps the most significant<br />

point of trade importance brought out at the<br />

16th annual seminar held here Tuesday<br />

02) of the New York Council of Protestant<br />

Churches.<br />

If the Green Sheet, which is financed by<br />

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

circulated more widely there would be no<br />

reason for the recent introduction of the<br />

Marano bill which calls for an "advisory"<br />

system of classification for children in<br />

state primary-secondary schools, James A.<br />

Fitzpatrick, counsel for the Joint Legislative<br />

Committee on Offensive and Obscene<br />

Material, declared.<br />

Fitzpatrick long has been a leader on the<br />

side for censorship in New York state.<br />

Others on the panel discussions on "Getting<br />

Good Literature and Good Movies"<br />

were Barbara Scott, attorney for the<br />

MPAA: Margaret Twyman. director of the<br />

MPAA community relations department,<br />

and James L. Herlihy. assistant to the<br />

MPAA vice-president. Arthur Hornblow jr..<br />

producer, was a scheduled participant but<br />

could not attend. Mrs. Twyman and Miss<br />

Scott had to leave early for New York City<br />

because snow had grounded planes.<br />

Circulation of the Green Sheet in New<br />

York is good and will be Improved. Mre.<br />

Twyman said. It is mailed to all newspapers<br />

In New York but not In other states.<br />

Mrs. Twyman emphasized that ten organizations<br />

are represented on the estimate<br />

board, including the Protestant Motion<br />

Picture Council, the Catholic Legion of<br />

Decency, church, civic and clubwomen<br />

groups. She distributed a brochure containing<br />

her "Special Applause" review of<br />

"To Kill a Mockingbird."<br />

She also praised "A Child Is Waiting."<br />

All—Mrs. Twyman, Miss Scott, Fitzpatrick—agreed<br />

it's the public's responsibility<br />

to patronize good pictures, and to<br />

speak out and write favorably about them.<br />

Declaring that the U.S. Supreme Court<br />

and other tribunals had brought about "the<br />

demise of censorship." Miss Scott said they<br />

also have ruled out all classification systems<br />

except the voluntary ones. She condemned<br />

the Marano measure which would<br />

ejnpower the state motion picture division<br />

to issue regular classifications as "too<br />

vague and indefinite."<br />

Fitzpatrick countered with a statement<br />

that although the motion picture division's<br />

authority has been lessened, court rulings<br />

have not invalidated completely either classification<br />

or "preview" p)owers. and pointed<br />

out that the state film division still exists.<br />

The MPAA spokesmen emphasized that<br />

of the 50 states in the U.S., only three now<br />

have censorship laws.<br />

They ridiculed "flim-flam" statistics that<br />

emphasize that only 190 of the 790 pictures<br />

licensed in New York bear Production Code<br />

seals. They said the non-code-bearing<br />

films were mostly foreign whose audiences<br />

are small compared to the people who see<br />

the code pictures.<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963 E-1


—<br />

—<br />

— —<br />

—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

——<br />

i<br />

Lincoln's<br />

Birthday<br />

Business; Tlubber<br />

NEW YORK — Although the Llncohi's<br />

Birthday school and bank holiday boosted<br />

business at many of the first-run houses,<br />

the cold and rain, plus the continued newspaper<br />

blackout, still hurt the boxoffice.<br />

However, several pictures, which were postponed<br />

in the hopes that ncw'spapers would<br />

be resumed, have already opened or are<br />

scheduled to open before the end of February,<br />

even RKO Theatres' new 23rd Street<br />

house, which will open with "The Trial"<br />

February 20.<br />

"Son of Flubber" had a smash opening<br />

week at the DeMille in Times Square and<br />

the Normandie on 57 th Street while the<br />

current week saw the opening of three important<br />

films, "To Kill a Mockingbird," "A<br />

Child Is Waiting" and "The Hook" at Radio<br />

City Music Hall, the Astor and the Embassy,<br />

respectively.<br />

Best among the holdover pictures was<br />

"Days of Wine and Roses." in its fourth and<br />

final week at the Music Hall, while "Sodom<br />

and Gomorrah" did well enough in its<br />

third and final week at the Astor but was<br />

mild in its third week at the east side<br />

Trans-Lux 85th Street. "Term of Trial"<br />

was just fair in its second week at the<br />

Paramount but was strong in its second at<br />

the east side Trans-Lux 52nd Street, and<br />

"40 Pounds of Trouble" was good in its<br />

third week at the RKO Palace.<br />

"Lawrence of Arabia" again was virtual<br />

capacity in its eighth week of two-a-day at<br />

the Criterion and "The Longest Day" was<br />

strong in its 18th week at the Warner.<br />

"Mutiny on the Bounty" held up well<br />

enough in its 14th week at Loew's State<br />

but "The Wonderful World of the Brothers<br />

Grimm" was down in its 27th week of twoa-day<br />

at Loew's Cinerama. It will stay,<br />

how^ever, until "How the West Was Won"<br />

can be exploited when the newspapers return—if<br />

ever.<br />

"David and Lisa" was continuing at a<br />

sensational clip in its seventh week at the<br />

Plaza, better than preceding weeks, while<br />

"Freud," in its iiinth week at Cinema I and<br />

Cinema 11, "Sundays and Cybele." in its<br />

12th big week at the Fine Arts: "Monkey in<br />

Winter," in its second week at the Baronet;<br />

second week at<br />

"Love and Larceny," in its<br />

the Coronet, and the newcomer. "Love at<br />

20," in its first week at the Normandie,<br />

were other art house pictures which did<br />

well.<br />

(Averoge Is 100)<br />

Astor Sodom ond Gomorroh (20th-Fox), 3rd wk. 135<br />

Boronet Monkey in Winter (MGM), 2nd wk 1 65<br />

Beekman Electro (Lopert), 8th wk 150<br />

Carnegie Holl Cinema Yojimbo (Seneca), 17th wk, 100<br />

Cinema I ond Cinema II Freud (Univ), 9th wk. ..165<br />

Coronet Love ond Lorccny (Major), 2nd wk 180<br />

Criterion Lowrencc of Arobio (Col), 8th wk. of<br />

Holiday Boosts<br />

Opens Strong<br />

1<br />

two-o-doy 95<br />

DeMille Son of Flubber (BV) 195<br />

Embossy Botcoccio '70 (Embossy), return run,<br />

8th wk "0<br />

5th<br />

of (Cont'l),<br />

moveover, 8th<br />

1 20<br />

Avenue The Lovers<br />

wk<br />

Tcruol<br />

55th Street Cross of the Living (Cori), 2nd wk. 110<br />

Fine Arts Sundoys ond Cybele (Davis-Royal),<br />

12th wk 165<br />

Forum— Her Bikini Never Got Wet (Hakim), 2nd wk, 150<br />

Little Cornogie Eclipse (Times), 8th wk 125<br />

Loew's Cinerama The Wonderful World of the<br />

Brothers Grimm [MGM-Cincramo), 27th<br />

wk. of two-a-doy<br />

1 35<br />

Loew's State Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM),<br />

1 4th wk. of two-a-doy 1 50<br />

Loew's Tower East Long Doy's Journey Into<br />

I 8th wk 1 20<br />

Night (Embossy),<br />

Murroy Hill Love of 20 (Embassy) 175<br />

Son of Flubber (BV) 1 75<br />

Polace 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 3rd wk 140<br />

Paromount Term of Triol (WB), 2nd wk 150<br />

Pons Divorce— Ifolton Style (Embossy), 21st wk. ..130<br />

Plaza— Dovid and Lisa (Cont'l), 7th wk 190<br />

Rodio City Music Hall Days of Wine ond Roses<br />

(WB). plus stage show, 4fh wk 145<br />

Normandie<br />

Rivoli West Side Story (UA), 69th wk., continuous<br />

1 50<br />

Sutton 7 Copitol Sins (Embassy), 4th wk 160<br />

Toho Cinema The Bod Sleep Well (Toho), 3rd wk. 135<br />

Trons-Lux 52nd St. Term of Triol (WB), 2nd wk. 160<br />

Trans-Lux 85th St. Sodom and Gomorrah<br />

(20th-Fox), 3rd wk 115<br />

Victoria—Playing revivals<br />

Warner The Longest Doy (20th-Fox), 18th wk.<br />

of two-a-day 1 70<br />

Has Fine Week<br />

Buffalo<br />

With 4 Big Openings<br />

BUFFALO— "Son of Flubber" topped the<br />

town last week at the Paramount where<br />

the Disney opus got away to a terif fie weekend,<br />

and two days of no school (Monday<br />

and Tuesday) helped. "Who's Got the<br />

Action?" tacked up a 150 in the Center and<br />

"The Longest Day" a 175 in the Century.<br />

Buffalo 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 2nd wk. ..150<br />

Center Who's Got the Action? (Para) 150<br />

Century The Longest Doy (20th-Fox) 175<br />

Cinema Pheodro (Lopert), 7th wk 100<br />

Grenada In Search of the Castaways (BV), 7fh wk. 100<br />

Paramount Son of Flubber (BV) 250<br />

Teck Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM) 150<br />

'Seesaw' Gets Strong Start<br />

In Baltimore Nabe House<br />

BALTIMORE—Only one new attraction<br />

was offered last week— "Two for the Seesaw"—at<br />

a neighborhood house which<br />

usually is on a subsequent run policy.<br />

Grosses there were reported "excellent." A<br />

sneak preview of "Diamond Head" Saturday<br />

night packed the theatre where "Sodom<br />

and Gomorrah" was the current show.<br />

Ambossodor Two for the Seesow (UA) 150<br />

Aurora Rosemary (F-A-W); A French Mistress<br />

(F-A-W), revivals 90<br />

Charles Divorce— Ifolion Style (Embassy), 7th wk. 95<br />

Cinema Bell' Antonio (Embassy), 3rd wk 100<br />

Five West The Loneliness of the Long Distonce<br />

Runner (Cont'l), 3rd wk 1 30<br />

Hippodrome Who's Got the Action? (Para), 2nd wk. 120<br />

Little Breokfost of Tiffany's (Para), The Miracle<br />

Worker (UA), return runs 120<br />

Moyfoir 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 2nd wk 150<br />

New The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 4th wk 140<br />

Playhouse Mr. Arkodin iCari), 3rd wk 95<br />

Stanton Sodom and Gomorroh (20th-Fox), 2nd wk. 140<br />

Town Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 7th wk. ..125<br />

Floersheimer Returns<br />

To Reade as Ad Chief<br />

NEW YORK—Albert Floersheimer, who<br />

resigned late last year as director of public<br />

relations for Theatre Owners of America<br />

to join an electronics supply firm, is<br />

back in the film business. He has been appointed<br />

director of advertising and publicity<br />

for Walter Reade-Sterling, Inc., parent<br />

company of the various Reade<br />

enterprises.<br />

It is a sort of homecoming lor Floersheimer.<br />

He was vice-president in charge<br />

of advertising for Walter Reade theatres<br />

from 1947 to 1955 and was in charge of<br />

catering from 1955 to 1957.<br />

Floersheimer will headquarter at the<br />

Reade-Sterling office until the new executive<br />

building is completed on East 34th St.<br />

in the spring.<br />

Sheldon Gunsberg, vice-president of<br />

Reade-Sterling, said the employment of<br />

Floersheimer was another move in the<br />

company's policy of strengthening its executive<br />

personnel. Floersheimer will be in<br />

charge of the coordination of all advertising<br />

and publicity for Walter Reade-Sterling,<br />

Inc., and its affiliated activities, including<br />

Continental Distributing, the<br />

Reade circuit and the activities of the Sterling<br />

Television organization.<br />

Robert Sherman Rejoins<br />

Reade as Film Buyer<br />

NEW YORK—Robert Sherman has rejoined<br />

the Walter Reade-Sterling organization<br />

as film buyer for the theatre<br />

division.<br />

Sheldon Gunsberg, vice-president, said<br />

Shei-man would divide his time between the<br />

circuit's main office in Oakhurst. N.J., and<br />

the New York office.<br />

Sherman was film buyer for the RKO<br />

circuit for many years and was film buyer<br />

for Walter Reade Theatres from 1958<br />

through 1960. He then became special sales<br />

representative for Allied Artists' "El Cid."<br />

Prism Process at Carlin<br />

BALTIMORE—The 138-foot long screen<br />

of the mammoth Carlin Drive-In will receive<br />

the Prism process this spring, as the<br />

Redstone Northeast Drive-In circuit continues<br />

its program of providing Prism<br />

screen improvement for each circuit unit.<br />

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BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963 E-3


1<br />

Professor<br />

.<br />

and<br />

.<br />

BROADWAY<br />

JOSEPH E. LEVINE. president of Embassy<br />

Pictures, delayed his planned trip to<br />

London, Paris and Rome to hold conferences<br />

on "Zulu" and four other features to be coproduced<br />

with Carlo Pontl. Levine's Broadway<br />

stage production of "Photo Finish"<br />

opened at the Brooks Atkiiison Theatre<br />

Tuesday with Peter Ustinov as star,<br />

author and eodirector and Eileen Herlie<br />

and Dennis King costarred. Leoiiard Lightstone,<br />

executive vice-president of Embassy,<br />

went to Rome Satui-day 1<br />

9 1 . Also bound<br />

for Rome was Robert L. Lippert, following<br />

meetings with 20th Century-Pox executives<br />

on his completed film, "The Yellow<br />

Canary." He will return to the U.S. February<br />

20.<br />

•<br />

John Wenish has been named sales manager<br />

of Columbia's New York exchange by<br />

Saul Ti-auner. New York branch head. * • •<br />

Edward T. Smith, a member of the print<br />

and booking department of Elmbassy Pictures,<br />

is the proud father of Dawn Annette,<br />

born to Mrs. Smith at Englewood Hospital<br />

in New Jersey Febi-uary 9. * * * Mark Robson,<br />

producer-director of "Nine Hours to<br />

Rama" for 20th Century-Fox, left for London<br />

to attend the premiere of the film at<br />

the Caiiton Theatre February 21. * * *<br />

Seymour Poe, 20th Century-Fox vice-president,<br />

went to Los Angeles for studio conferences.<br />

The company's forthcoming<br />

"Cleopatra" has tickets for the world premiere<br />

at the Rivoli Theatre June 12 on sale<br />

there and at Skoui-as and Randforce houses<br />

throughout the metropolitan area.<br />

Romy Schneider, one of the stars of Otto<br />

Preminger's "The Cardinal," now filming<br />

in Boston, arrived from Europe Thursday<br />


.<br />

1<br />

. . Chairman<br />

. . Myron<br />

ALBANY<br />

T Myer Schine, cofounder of the Schine<br />

circuit and board chairman of Schine<br />

Enterprises, is optimistic about exhibition.<br />

Here to attend a farewell dinner for Stanley<br />

E. Cox, manager of Ten Eyck Hotel,<br />

Schine said he thinks "1963 will be all right<br />

for theatres." Schine was accompanied by<br />

William Graham, vice-president for development<br />

of Schine EnteiiJrises, and Seymour<br />

L. Morris, director of publicity for<br />

Schine Hotels.<br />

Stanley E. Cox, a member of the committee<br />

for the dinner which the Variety Club<br />

recently tendered state controller Arthur<br />

Levitt, left for New York and the managership<br />

of the 1,600-room Park Sheraton (the<br />

former Park Central ) . The Ten Eyck staff<br />

and close friends (including Albert J.<br />

Bearup, associate editor of the Times-<br />

Union and a member of Tent 9 crew) presented<br />

him with a two-speaker stereo set.<br />

Times-Union's Hy Rosen drew a picture of<br />

Cox which all attendees signed. Stephen H.<br />

Anderson, who had been general manager<br />

of Schine's Quisenberry Inn at Glenn Falls,<br />

succeeds Cox at the Ten Eyck.<br />

F. Chase Hathaway of Hathaway's Drivein,<br />

North Hoosick, and his wife are wintering<br />

in Hollywood, Fla., where they have a<br />

home. Chase invited Albany area men<br />

visiting Florida to play golf with him . . .<br />

Harold I. Tyler, former exhibitor, and<br />

Jimmy Moore, former Columbia and Warner<br />

salesman, got together here recently<br />

and discussed old times in the Industry.<br />

Tyler is an assemblyman, while Moore<br />

works for the state bureau of audit and<br />

control. Tyler's former theatre, the Delphia<br />

in Chittenango, is now a restaurant<br />

and liquor store ( separate establishments )<br />

How is this for drastic climate changes?<br />

Harold Gabrilove, president of RTA Distributors<br />

and former Albany Variety chief<br />

barker, flies back and forth between Albany,<br />

where zero has been about average,<br />

and Miami, where 70-degree readings are<br />

the rule. "I don't mind the hop to Miami,"<br />

he said, "but the change back to this city<br />

is pretty rough."<br />

The eighth birthday of Stephen McGrath,<br />

son of Mrs. Doris McGrath, National Theatre<br />

Supply manager, was observed February<br />

11. The day before, Mrs. McGrath<br />

took Stephen and five friends to the Palace<br />

Theatre to see Walt Disney's "Son of Flubber."<br />

Mrs. McGrath recently drove to<br />

Schine headquarters in Gloversville for<br />

conferences with purchasing agent John<br />

Sczerba, sound engineer George Stein and<br />

others.<br />

Another Gloversville visitor was Herb<br />

Gaines, Warner Bros, manager, who huddled<br />

with booker Bill Kraemer. Gaines also<br />

drove to Kallet Theatres in Oneida for a<br />

meeting with chief buyer Sid Kallet. Tuesday<br />

morning (19i the Warner Bros, manager<br />

will host a preview screening of<br />

"Spencer's Mountain" in the Strand Theatre.<br />

Exhibitors and many other interested<br />

folks have been invited to the special<br />

showing.<br />

. .<br />

The Canastota Avon has been closed, according<br />

to advices reaching here. It had<br />

been operated on weekends recently by Alex<br />

Pedro . Herb Schwartz. Columbia man-<br />

Buffalo Tent 7's Award<br />

Goes to Hospital Head<br />

began its ob-<br />

BUFFALO—Variety Tent 7<br />

servance of Variety Week Monday (18<br />

James Hayes<br />

with its annual citation<br />

luncheon at<br />

which Moir Tanner,<br />

head of the Children's<br />

Hospital, was presented<br />

the fifth annual<br />

Variety Club<br />

award for his years of<br />

dedication and work<br />

at the institution.<br />

The luncheon was<br />

held in the Tent 7<br />

headquarters on Delaware<br />

avenue at<br />

noon.<br />

The local Variety Week celebration was<br />

postponed a week to allow the club to conclude<br />

the great amount of detail arising<br />

from the club's recent, and very successful,<br />

telethon for the Rehabilitation Center at<br />

Children's Hospital.<br />

On Thursday. Tent 7's annual salute to<br />

the radio, television and newspapers will<br />

be combined with the presentation of a<br />

check to the Rehabilitation Center. This<br />

luncheon also will be held in the Tent 7<br />

quarters.<br />

James J. Hayes, past chief barker, is<br />

general chairman of the Variety Week program.<br />

AI Petrella requested Mayor Chester<br />

A. Kowal to proclaim February 18-23 as<br />

Variety Week. Tom Fenno and Eddie<br />

Meade have photos, slides, film clips and<br />

stories for radio, television, the newspapers<br />

and theatres.<br />

1 1 1 . Schwartz<br />

. . . Carmela<br />

ager. now has an office aide—his former<br />

secretary, who is doubling as booker. She<br />

reported for duty Monday (<br />

had been engaged in a one-man operation<br />

since the last fall cutback<br />

Motolese. longtime Columbia cashier, has a<br />

state Job.<br />

Phil Baroudi reopened the Warren, Warrensburg.<br />

February 8. The theatre had<br />

been closed during December and January.<br />

Baroudi visited Filmrow with the Warren<br />

manager. Mrs. Ruth Lowery. who directed<br />

the theatre last summer, too. The theatre<br />

is operating on Fridays and Satui-days. as is<br />

Baroudi's 265-seat Northwood in North<br />

Creek. It was 17 below zero In North Creek<br />

when Baroudi drove to Albany, where<br />

It was only 14 below. North Creek is a pioneer<br />

ski center but this does not help theatre<br />

business, Baroudi reported. The energetic<br />

Baroudi also books the Tahawus In<br />

Tahawus. located on a mountain ten miles<br />

from North Creek. The Tahawus is open<br />

on Tuesday and Friday nights and is owned<br />

by the American Lead Co.<br />

Condolences to John F. and Joseph Pirlik<br />

jr.. Firlik Express Service, on the death of<br />

their sister, Mrs. Rita M. Casper. A widow,<br />

she was secretary at the express service office.<br />

Her father, Joseph G. Firlik sr..<br />

started a film-print delivery service with<br />

a horse and wagon, between Albany.<br />

Watervliet and Troy many, many years ago.<br />

Mrs. Casper is survived by her son Anthony<br />

of Colonle and the two brothers.<br />

Paramounfs "Love With the Proper<br />

Stranger " is being produced by Alan Pakula<br />

and directed by Robert Mulligan.<br />

BUFFALO<br />

^he many local industry friends of Charles<br />

Boasberg were delighted to hear of his<br />

election as president of Paramount Film<br />

Distributing Corp. Charlie is a twin<br />

brother of local attorney Robert Boasberg.<br />

who for many years was in distribution<br />

here. Charlie joined Paramount last July<br />

as vice-president and general sales manager.<br />

Floyd Fitzsimmons, Warner Bros, field<br />

staffer. Boston, worked with district manager<br />

Arthur Krolick of AB-PT on promotion<br />

for "Days of Wine and Roses," which<br />

will open on the 22nd at the Center . . .<br />

The invited audience at the preview of "To<br />

Kill a Mockingbird" at the Schine Granada<br />

was high in praise of the film, reported<br />

Manager Joe Garvey, who will open the<br />

film soon.<br />

Chief Barker Nate Dickman of the<br />

Variety Club says that workers are needed<br />

to aid at the bingo games every Wednesday<br />

at 8 p.m. in the Genesee Theatre, and he<br />

urges Tent 7 members to call past chief<br />

barker James J. Hayes, TL 3-8805. and volunteer<br />

their time. The Tent 7 building<br />

fund receives 40 per cent of the profit and<br />

the Variety charity, the heart fund receives<br />

60 per cent. Dickman has received<br />

word from Joe Polichino. chairman for the<br />

Houston VIC convention, to the effect that<br />

the first registration is in. honors going to<br />

B. C. Johnson of Tent 46. Seattle, and wife.<br />

The big powwow will be staged May 14 to<br />

17. "With Buffalo being the 1964 hosts, all<br />

eyes will be upon us. so let's send a good<br />

group." said Dickman. Reservations may<br />

be made through the maitre d'hotel<br />

Clint<br />

LaFlamme at the Delaware avenue headquEirters<br />

of Tent 7.<br />

. . .<br />

Gianina Poppalardo, president of the<br />

Women's League of the Variety Club, announces<br />

the next meeting of members of<br />

the league will be held in the Tent 7 clubrooms<br />

on the 23rd, when a luncheon will be<br />

served at 12:30, followed by a business<br />

meeting. Wives of all barkers are Invited<br />

. . . Harry Berkson of B&D Distributors, 505<br />

Pearl, and Mrs. Berkson are in California<br />

on vacation and visiting their son David<br />

and family . and Mrs. Gross left<br />

on the 14th for a sojourn in the Virgin<br />

Islands and Puerto Rico. Myron is manager<br />

for Cooperative Theatres here<br />

Joe Palanker. a prominent member of the<br />

Variety Club, is vacationing at Miami<br />

Beach . Gixxss announces that<br />

the winners of the Tent 7 January<br />

booster raffle were Max Kreigler. Peter<br />

Becker, Robert Michaels, Ann Mendola and<br />

Pauline Keefe.<br />

Ralph Biiring 20th-Fox fieldman here<br />

and out of Pittsburgh for several years, who<br />

was transferred to Atlanta, has moved there<br />

with his bride of a few months. His last<br />

effort here was in behalf of "The Rage of<br />

the Lion."<br />

ENDLESS<br />

BURNS THE ENTIRE<br />

POSITIVE ROD<br />

Sovc Corbon Cost<br />

W*it Cooit Thaotr* S«rvic«<br />

lt» K.W. UAtNIT - PMTUM. 0I16ON<br />

BOXOmCE :: February 18. 1963<br />

E-5


. .<br />

. . Marcia<br />

. . John<br />

. .<br />

. .<br />

—<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

pioyd Klingensniith, Natrona Heights outdoor<br />

theatre owner, is that area's chairman<br />

for the American Field Service committee,<br />

and as such he introduces exchange<br />

students who come to Har-Brack High<br />

School, etc. Recently he accompanied an<br />

Italian exchange student, Lucia Borghl, to<br />

a meeting of Y's Men's Club at the Allegheny<br />

Valley YMCA.<br />

The Court Theatre. Wheeling, has reopened<br />

after suffering a siege of smoke<br />

and water from the Board of Trade building<br />

fire which stai'ted in the Court Bar.<br />

The Wheeling News-Register describes the<br />

Court Theatre as "the most popular theatre<br />

between New York and Chicago" .<br />

The Allegheny Classic Film Society, operated<br />

by George Anderson, InteiTnission<br />

columnist for the Valley Daily News, Tarentum,<br />

has announced his spring series of<br />

ten "classic" movies, from March 13 to<br />

May 22, for exhibitions in the lATSE hall<br />

on Fourth Ave.. Arnold.<br />

Gus A. Katsilas, former East Pittsburgh<br />

exhibitor and ex-trucker, will be honored<br />

by the King of Greece for helping to rebuild<br />

the parish church in his hometown of<br />

Poullakidas. The 69-year-old immigrant<br />

who went from washing clothes to a modest<br />

fortune in the trucking industi-y, will be<br />

presented the Royal Medal of Local Government<br />

at a date to be announced by the<br />

Greek ambassador to the U.S.<br />

Bill Moclair, Penn Theatre manager, had<br />

several exceptionally busy weeks, with the<br />

first stage musical ever presented at this<br />

theatre in its 35 -year histoiT, plus other<br />

problems, including his coping with a big<br />

break in the water pipes, etc. . . . WTAE,<br />

channel 4, having used certain photoplay<br />

classics several times, has tmTied over 15<br />

such feature pictm-es to WQED (NET)<br />

chamiel 13. for a Film Classics Festival,<br />

starting FebniaiT 19. and scheduled each<br />

succeeding Tuesday at 8:30 p.m., through<br />

May 28. Channel 13 offered a simOar festival<br />

last year, each feature picture being<br />

exhibited completely without commercial<br />

interiTiptions.<br />

. . .<br />

Wheeling theatres will cooperate with a<br />

special centennial session of the West Virginia<br />

legislature to be re-enacted at<br />

Wheeling April 20. Wheeling was the site<br />

of the 1861 convention which resulted in<br />

the people of northwestern Virginia counties<br />

breaking away from the mother state<br />

The Pennsylvania legislature at Harrisbiu-g<br />

has measures which would lift the<br />

ban on Sunday liquor sales: require compulsory<br />

arbitration to settle labor disputes<br />

involving mass transportation: pennit<br />

legal bingo games, etc. . . . Thieves broke<br />

into the Grove Drive-In at Elm Grove,<br />

W. Va., and got away with $206, John<br />

Gardner, owner, said that the money was<br />

stolen from a metal locker in the small<br />

. . .<br />

office building adjacent to Big Wheeling<br />

Creek road The newly organized Regent<br />

Theatre, Seventh Avenue. Beaver<br />

Falls, is a "live" theatre group which maliies<br />

its debut April 19.<br />

Frank Silverman, Columbia manager, entered<br />

Montefiore Hospital February 13 for<br />

surgery . . . UA trade.screened "Five Miles<br />

Ted Burtnett of the<br />

to Midnight" . . .<br />

Moonlite Drive-In, Bedford, was in Bedford<br />

General Hospital for an operation .<br />

Gilbert Abel started something new last<br />

Thursday il4i when he staged "50-50"<br />

Night. Each Thursday, he announces, the<br />

Crafton Theatre will give away one-half of<br />

its net receipts for that night to lucky<br />

patrons.<br />

.<br />

The Victor Theatre, New Castle, had its<br />

long history in show business ended last<br />

week by the wrecking ball. The four-ton<br />

marquee came down, victim of a truck<br />

crane with a 60-foot boom. The old landmark<br />

is being removed to make way for<br />

drive-in facilities of the Lawrence Savings<br />

& Trust Co. Kunkle of Burgettstown<br />

placed her pur.se and coat on a<br />

downtown theatre seat adjoining the one<br />

she occupied and after she left the theatre<br />

she discovered the wallet's contents, her<br />

week's pay, was missing . Capitol, Wheeling,<br />

will<br />

. .<br />

feature "My Fair Lady" on stage<br />

February 18, 19.<br />

Ernie Stern, Variety chief barker, has<br />

many activities scheduled for Variety Week,<br />

February 10-16 . Zomnir, UA manager,<br />

has started lining up special bookings<br />

for UA Week, June 30-July 13 . . .<br />

"The Best of Cinerama" opens at the Warner<br />

Theatre February 14 for four weeks,<br />

to be followed by MGM-Cinerama's "How<br />

the West Was Won" . . . Paul Mach. veteran<br />

projectionist who has been ill for<br />

many months, now is in Kane Hospital .<br />

George Lukuwich, Regent Square Theatre<br />

projectionist, has recuperated in Braddock<br />

General Hospital where he had a ruptured<br />

appendix removed.<br />

Mrs. Dorothy Soltz, widow of Jacob Soltz,<br />

entered a suit in equity in local common<br />

pleas court in which she seeks her share in<br />

the sale price of the Fullerton Corp., the<br />

foi-mer Rhumba Theatre property, and the<br />

value of some stock she allegedly owned in<br />

it. The widow sues her stepson Sidney<br />

Soltz and the Fullerton Corp. She states<br />

that she was duped into signing over her<br />

inherital interest in the firm to the corporation<br />

in 1945, five years after she<br />

married Jacob Soltz, late pioneer exhibitor<br />

and owner of a Filmrow lunch room for<br />

many years. Her stock, she claimed, was in<br />

settlement of a nonsupport action which<br />

she had lodged against him. The stock<br />

certificate was given to her husband for<br />

safe keeping. She charges that her stepson,<br />

Sidney Soltz, former manager of the<br />

old Rhumba Theatre on Fullerton street,<br />

has refused to acknowledge her title to the<br />

stock. The firm's real estate was sold in<br />

1959 to the Urban Redevelopment Authority<br />

for $70,305, according to the petitioner.<br />

Tom McCleary, NTS manager, was in<br />

West Penn Hospital for a week for a physical<br />

checkup . . . Herman Hoffman, assistant<br />

manager of the Stanley Theatre, and<br />

Carole Lesick of the J. C. Penney office<br />

here are engaged to wed, with no date set<br />

for the event . . . Peim Theatre, which is<br />

offering its initial stage show, "Sound of<br />

Music," for two weeks, has additional stage<br />

bookings, including "Milk and Honey" for<br />

one week, opening March 4 and "Carnival."<br />

for one week, opening April 8 . . . Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Bob Courier have leased the Royal<br />

Ballroom, Pennwood avenue, Wilkinsburg,<br />

from John Lengyel, city area projectionist<br />

and real estate agent, and have opened<br />

"Courter's Ice Skating Pond."<br />

Mrs. Pauline L. Green, vice-president of<br />

the Guild Theatre Coi-p-, died February 5<br />

at Magee Woman's Hospital. A graduate<br />

nurse, she was the widow of David Green,<br />

who was well-known as a local tobacco<br />

salesman and theatreman. Surviving are<br />

sons S. Ralph and Millard B. Green, operators<br />

of the Guild Theatre, and four grandchildi-en.<br />

Burial was in West View Cemetery.<br />

Tony Sarkis, ESCO driver, was back on<br />

the job after an absence of eight weeks due<br />

to pneumonia which hospitalized him for<br />

known<br />

more than a month; Joe Marric jr..<br />

as "Butchie." had joined his ESCO father<br />

there and was on a pickup truck the other<br />

day: Joe Vandegrift of the ESCO dock. Is<br />

ill and absent from work . . . Bill Leliman,<br />

projectionist at the Arcadia Theatre, Windber,<br />

for 32 years, was a Filmrow visitor.<br />

He operates the house for the owners, a<br />

coal company.<br />

The New Castle citizens committee for<br />

decent Literature and films recently met in<br />

city hall there, with Hai-vey Jokinen presiding.<br />

Plans were made for the showing of<br />

a film to the public supporting the activities<br />

of this committee. The New Castle<br />

committee members announced plans to<br />

send a delegate to attend a national conference<br />

of the National Citizens for Decent<br />

Literature at Chicago in October. The local<br />

film group will meet March 7 in city hall.<br />

The West Virginia house judiciary committee<br />

is pressing for passage of a bill<br />

that would put the entire state on daylight<br />

saving time each summer. Under teims of<br />

the measure, the governor would be required<br />

to proclaim "fast time" each year<br />

from the last Sunday of April through the<br />

last Sunday of September.<br />

William Scott, AA salesman, received his<br />

notice last week and he has left the payroll.<br />

The company cutback removed one of the<br />

mideast's oldest-in-service sales representatives.<br />

Bill Scott had been with UA for<br />

Jo^tA^CUMC<br />

BOONTON, N. J.<br />

Large Core<br />

Greater Crater Area<br />

MAXIMUM LIGHT<br />

i'^«n\y Distributed<br />

in Pennsylvonio—Blumberg Bros., Inc., 1305 Vine Street, Philadslphio,<br />

Walnut 5-7240<br />

Notionol Theatre Supply, Philadelphia—Locust 7-6156<br />

Superior Theatre Equipment Company, Philadelphia<br />

Rittenhousc 6-1420<br />

in Buffolo^National Theatre Supply Co., 500 Pearl Street, Buffalo, N.Y.<br />

TL 4-1736<br />

E-6 BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


. .<br />

. . Columbia<br />

. . Harley<br />

. . Floyd<br />

about a quarter-of-a-centui-y; next with<br />

RKO for more than six years, then with<br />

AA for the past six years. He has been rehable,<br />

faithful and progressive in this business<br />

and it is hoped by his many friends<br />

that he'll be back in a sales position hereabouts<br />

at an early date . . . Ross Gibson of<br />

Filmrow more than 15 years ago (and not<br />

to be confused with Ross Gibson of Atlas<br />

Theatre Supply ) suffered frozen hands and<br />

feet in the recent sub-zero weather. He was<br />

found unconscious on a city street.<br />

Elmer C. Stoner, 77, Nixon backstage doorman<br />

for many years, died Febi-uai-y 6 at<br />

Shadyside Hospital. Survivors include his<br />

wife, a daughter, a brother, two sisters and<br />

four grandchildi-en . . . MGM-Cinerama's<br />

"How the West Was Won" is dated for<br />

opening Mai-ch 21 at the Warner, which<br />

means that "Best of Cinerama" can play<br />

there a few days beyond four weeks .<br />

Augie Gonlin. projectionist and north side<br />

political leader, attended the inaugm-ation<br />

events for Pennsylvania's new governor,<br />

William W. Scranton, at Harrisburg.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Don Mungello, Burgettstown<br />

outdoor exhibitors, spent two days in<br />

HariTsburg at the inaugural . . . Mrs. Gordon<br />

( Bertha ) Gibson of Atlas Theatre Supply<br />

was in Montefiore Hospital.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Delisi, former<br />

Saltsburg and Avonmore exhibitors, celebrated<br />

their 50th wedding anniversary in<br />

. . .<br />

St. Petersburg, Fla., where they now live.<br />

Among visitors during the observance was<br />

brother Joseph L. Delisi of Winter Park,<br />

Fla., former Cambria County exhibitor,<br />

whose son Joseph operates his theatre at<br />

Nanty-Glo Roy W. Fiedler jr.'s redecorated<br />

Parkway in the West Park section<br />

of McKees Rocks features Lucky bingo<br />

every Wednesday under the direction of<br />

Paul G. Speri, manager.<br />

lA 703 25 Years Old<br />

Dubois, pa,—IATSE Local 703 celebrated<br />

the 25th anniversary of its incorporation<br />

at a dinner in the Stage Coach<br />

room of the Pershing Hotel here recently.<br />

The event was well attended by members,<br />

friends and city officials. Guests included<br />

lA's second vice-president Harry<br />

Abbott; exhibitors Richard Rizzola and<br />

Harold Graffius, and charter members M.<br />

C. Bojallad. Grant Frankhouser and R. R.<br />

McGreevey. Charles Berkey, president,<br />

opened the session, and R. R. McGreevey,<br />

business agent, was emcee.<br />

New lA 171 BA<br />

PITTSBURGH — Martin Torreano was<br />

elected business agent for IATSE Local 171,<br />

replacing John C. "Jack" Snyder, who resigned<br />

due to ill health. John Lengyel and<br />

Frank Ferry were in the field against Torreano.<br />

George Pavlich was elected to the<br />

executive board, filling the vacancy left<br />

by the resignation of Paul Mach.<br />

Theatre Tax Repealed<br />

COATESVILLE. PA.—The city council<br />

has repealed its 10 per cent amusement tax,<br />

which had been in effect since 1948 and<br />

brought in about $10,000 annually. The<br />

levy applied to admission fees to theatres<br />

and athletic events.<br />

WASHINGTON<br />

prank J. Damis, Stanley Warner zone manager,<br />

is away from his Philadelphia<br />

office on a vacation in Miami. Charles<br />

Grimes, Damis' assistant and head of the<br />

SW Washington office, announced that the<br />

new Cinerama film, "How the West Was<br />

Won," will open at the new Cinerama Uptown<br />

March 14. Publicists Frank LaFalce<br />

of SW and Jack Foxe of MGM are busy<br />

arranging an appropriate premiere for the<br />

star-banked MGM-Cinerama spectacular.<br />

Paramount home office visitors were vicepresident<br />

Hugh Owen, who conducted a<br />

sales meeting, and Mario Ohio, who heads<br />

the print department . Davis of<br />

the Richmond neighborhood theatres was<br />

another Filmrow visitor, stopping in at the<br />

Columbia exchange . staffer<br />

Mrs. Billie Bennick's son John has gone<br />

overseas on a three-year tour of duty with<br />

the Navy.<br />

"To Kill a Mockingbird," which opened<br />

the 14th at the Town, had a private showing<br />

at the MPA on the evening of the 8th<br />

with its Pulitzer prize-winning author.<br />

Harper Lee, as honor guest. Alex Schimel,<br />

Universal exchange manager, was acting<br />

host.<br />

"The Longest Day" moved from the<br />

Ontario to the Apex on the 14th so the Ontario<br />

could make alterations prior to the<br />

premiere of "Lawrence of Arabia" on the<br />

25th . . . "Five Miles to Midnight" was to<br />

have its first American showing at Keith's<br />

on the 20th.<br />

George Stevens jr., director of the U.S.<br />

Information Agency's Motion Picture Service,<br />

is a recipient of the 15th annual<br />

Arthur S. Flemming Award for 1962, having<br />

been selected as one of the ten outstanding<br />

young men in the federal government.<br />

Stevens projects America's story abroad<br />

through USIA films, which are produced<br />

in 49 languages. "Jacqueline Kemiedy's<br />

Asian Journey" was produced mider his<br />

supervision. A private audience, headed by<br />

the chief justice, was recently shown other<br />

USIA film releases, including "American<br />

Jouiney."<br />

Eric Johnston, MPAA president, received<br />

the first peace award of the Philadelphia<br />

Zionist organization at Temple Adath<br />

Israel of the Main Line, Marion, Pa., on<br />

the 10th. Upon accepting the award,<br />

Johnston expressed his gratitude and<br />

spoke bi'iefly on the organization's twin<br />

goals of understanding and cooperation.<br />

. . . Since James Moore,<br />

Harley Davidson, president of Independent<br />

Theatres, and Mrs. Davidson returned<br />

on the nth from a vacation in Florida . . .<br />

Duane Davidson, a booker at Independent,<br />

is also a composer. The Claremont string<br />

quartet will perform Duane's "Quartet No.<br />

1" next season<br />

booker, returned on the 11th from attending<br />

his mother's funeral at Bangor. Me., he<br />

has received expressions of sympathy from<br />

his Filmrow friends . Davidson's<br />

secretary, the former Jane Mauney, was<br />

married January 26 to airman first class<br />

Roger Klotz in the chapel at Andrews Air<br />

Force Base. A reception followed at the<br />

NCO Club.<br />

Associated to Open<br />

Small Art Theatre<br />

PITTSBURGH — Associated<br />

Theatres,<br />

which has one four-wall theatre and two<br />

drive-ins under consti-uction, leased a<br />

vacant auto sales room at Forbes and<br />

Shady avenues and will remodel it for a<br />

325-seat art theatre, as yet unnamed.<br />

Thus Associated will be opening four<br />

situations late in the spring or early summer.<br />

The circuit headed by Ernest and<br />

George Stern, cousins, is the only theatre<br />

finn doing any construction at all in this<br />

area.<br />

At Monroeville, a roof has been completed<br />

on the new Monroe Theatre and<br />

work on the interior was ready to be<br />

started.<br />

Work on Associated's new Northside<br />

Drive-In in Reserve township has been<br />

held up by the record cold weather, but<br />

grading now has been resumed and<br />

ground broken for the buildings. Footers<br />

for the screen have been poured for the<br />

Canal Road Drive-In the circuit is constnicting<br />

near the old Ohio canal on the<br />

south side of Cleveland, ramps have been<br />

graded and work is expected to be going<br />

full<br />

blast in a week or so.<br />

PHILADELPHIA<br />

IJow the West Was Won" will be shown at<br />

the Boyd Theatre March 7 as a benefit<br />

for the Mary Bailey Institute for Heart Research.<br />

This w-as announced at a luncheon<br />

last week by the members of the auxiliary<br />

of the Mary Bailey Institute. Funds raised<br />

by the premiere of the newest Cinerama<br />

production will go to the institute's cardiovascular<br />

division. An organization known<br />

as Philadelphia Philanthropies is planning<br />

the premiere with the assistance of the<br />

auxiliary. Martin Berger is president and<br />

John R. Wanamaker vice-president of the<br />

philanthropic organization. Mi-s. Sylvia<br />

Gordon heads the auxUiai-y. A cocktail<br />

party and formal dinner will be given for<br />

some 400 guests at the Warwick Hotel prior<br />

to the movie showing. Buses will take<br />

guests to the Boyd in time for the 8:30 p.m.<br />

performance. "How the West Was Won"<br />

will begin an extended reserved-seat engagement<br />

after the premiere.<br />

Actor Keir Dullea, star of the film, "David<br />

and Lisa," was greeted on his appearance<br />

here last week by assistant city representative<br />

Paul B. Hartenstein and presented<br />

with a city seal paperweight as a memento.<br />

Drive-in theatres in Burlington County,<br />

N.J., arc being considered for use in the<br />

annual state motor vehicle inspections.<br />

Drive-in operators will be contacted soon<br />

regarding possible lease agreements for use<br />

of the theatres during the daytime. State<br />

Senator Henry S. Haines, whose proposal<br />

it is, said the drive-in theatres provide<br />

plenty of room to contain cars while the<br />

drivers are waiting to have the vehicles<br />

inspected. Long lines of waiting cars often<br />

times block highways in the vicinity of<br />

present inspection stations, he said. Haines<br />

said drive-in operators would probably appreciate<br />

the extra revenue that would<br />

come from utilizing their areas during daylight<br />

hours when the theatres are closed.<br />

BOXOFTICE :: Febioiary 18. 1963 E-7


oth<br />

A


NEWS AND VIEWS OF THE PRODUCTION CENTER<br />

(Hollywood Office— Suite 320 at 6362 Hollywood Blvd.)<br />

MGM-TV Is Doubling<br />

Its Network Shows<br />

HOLLYWOOD — MGM Television, currently<br />

in its most successful year to date, is<br />

assured of double its present number of<br />

shows for the 1963-64 season, said studio<br />

head Robert M. Weitman in announcing<br />

four new MGM-TV series have been set for<br />

network airing. These are Mr. Novak, The<br />

Lieutenant and Harry's Girls, scheduled for<br />

NBC, and The Travels of Jaimie Mac-<br />

Pheeters for ABC. All are full-hours except<br />

the half-hour Harry's Girls.<br />

MGM-TV currently has three one-hour<br />

series. Dr. Kildare, The Eleventh Hour and<br />

Sam Benedict, all on NBC.<br />

Jaimie MacPheeters, starring Dan O'Herlihy<br />

and young Kurt Russell, will be produced<br />

by Robert Sparks with Don Ingalls<br />

as associate producer. It marks the first<br />

adaptation into any medium of the Pulitzer<br />

prize novel by Robert Lewis Taylor. John<br />

Gay wrote the pilot script, which was directed<br />

by Boris Sagal. The large continuing<br />

cast in the comedy-adventure series<br />

includes James Westerfield, Jena Engstrom,<br />

Sandy Kenyon, Michael Witney, Mark<br />

Allen, Meg Wyllie and William O'Connell.<br />

The Mr. Novak series, created by E. Jack<br />

Neuman and Boris Sagal, stars James<br />

Franciscus and Dean Jagger. Neuman will<br />

produce. Sagal directed the pilot, written<br />

by Joseph Stefano. The dramatic stories<br />

deal with a new young teacher in a metropolitan<br />

high school.<br />

The Lieutenant, filmed without network<br />

association and produced by Arena Productions,<br />

was set with NBC within 24 hour's<br />

after executive producer Norman Felton<br />

joined Weitman in New York a week ago<br />

with his first rough cut of the pilot. Gene<br />

Roddenberry, who wrote the opening<br />

script directed by Buzz Kulik, created the<br />

series and will produce.<br />

Gary Lockw'ood stars in the title role,<br />

with Robert Elston and Stephen Franken<br />

costarring in the series backgrounded by<br />

the peacetime Marine Corps. Much of the<br />

initial episode, guest-starring James Gregory.<br />

Robert Vaughn and Laura Devon, was<br />

filmed at the Camp Pendleton Marine base.<br />

Han-y's Girls, to be filmed abroad by<br />

Joseph Stein and Billy Priedberg, will star<br />

Larry Blyden.<br />

'Love Is Ball' Junket<br />

LOS ANGELES — A three-day press<br />

junket is being planned by United Artists<br />

to the "Love Is a Ball" premiere in Las<br />

Vegas, March 1. The picture stars Glenn<br />

Ford, Hope Lange and Charles Boyer.<br />

City of Hope Salute Being<br />

Produced by Gus Bayz<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Gus C. Bayz Productions<br />

has been signed by the City of Hope to<br />

produce its golden anniversary "Salute<br />

From Showbusiness" spots for radio, television<br />

and theatres. Bob Hope is national<br />

chairman of the free nonsectarian Medical<br />

Center's 50th year observance.<br />

Stars who have already checked in with<br />

Bayz for recording and filming sessions<br />

are Jack Benny, Joey Bishop, George<br />

Burns, Lee J. Cobb, Claudette Colbert, Andy<br />

Griffith, Rita Hayworth, Robert Horton,<br />

Jack Lemmon, Raymond Massey, Ethel<br />

Mei-man, Louella O. Parsons, Gregory Peck,<br />

Walter Pidgeon, Edward G. Robinson, Barbara<br />

Stanwyck, and Danny Thomas.<br />

Films and discs will be distributed nationally.<br />

Added Facilities Are<br />

Unveiled by Center<br />

HOLLYWOOD—An open house to introduce<br />

the new facilities of the Medical and<br />

Welfare Center was hosted by the officers<br />

and trustees of the Motion Picture Relief<br />

Fund at the 335 North La Brea headquarters<br />

Sunday (17). The new facilities include<br />

an eye. ear, nose and throat room, a<br />

second physician's office and a physical<br />

medicine department equipped with diathermy,<br />

ultrasonic, whirlpool and vibra<br />

baths.<br />

MPRF, which administers the Medical<br />

and Welfare Center in Hollywood and Motion<br />

Pictuie Country House and Hospital<br />

in Woodland Hills, averaged 617 cases a<br />

month in 1962 as contrasted with 573 in<br />

1961 and 536 in 1960, according to executive<br />

director William T. Kirk. And, during<br />

last year, Counti-y House-Hospital had 51<br />

peiTOanent guests and 457 patients,<br />

respectively.<br />

Supported entirely by voluntary contributions<br />

from within the motion picture and<br />

television film industry, MPRF provides<br />

medical, dental, maintenance and personal<br />

services at the center.<br />

Aid by Burt Lancaster<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Burt Lancaster, member<br />

of the board of the local Civil Liberties<br />

Foundation, presented a grant to William<br />

L. Higgs, who acted as attorney for James<br />

Meredith and Dewey Green at the university,<br />

the money to be used for the Smith<br />

vs. Mississippi Negro rights case to be<br />

heard by the U.S. Supreme Court this<br />

spring.<br />

ABC Unable to Change<br />

Date of Oscarcast<br />

HOLLYWOOD—The Academy of Motion<br />

Picture Arts and Sciences and the American<br />

Broadcasting Co. have been unable to<br />

change the date of the 35th annual Oscar<br />

awards show. Wendell Corey, president of<br />

the Academy, explained that the Academy<br />

and the network had sought to shift the<br />

Monday April 8 date because the Jewish<br />

Seder and the recently scheduled Canadian<br />

general election both fall on the day of the<br />

Oscarcast.<br />

The 35th presentation will be held at the<br />

Santa Monica Civic Auditorium and be<br />

carried over the combined radio and television<br />

facilities of the American Broadcasting<br />

Co. and will be made available to the<br />

television facilities of the Canadian Broadcasting<br />

Co.<br />

A February 25 deadline for balloting on<br />

nominations has been set by the Screen<br />

Writers Guild so the writers will not be<br />

influenced by the amiual Oscar awards.<br />

The SWG annual dinner won't be held<br />

until May 7. later this year than the usual<br />

March date, because the guild had been unable<br />

to get a producer in time, awards<br />

chairman Allen Rivkin said.<br />

Jack Warner Will Appear<br />

On Dais for Berlin Dinner<br />

HOLL'YWOOD — Jack L.<br />

Warner, past<br />

recipient of the Milestone Award, has been<br />

scheduled as a special dais guest for the<br />

Screen Producers Guild 11th annual Milestone<br />

awards dinner honoring Irving Berlin<br />

at the Beverly Hilton Hotel Sunday<br />

night, March 3, in the International Ballroom,<br />

it is announced by Arthur Freed,<br />

chaii-man of this year's awards dinner. Also<br />

Stanley Adams, president of Ascap, has<br />

been set as a special dais guest.<br />

Among the others on the dais will be<br />

Frank Sinatra, Dinah Shore. Bob Hope,<br />

Fred Astaire, Adolph Zukor and Samuel<br />

Goldwyn. George Jessel, long-time friend<br />

of Berlin, will be master of ceremonies.<br />

20th-Fox South Africa<br />

Post to Jerry Berger<br />

ST. LOUIS—Jerry Berger, who has been<br />

regional advertising and publicity director<br />

here for 20th Century-Fox. has been named<br />

advertising-publicity director of that company's<br />

holdings in the Republic of South<br />

Africa, it was amiounced by Seymour Poe,<br />

global sales head.<br />

Berger's headquarters will be Johannesburg.<br />

BOXOFFICE Februai-y 18. 1963<br />

W-1


.<br />

O-B-P.fl o()oo,,o,op.oaooinm)8


George Peppard to Appear<br />

At Openings for 'West'<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Actor George Peppard<br />

will go on a three-week personal appearance<br />

tour to promote key city openings of<br />

Rapid City Trip Next Forward Look<br />

Project for Denver Distributors<br />

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer-Cinerama's "How DENVER—Managers of Denver film exchanges<br />

will fly to Rapid City, S.D.,<br />

the West Was Won" after attending the<br />

American premiere at the Warner Hollywood<br />

Cinerama Theatre on February 20. tive efforts to sell the industry and its<br />

Wednesday i20i to continue their coopera-<br />

Peppard, who has a top role in the film, products to the communications media and<br />

will spend a minimum of two days in each public of the Denver trade area.<br />

situation for meetings with theatre personnel<br />

and civic leaders, press, TV and we are doing and have planned to follow up<br />

"This is just one of many of the things<br />

radio interviews. He departs February 24 our meeting in December where we came<br />

with Dallas as the first stop followed by up with the theme, 'The Forward Look,"<br />

Chicago, New "<br />

York, Boston, Philadelphia, said John Dobson, manager of the United<br />

Detroit, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Washington! Artists exchange. "Our purpose is to create<br />

D.C., and Montreal.<br />

new interest in and about our ii\dustry by<br />

Peppard will attend the Chicago premiere making the public more aware of the new<br />

February 27 with other appearances arranged<br />

to bring him into cities a few days our business."<br />

and exciting things that are happening in<br />

ahead of opening engagements.<br />

The Denver managers will tape an interview<br />

for radio station KIMM immediately<br />

Lawrence W. Carroll<br />

after arriving in<br />

Dies<br />

Rapid City at 9:15 a.m.<br />

LOS KOTA-TV then plays host to the visitors<br />

ANGELES—Lawrence W. Carroll for<br />

65, died February<br />

two live half-hour telecasts, the 7 at his home<br />

second<br />

at Toluca<br />

Lake,<br />

one, just<br />

North<br />

before noon,<br />

Hollywood,<br />

being the popular<br />

of a heart attack.<br />

He<br />

Polly<br />

had been manager<br />

Weidman Show.<br />

of the<br />

m<br />

Lake Theatre<br />

Los Angeles<br />

The Rapid Theatre will be the since<br />

scene of<br />

1934. Previously he<br />

had<br />

a<br />

managed<br />

noon-hour press conference and trailer<br />

the Flynn Theatre in Bur-<br />

Imgton,<br />

showing by the group, Vt.,<br />

followed<br />

and<br />

by a second<br />

theatres in Berlin NH<br />

and<br />

one-hour press<br />

Bangor,<br />

conference, luncheon<br />

Me.<br />

and<br />

At the age of 'l6 he cocktails<br />

was session<br />

claimed<br />

at the Sheraton Hotel,<br />

as the youngest theatre manager<br />

where the managers will<br />

ni<br />

stay<br />

the<br />

overnight.<br />

United States while at Lancaster.<br />

At 2:10 the distributors will<br />

N.H.<br />

be guests<br />

He<br />

on<br />

is sui'vived by his wife KOTA's Opiiiion Please<br />

Marie:<br />

program for 50<br />

one daughter Mrs. Mario Carranza minutes.<br />

of North<br />

Between 3 and 4 they make a<br />

Hollywood and two grandsons. taped interview on radio station KEZU.<br />

Graphically demonstrating the saturation<br />

news coverage<br />

Production of "Harm's Way" will begin in<br />

Hawan<br />

which can be generated<br />

this year for Columbia release. when distribution members band together<br />

in a promotion to help the entire industry,<br />

this coverage has been assured:<br />

News story and pictures in the Rapid<br />

City Journal; news stories on the regular<br />

news programs of these stations throughout<br />

the day—KOTA. KIMM, KRSD, KEZU;<br />

live coverage and taping of the theatre<br />

press conference by KEZU: live coverage of<br />

the Sheraton press conference by KRSD,<br />

and broadcast of each hour tape at least<br />

twice by each station.<br />

The managers will make the return flight<br />

to Denver Thursday morning.<br />

Richard Carter, Jay Weston<br />

Form P. R. Association<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Richard Carter, Hollywood<br />

public relations firm, and Weston Associates<br />

of New York have formed an association<br />

for international representation<br />

of industrial and entertainment world accounts.<br />

Jay Weston heads the New York<br />

operation which retains his name. The organization<br />

represents all corporate, financial<br />

and motion picture activities of Cinerama,<br />

Cinemiracle and Cinerama Camera<br />

Corp. Clients also include Jack Lemmon,<br />

Ross Bagdasarian Enterprises, Paul Anka<br />

and Raleigh Construction Co., among<br />

others.<br />

European representatives of the firm are:<br />

Maurice Bessy, Paris: Krueger Frank,<br />

Frankfurt; Mario Natale, Rome; and Torrington<br />

Douglas, London.<br />

we remember for you •••<br />

exclusive with<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

Nationally [xi»nsir» . . . Locally lirttnshe<br />

BOXOFFICE :: February 18, 1963<br />

W-3


Lawrence' Confinues to Dominate<br />

Skittish LA; 'David & Lisa' Solid<br />

LOS ANGELES—Iii its first stanza at<br />

the Fine Arts "David and Lisa" the much<br />

heralded independent film racked up a<br />

250 per cent despite the inclement weather.<br />

Regular runs dropped slightly, while "Lawrence<br />

of Arabia" maintained its leadership<br />

in the hard-ticket parade with a 300.<br />

(Avcroge Is 100)<br />

Beverly—Two for fhc Seesaw (UA), 8th wk 65<br />

Beverly Cancn—The Loneliness of the Long<br />

Drsfiince Runner (Cont'l), 2nd wk 85<br />

Carthoy—The Longest Doy (20th-Fox), 18th wk. .. 75<br />

Chinese— Son of Flubber (BV). 4lh wk 125<br />

Crest— Electro Lopcrt), 8th wk 65<br />

Egyptian—Mutiny on the Bounty ,MGM), 13th wk. 175<br />

El Rey—The Manchurion Candidate (UA), return run 75<br />

Fine Arts—David and Lisa iCont'l) 250<br />

State—The Raven (AlP), 2nd wk 65<br />

Fox Wilshire—To Kill a Mockingbird (Univ), 7fh wk. 150<br />

Hillstreet, Ins, Villoge, Loyolo—The Lion (20th-<br />

Fox) 95<br />

Huntington Hartford— Long Day's Journey Into Night<br />

(Embassy), Sih wk 65<br />

Lido—7 Capital Sins (Embassy), 3rd wk 65<br />

Los Angeles, HoMywood, Baldwin—Madome<br />

(Embossy) 90<br />

Four Star— Lonely Are the Brave (Univ), return run 65<br />

Vogue—Ooys of Wine ond Roses (WB), 7th wk. 200<br />

Orpheum, Pix—West Side Story (UAl, gen, rel. . .225<br />

Warren's, Hawaii—The Tell Tole Heart (Brigadier). . 65<br />

Hollywood Paramount— Billy Rose's Jumbo (MGM),<br />

8th wk 95<br />

Pontages—Gypsy ( WB), 8th wk 1 75<br />

Music Hall—Freud (Univ). 9th wk 160<br />

Warner Beverly— Lawrence of Arabia (Col),<br />

8th wk 300<br />

Warner Hollywood—The Wonderful World of the<br />

Brothers Grimm (MGM-Cineramo), 27th wk 190<br />

San Frcmcisco Fox Bows Out<br />

On Upbeat Note With "Raven'<br />

SAN FRANCISCO—The last picture to be<br />

shown at the Fox Theatre. "The Raven."<br />

pulled a strong 200 per cent, but was topped<br />

by "Diamond Head" at the St. Francis.<br />

After a six-day run "Lover Come Back"<br />

and "Come September" moved out for the<br />

Disney comedy "Son of Flubber."<br />

Cineromo-Orpheum—The Wonderful World of the<br />

Brothers Grimm (MGM-Cincramo), 29th wk 225<br />

Esquire—The Day Mors Invaded Earth (20th-<br />

Fox); Young Guns of Texas (20th-Fox) 75<br />

Fox—The Raven (AlP) 200<br />

Golden Gote— Lover Come Bock (Univ); Come<br />

September 'Univ), return runs 85<br />

Metro— Divorce— Italian Style (Embassy), 13th wk. 250<br />

Paromount—Who's Got the Action? (Para); Where<br />

the Truth Lies (Pora) 90<br />

Presidio— Ingmor Bergman Festival (Jonus),<br />

4th wk 1 50<br />

-YOU CAN RELY ON<br />

PICTURE SERVICE Go<br />

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SAN FRANCISCO<br />

R sneak preview of "Farewell to the Fox"<br />

benefit party was held at the Fox Theatre<br />

Tuesday il2i at 11 a.m. when vintage<br />

cars filled with Peninsula Volunteer flappers<br />

and a banjo-playing group from the<br />

Red Garter pulled up in front of the theatre,<br />

followed by new convertibles with Volunteers<br />

in very fashionable evening fashions.<br />

The original doorman and some of<br />

the original ushers escorted the group into<br />

the theatre for a lobby party. Mrs. Warren<br />

Debenham jr., and Mrs. James HaiTis.<br />

chairmen of the party, greeted the incoming<br />

group, which included Mrs. Lois Moran<br />

Young, who starred in the opening-night<br />

film, "Behind That Curtain"; Herman<br />

'<br />

Kersken, original manager: Eddie Peabody,<br />

celebrated banjoist. and Hoddy Guittard,<br />

the San Francisco baritone. Three<br />

"Cleopatra" costumes were modeled by<br />

Peninsula Volunteers. The farewell party<br />

at the Pox Saturday il6i was directed by<br />

Kersken. with Ken Murray acting as emcee.<br />

Among the original employes of the Pox<br />

who participated in the farewell were Al<br />

Graf, Lou Singer, Harvey Binns, Sam<br />

Barnblatt, Wesoneal Winston. Bill Canes.<br />

Jos Sinai. Peter Zelis, Joe Brenslick and<br />

rBud Tapper. A gala on-stage party followed<br />

',<br />

the entertainment.<br />

r .<br />

H<br />

U


. . Tom<br />

. . Artlin<br />

. . Mr.<br />

. .<br />

1<br />

DENVER<br />

Tim Hughes has taken over management<br />

of the Harney Theatre in Custer, S.D.,<br />

for owner Clell Elwood. Elwood is constructing<br />

a scenic cable railway there .<br />

Catherine Tallman plans an early April<br />

opening for her Hills Drive-In at Spearfish,<br />

S.D. . McKee, Inland Theatre,<br />

Martin, S. D., and his family were vacationing<br />

in California . . . Keith Parrinton<br />

has closed the Atom Theatre in Jeffrey<br />

City, Wyo.<br />

Sympathy to John and Adelaide Vos ihe's<br />

with American International i<br />

on the death<br />

of their daughter Barbara Lou at age 23<br />

after a lengthy illness . . . Buzz Campbell,<br />

manager of the Fox Theatre, Rawlins, was<br />

trying a series of operetta features, one<br />

night a week . Zeigler will go to<br />

two changes a week in the Range Theatre,<br />

Saratoga, Wyo., in the spring . and<br />

Mrs. W. Hipsher, Post Theatre, Igloo, S.D.,<br />

are celebrating the arrival of their first<br />

grandchild, Todd Wilson Johnson.<br />

Frank Aydelotte is planning extensive<br />

improvements for the Aggie Theatre, Port<br />

Collins, including the erection of a balcony<br />

which will greatly increase the seating<br />

capacity . . . The "Bachelors Five," under<br />

supervision of Manager Lyle Podnes,<br />

have remodeled the foyer of the New Roxy<br />

Theatre, Hemmingford. Neb., including installation<br />

of a new concession bar . . .<br />

Norman Bentz, who recently took over operation<br />

of the Cody (Wyo.) Theatre and<br />

Cody Drive-In from owner Earl Corder, has<br />

negotiated for the Park Drive-In, also in<br />

Cody, and will operate it in association<br />

with Paul Cory from Thermopolis, Wyo.<br />

In an election supervised by the National<br />

Labor Relations Board, employes in nine<br />

Fox Denver theatres voted about three to<br />

one against union representation. The election<br />

involved employes other than projectionists<br />

... A baby elephant was exhibited<br />

in front of the Centre Theatre to<br />

draw attention to the opening of "The<br />

Lion," sponsored by Denver Lions Club.<br />

The Associates and Aldrich Co. will film<br />

for Warners a multi-million-dollar outdoor<br />

drama, titled "Two for Texas."<br />

Color TV Is Postponed<br />

Indefinitely in Canada<br />

From Canadian Edition<br />

TORONTO — With the acquiescence of<br />

TV networks, the federal Board of Broadcast<br />

Governors has indefinitely postponed<br />

the introduction of color television in<br />

Canada pending further technical study.<br />

One factor is the expensive outlay for required<br />

studio equipment.<br />

At the same time, Trans-Canada Telemeter,<br />

which does not come under the<br />

jurisdiction of the government board in<br />

the operation of its closed-circuit system<br />

in suburban Etobicoke, has announced the<br />

availability of pay TV programs in color for<br />

subscribers.<br />

The Telemeter guide listed seven features<br />

for toll TV programs in color as follows:<br />

Constantine and the Cross, Wonderful to<br />

Be Young, In Search of the Castaways, My<br />

Geisha, Son of Samson, The Ti-ojan Horse<br />

and The Tartars.<br />

PORTLAND<br />

Qovernor and Mrs. Mark Hatfield, mayor<br />

and Mrs. Terry Schrunk, city, county<br />

and state officials, the press and guest exhibitors<br />

attended the premiere Tuesday ( 5<br />

of "Mutiny on the Bounty" at the Music<br />

Box Theatre. Employes of the U.S. National<br />

Bank and members of the Junior<br />

Chamber of Commerce bought the house<br />

for additional benefit premieres Wednesday<br />

and Thursday. The picture was opened to<br />

the public Friday (8). Katherine Marshall,<br />

Music Box manager, reported sellouts for<br />

the first five days. Down for the Tuesday<br />

premiere was Will J. Conner, president of<br />

Hamrick Theatres, Seattle. Hamrick operates<br />

the Music Box.<br />

At the Paramount, where "The Longest<br />

Day" is in a fourth week, Ron Mesher reports<br />

healthy patronage. Special bargain<br />

matinees are scheduled for Wednesdays<br />

and Saturdays.<br />

Schreibman Is Attorney<br />

For British Producers<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Paul Schreibman has<br />

been appointed U.S. representative and attorney<br />

for British producers-distributors<br />

Michael Klinger and Robert Hartford-<br />

Davis, currently in Hollywood for talks<br />

concerning Hollywood tieups.<br />

Schreibman, veteran legal figme in the<br />

entertainment field, will serve as official<br />

liaison here for such Klinger-Hartford-<br />

Davis companies as Tekli Film Productions,<br />

Ltd.. Compton-Cameo Films and<br />

Compton Cinemas, Ltd. Schreibman is now<br />

screening film projects for possible coproduction<br />

deals with the various British firms<br />

he now represents.<br />

me<br />

talks<br />

adoui<br />

lakes<br />

more<br />

Ives<br />

in this country than any other<br />

type of cancer. Because so<br />

many people ignore its<br />

symptoms. Or hope they will<br />

"go away." Or expect to do<br />

something "tomorrow." In short,<br />

they avoid the one thing that<br />

will help— seeing their doctors.<br />

For cancer of the colon and rectum<br />

can be cured in 3 out of 4<br />

patients when discovered early<br />

and treated properly. Its danger<br />

signs—change in bowel habits<br />

or<br />

unusual bleeding— call<br />

for prompt medical examination.<br />

It may not be cancer, but<br />

only a physician will know.<br />

Every adult man and woman can<br />

have life-saving protection<br />

from cancer of the colon and rectum.<br />

An annual health checkup,<br />

including digital and proctoscopic<br />

examinations, can detect this cancer<br />

before any symptoms appear.<br />

Call your local American Cancer<br />

Society Unit for more information<br />

and material on this subject.<br />

As a screen game,<br />

HOLLYWOOD takes fop<br />

honors. As a box-office attraction,<br />

it is without equaL It has<br />

been a favorite with theatre goers for<br />

over 15 years. Write today for complete detoils.<br />

Be sure to give seating or cor capacity,<br />

HOLLYWOOD AMUSEMINT CO. ,<br />

3750 Ookton St. * Skokic, Illinois<br />

Gets Two British Nominations<br />

HOLLYWOOD — British writer-director<br />

Bryan Forbes has been nominated in the<br />

best screenplay categoi-y by the British<br />

Screen Writers' Guild for his "Only Two<br />

Can Play," the Peter Sellers starrer which<br />

Columbia Pictures released. Forbes is also<br />

in contention in the forthcoming British<br />

Film Academy Awards with nominations in<br />

best .screenplay and best director of "The<br />

L-Shaped Room," the Columbia release<br />

starring Leslie Caron. and best screenplay<br />

again for "Only Two Can Play."<br />

CANCER<br />

SOCIETY<br />

This space conu^outoa Oy ifto publisher<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18. 1963<br />

W-7


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 />

enrollnient.s, 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 present 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 />

Business 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<br />

choice.<br />

their<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 />

^•^^'"• <<br />

-^/\- HIOHIR COUCATION<br />

A STATEMENT<br />

We believe that, in the light of the present<br />

urgency, now is the time for a broader and<br />

deeper participation by the business community<br />

in the support of higher education.<br />

We therefore call upon our colleagues in<br />

American business and industry to help<br />

spread the base of voluntary support of<br />

higher education as a necessary supplement<br />

to the extensive support which busi-<br />

KENNETH H. KLIPSTEIN,<br />

American Cyanamid Co.<br />

JOSEPH A. GR.\ZIER,<br />

American Radiator & Standard<br />

Sanitary Corporation<br />

M. NIELSEN,<br />

The Babcock & Wilcox Co.<br />

HARMON S. EBERHARD,<br />

Caterpillar Tractor Co.<br />

HAROLD H. HELM,<br />

Chemical Bank New York<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 />

THOM.\S C. FOGARTY,<br />

Continental Can Company, Inc.<br />

SAMUEL LENHER,<br />

E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company<br />

MARION B. FOLSOM,<br />

Eastman Kodak Company<br />

LEWIS B. CUYLER,<br />

First National City Bank<br />

RALPH J. CORDINER,<br />

General Electric Company<br />

LEONARD F. GENZ,<br />

General Foods Corporation<br />

GEORGE RUSSELL,<br />

General .Molars Corporation<br />

JOHN C. GRISWOLD,<br />

W. R. Grace & Company<br />

JERRY McAFEE,<br />

Gulf Oil Corporation<br />

OF CONVICTION<br />

GEORGE S. DIVELY,<br />

Harris-lntertype Corporation<br />

FRANK R. MILLIKEN,<br />

Kennecott Copper Corporation<br />

JAMES C. DONNELL II,<br />

Marathon Oil Company<br />

REINHARD A. HOHAUS,<br />

Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.<br />

STUART T. SAUNDERS,<br />

Norfolk & Western Railway Co.<br />

STANLEY DE J. OSBORNE,<br />

Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp.<br />

WILLIAM CARPENTER,<br />

Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.<br />

CHAMP CARRY,<br />

Pullman, Incorporated<br />

JAMES T. GRIFFIN,<br />

Sears, Roebuck and Company<br />

H. GERSHINOWITZ,<br />

Shell Development Company<br />

Shell Oil Company<br />

E. L. STEINIGER,<br />

Sinclair Oil Corporation<br />

JOHN E. SWEARINGEN,<br />

Standard Oil Company {Indiana)<br />

M.J. R.^THBONE.<br />

Standard Oil Company (N. J.)<br />

CHARLES E. SPAHR,<br />

Standard Oil Company (Ohio)<br />

J. ERIK JONSSON,<br />

Texas JnttrununU, Inc.<br />

ness now provides to education through<br />

taxes.<br />

We urge responsible management to think<br />

through its opportunity and its obligation<br />

to adopt meaningful programs of voluntary<br />

corporate support to those colleges and<br />

universities whose service and quality they<br />

wish to encourage and nurture. We on our<br />

part will do no less.<br />

HARRY B. McCLURE,<br />

Union Carbide Corporation<br />

J. S. JOHNSON,<br />

U. S. Rubber Company (<br />

W. HOMER TURNER,<br />

U. S. Steel Foundation, Inc.<br />

R. D. LILLEY,<br />

Western Electric Company, Inc.<br />

ALFRED S. GLOSSBRENNER,<br />

Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.<br />

•JAMES B. BLACK,<br />

Pacific Gas


—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

— —<br />

'<br />

. . . George<br />

. . Herman<br />

.<br />

'Seesaw' Finds Favor<br />

At Kansas City Plaza<br />

KANSAS CITY— "Two for the Seesaw"<br />

opened at the Plaza here and earned a solid<br />

240 per cent rating with prospects of holding<br />

up for a goad run. Conversely, "Term<br />

of Trial" was disappointing at the Paramount<br />

and stayed only a week as did "The<br />

Raven" at the Uptown and Granada. Too,<br />

"Boccaccio '70" fell off at the Brookside<br />

more than it was expected to in a second<br />

week, but was holding. Large display ads<br />

were beginning to appear for the opening<br />

of "LawTcnce of Arabia" at the Saxon<br />

Thursday (21).<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Brookside Boccaccio '70 (Embassy), 2nd wk 210<br />

Capri MuHny on »he Bounty (MGM), 7th wk. ..100<br />

Empire The Wonderful World of the Brothers<br />

Grimm (MGM-Cineroma), 26th wk 90<br />

Kimo Phaedra (Lopert), 8th wk 125<br />

Paramount Term of Trial (WB) 95<br />

Plaza Two for the Seesaw (UA) ,240<br />

Roxy The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 14th wk. ...!lOO<br />

Saxon 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 3rd wk 100<br />

Uptown, Granada The Raven (AlP); Guns of the<br />

Black Witch (AlP) 130<br />

3 Newcomers Are Brisk<br />

As Chicago Openers<br />

CHICAGO—With many people having<br />

a holiday on February 12, and with sunshine<br />

and good weather for a change, there<br />

was optimism among Loop and neighborhood<br />

theatres. "Gypsy" did a tremendous<br />

business in its first outlying run. Two Loop<br />

openers, "Diamond Head" at the Chicago,<br />

and "40 Pounds of Trouble" at the United<br />

Artists, had a good start. At the Esquire<br />

on the near north side "A Girl Named<br />

Tamiko" was a strong newcomer.<br />

Capri Nature's Playmates (SR); The Love Specialist<br />

(SR), 7th wk<br />

, . 1 55<br />

Carnegie Gypsy (WB), return run<br />

'<br />

1 65<br />

Onemo The Great Chose (Cont'l), 3rd wk 1 5C<br />

Cinestage Lawrence of Arabia (Col), 5th wk 235<br />

Chicago Diamond Head (Col) 195<br />

Esquire A Girl Named Tamiko {Para) .....'.'.'..<br />

J80<br />

Loop The Password Is Courage (MGM), 4th wk 90<br />

McVickers The Wonderful World of the Brothers<br />

Grimm (MGM-Cineromo), 28th wk 95<br />

Orientoi A Child Is Waiting (UA), 2nd wk 135<br />

Roosevelt—The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 1 9th wk. 'l35<br />

Stote Lake Borobbas (Col), 5th wk. 160<br />

Surf— Lonely Are the Erave " '<br />

(Univ), 2nd wk.<br />

1 75<br />

Todd Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 14th wk 150<br />

Town The Green More (Zenith), 3rd wk 135<br />

United Artists 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ) 195<br />

Woods—Sodom and Gomorroh (20th-Fox), 3rd' wk. 200<br />

'Sodom and Gomorrah' Clicks<br />

For 225% in Indianapolis<br />

INDIANAPOLIS— Business was a little<br />

lopsided at first-run theatres here for the<br />

week. "Sodom and Gomorrah" clicked immediately,<br />

"Barabbas" was doing all right<br />

for a second week and "The Longest Day"<br />

has come back nicely in its ninth week.<br />

But other attractions were draggy.<br />

Circle Sodom and Gomorrah (20th-Fox).<br />

'<br />

225<br />

Encore The Man Who Wagged His Toil (CoritI)' 100<br />

Esquire Woltz of the Toreadors (Cont'l) 115<br />

Indiono—The Best of Cinerama (Cincramo), 's'th wk' 90<br />

Keiths Borobbas (Cnl), 2nd wk. ... 1)5<br />

Loew's Divorce— Italion Style (Embassy) 90<br />

Lyric The Longest Doy (20th-Fox), 9th wk. 135<br />

Opens Bunker Hill Sharon<br />

BUNKER HILL. ILL.—Mr. and Mrs. T.<br />

A. Baker have reopened the Sharon Theatre,<br />

which had been closed since December<br />

4 due to illness in the management's<br />

family.<br />

Neil Paterson (of "Room at the Top" and<br />

"Little Kidnappers" fame" is writing the<br />

screenplay for MGM's version of Hans Werfel's<br />

"40 Days of Musa Dagh."<br />

Dewey, Okla., Theatre<br />

Bought by W. W. Bell<br />

DEWEY, OKLA.—Walter W. Bell, owner<br />

of the New Cozy Theatre in Chetopa, Kas.,<br />

has purchased the Dewey Theatre here from<br />

E. M. Freiburger of Bartlesville. owner and<br />

operator of the house for the last 25 years.<br />

Bell, who also owned and operated a theatre<br />

at Chelsea, Okla., before moving to<br />

Chetopa, plans to close the Dewey March<br />

1 for complete remodeling. The project<br />

calls for a new front, updated foyer and<br />

redecoration of the auditorium as well as<br />

installation of updated, modern equipment.<br />

The renovation is expected to be completed<br />

in about six weeks. Bell said, with<br />

tentative reopening date set for April 15.<br />

Prospects Improving<br />

For Premiere Circuit<br />

EVANSVILLE, IND.—After a year of<br />

transition. Premier Theatres, locally based<br />

circuit, is looking forward to a year of improving<br />

business for its own theatres and<br />

for exhibition in general.<br />

Last year Premier abandoned the Grand,<br />

a local theatrical landmark since the late<br />

1800s, and transferred its fir.st-run motion<br />

picture activities to the Washington and<br />

Ross theatres, according to an Evansville<br />

Press story.<br />

The Press account continues in part:<br />

Jesse Pme of Premier Theatres said of<br />

the exodus to the east side, "Although this<br />

marks the advent of a changed policy in<br />

Evansville, this follows a well-defined trend<br />

occui-ring throughout the countiT."<br />

Pine said there is increased activity in<br />

the building of luxury theatres in the suburban<br />

areas to which so much of the<br />

moviegoing public has gravitated. For the<br />

same reasons shoppers go to suburban<br />

shopping centers, motion picture fans are<br />

di-awn to the suburban theatres with their<br />

larger parking areas and easier access.<br />

"This follows a national trend," Fine explained,<br />

"bringing a facility, business or<br />

otherwise, to the people instead of forcing<br />

people to travel long distances to a facility<br />

in a crowded area where parking is a<br />

problem."<br />

In addition, maintenance and heatingcooling<br />

costs are reduced in the more modern<br />

subui-ban theatres. Fine said. He<br />

noted that it took three more workers to<br />

clean the Grand effectively than it takes<br />

to clean the Washington Theatre.<br />

Various improvements have been planned<br />

for the Washington and Ross, with the program<br />

already under way. Both theatres<br />

have been recarpeted completely and the<br />

screen at the Washington has been increased<br />

in size by one-third. Fine said a<br />

number of other projects will be started<br />

this year.<br />

Ernest Sands Conducts<br />

Chicago Sales Session<br />

CHICAGO— Ernest Sands, Allied<br />

Artists<br />

general sales manager, was in Chicago last<br />

week for meetings of division and branch<br />

managers from the midwestern territory,<br />

which ran through Friday (15). Attending<br />

were Nat Nathanson, midwestern division<br />

manager: Sol Francis, Omaha manager:<br />

Meyer Kahn. Milwaukee manager, and<br />

Irving Marks, Minneapolis.<br />

ST.<br />

LOUIS<br />

John Wilhelm arrived in St. Louis the Uth<br />

and will assume his duties as branch<br />

manager of 20th-Fox here next Monday.<br />

Wilhelm, who was branch manager at the<br />

20th office in Albany. N.Y., replaces William<br />

Gehring who has moved to the New<br />

York office.<br />

Rodney Bush of the 20th-Fox advertising<br />

and publicity department, was in St. Louis<br />

the 7th and 8th interviewing applicants for<br />

the job of regional advertising and publicity<br />

manager. Jeiry Berger, who formerly<br />

held that title, left to assume his new position<br />

in South Africa.<br />

The Washington Theatre, Quincy, 111., has<br />

booked group 2 of the MGM Golden Operettas<br />

from Crest Films. The new series<br />

begins Febi-uary 21 . Gorelick,<br />

Crest, and his wife are spending a week in<br />

Kansas City visiting circuits and exhibitors<br />

Cohn, Crest, spent some time<br />

visiting the Pi-isina circuit in Springfield,<br />

HI., and the Carney theatres and Caesar<br />

Bei-utt in Rolla, Mo.<br />

Tony Beninati, UA salesman, reports that<br />

he became a grandfather twice during one<br />

week in January. His son Tonydon had a<br />

fifth child, Catherine, born Januaii' 7 in<br />

Orlando, Fla., and his other son Brian Lee,<br />

who is in the Air Force in Selma, Miss.,<br />

had his first child, a boy, Brian David,<br />

January 2.<br />

"Diamond Head" opens at Loew's State<br />

February 14. It was seen by the press at a<br />

recent preview . . . Eddie Bracken and<br />

Rosemary Clooney were in town for a<br />

KPLR-TV telethon for the March of Dimes<br />

last Saturday and Sunday.<br />

Officers of the Missom-i-Hlinois Theatre<br />

Owners have decided not to have any meetings<br />

until after the Show-A-Rama convention<br />

in Kansas City. The next meeting will<br />

be the end of March or the first of April<br />

. . . Tom Ewell will be in town March 4 to<br />

aptJear in the roadshow of "Take Her She's<br />

Mine" at the American Theatre.<br />

A new indoor theatre is part of the plans<br />

included in the new twin tower apartments<br />

patterned after the Marina City in<br />

I<br />

(Continued on page C-4)<br />

Professor Showman Saysi<br />

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BOXOFFICE February 18. 1963<br />

C-1


—<br />

. . Harold<br />

—<br />

KANSAS CITY<br />

\il7cll-knowii exhibitor names in this territory<br />

are involved in a change of ownership<br />

at Eldorado Springs. Mr. and Mi-s.<br />

Harold E. Porta of Osceola and their son<br />

Ronn and his wife have purchased the Park<br />

Theatre and the El Dorado Drive-In from<br />

Mrs. Walter Lovan and the estate of the<br />

late T. E. and Tom Wilhoit. Mrs. Lovan and<br />

her husband, who died in 1952. first came<br />

to Eldorado Springs in 1936 to manage the<br />

Park Theatre. Lovan operated in partnership<br />

with the Wilhoits for many years. In<br />

1954, Mrs. Lovan and associates built the<br />

El Dorado Drive-In and relinquished the<br />

lease on the Park, which was operated from<br />

1954 to 1957 by Ray Brown. In 1957 Mrs.<br />

Lovan reacquired the Park and has kept<br />

both theatres in operation. Among the better<br />

known managers for the Lovan theatres<br />

have been Joe Hendrix and Ray Wood.<br />

The Porta family also has a long history<br />

of theatre operation in west central Missouri,<br />

1962 having been the Portas' 25th<br />

anniversary year in the theatre business.<br />

They operate the Civic Theatre in Osceola,<br />

the Windsor in Windsor and from time to<br />

time have operated other situations in<br />

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Will begin March 1 and the drive-in is expected<br />

to open April 1. Ronn Porta will<br />

move his family to Eldorado Springs and<br />

will run both theatres.<br />

Continuing with the familiar names<br />

theme. R. P. "Bob" Shade once again has<br />

.ibined the ranks of active theatremen. Effective<br />

February 1 he acquired the lola<br />

Theatre in Ida, Kas., from James J. Long.<br />

Both Bob Shade and his brother Don < who<br />

had the Tauy Theatre in Ottawa for many<br />

years I are widely known and respected<br />

theatremen. Bob and his wife owned and<br />

operated the Siloam Theatre in Excelsior<br />

Springs for eight years until an illness<br />

forced him to give it up about three years<br />

ago. The couple is in the process now of<br />

getting settled in lola and it is good news<br />

that Bob's health is much improved. Jim<br />

Lon^, former PMW executive and also<br />

widely known in the industry, now operates<br />

the only remaining indoor theatre in Ottawa,<br />

the Plaza. Chet Hylton, who books<br />

and buys for the Long theatres, also will<br />

book and buy for lola.<br />

Elmer Dillon, the silver-haired squire of<br />

the National Theatre, one of this town's<br />

few remaining neighborhood houses, still<br />

purveys tasty hot popcorn at ten cents a<br />

sack. He recently booked in an interesting<br />

midweek duo for adults— "Lolita" and<br />

"Streetcar Named Desire" . Lyon,<br />

ad-minded manager of the downtown<br />

Paramount, used a quote from <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

as a lead-in on his newspaper ad for "Term<br />

of Trial," having found in our review these<br />

words: "... cannot fail to be included in<br />

the list of best pictm-es for 1963."<br />

Sympathy is extended to George I. Hunter,<br />

Pox Midwest city manager in Springfield,<br />

in the recent death of his father, Robert T.<br />

Hunter, age 83 . . . Glen Caldwell of Aurora<br />

recently undei-went major sui'gery at<br />

Barnes Medical Ceiiter in St. Louis and is<br />

reportedly progressing satisfactorily . . .<br />

Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Van Duyne stopped in<br />

town briefly on their way from the east<br />

coast to Colorado Springs. Van Duyne, an<br />

RCA Service executive, headed that company's<br />

former office on Pilmrow here before<br />

being promoted and transferred to the<br />

firm's Cherry Hill headquarters near Camden,<br />

N.J. He now acts as special liaison<br />

man on RCA installations in connection<br />

with national defense alert systems.<br />

A former Rockhill Theatre employe may<br />

very well be on his way to a career on the<br />

operatic or concert stage as the result of<br />

having won his way into the regional<br />

Metropolitan Opera auditions. The young<br />

basso—Bruce Freeman by name—is a<br />

foi-mer doorman at the Rockhill and became<br />

seriously interested in an opera career<br />

through close association with the Lyric<br />

Opera Theatre which, for the past several<br />

years, has been presented on the Rockhill<br />

stage. Two Lyric Theatre principals<br />

Joanne Highley and William Justus—also<br />

were district winners and Walter Hook,<br />

another Lyric alumnus, is an alternate.<br />

A Chicago theatre manager, N. H. Johnathan,<br />

also said to be the author of several<br />

books, has acquired the Star Theatre in<br />

Lyons, Kas., from the Neely estate and<br />

will open it to the public Friday i22i.<br />

Johnathan said he plans to take an active<br />

interest in the Star, adding that he is now<br />

beginning a program of renovation and redecoration<br />

and that eventually he will add<br />

a new lobby. The Star has been operated<br />

by Mrs. Clifford Weaver since the death of<br />

her father, John Neely, longtime owner of<br />

the theatre. Mrs. Weaver closed the house<br />

last month. Neely died two years ago in a<br />

fall sustained while he was installing new<br />

ceiling material in the theatre auditorium.<br />

Indications are that the theatre business<br />

is improving in Rice County. Kas. In addition<br />

to the reopening of the Star Theatre<br />

in Lyons, word has come that the Chase<br />

Theatre in Chase, closed for at least a year,<br />

has been reopened on a weekend policy by<br />

Bill Kelley. The new manager has been<br />

c'.eaning and redecorating the house and<br />

is hoping that the townsfolk will give him<br />

enough support so that he can keep the<br />

theatre going.<br />

Two Fox Midwest houses—the Isis and<br />

"Vista—advertised "3 Thundering Hits."<br />

They were "Thunder Road," "Thunder in<br />

Carolina" and "Thunder in the Sun." The<br />

talk is that "Thunder Road" has become a<br />

sort of kid and teenage classic in this area<br />

—as well as in several other parts of the<br />

counti-y—and is rapidly approaching the<br />

all -occasion status of the Ma and Pa<br />

Kettles and the better Abbott and Costellos<br />

. . . Stebbins Theatre Equipment Co.<br />

recently furnished a large size screen to<br />

the army installation at Ft. Leavenworth.<br />

Herman Goreliek of Crest Films, St. Louis,<br />

and Mrs. Goreliek were here last week.<br />

Crest is handling MGM reissues in this<br />

territory . . . C. Clare Woods, employed by<br />

Durwood Theatres here several years ago,<br />

recently was elected president of United<br />

Theatres circuit of New Orleans. He will<br />

also continue as general manager of the<br />

theatre fii-m.<br />

All film exchanges here will be closed<br />

Friday 122) in observance of Washington's<br />

birthday. Some equipment and<br />

supply firms probably will be open, so<br />

the exhibitor is urged to check before<br />

making plans.<br />

. .<br />

Seen on the Row last week was Bev (the<br />

traveler! Miller, who declared that having<br />

been to both coasts and through the south<br />

since the holidays and having spent only<br />

three days in Kansas City since Januai-y 10<br />

—not to mention convention jaunts in November<br />

and December to Miami and Cleveland—he's<br />

decided to stay put right here<br />

until after Show-A-Rama i March 5-7 1 . . .<br />

Also seen along the Row were Mr, and Mrs.<br />

Charles Payson of the Carol Drive-In, Cai--<br />

rollton, and Ed Harris of Neosho. Also O.<br />

C. Johnson of Palls City. Neb., and Hiawatha,<br />

Kas. . The Motion Picture Booking<br />

Agency got a picture post card from Bill<br />

Bradfield, who is vacationing in Mexico,<br />

saying he'll see all his friends at Show-A-<br />

Rama,<br />

\


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BOXOFFICE :: February 18, 1963 C-3


. . Dave<br />

. . The<br />

. . Balaban<br />

CHICAGO<br />

T)iaI-A->Iovie"s hcadquarteis, the new phone<br />

service wliich gives age suitability<br />

latinss for current attractions, is located<br />

in St. Peter's Church Friedman and<br />

.<br />

Stanford Kohlbern are ready to launch their<br />

first low budget film, "Boing." They arc<br />

also starting a second feature titled "Scum of<br />

the Earth," with shooting taking place in<br />

Chicago.<br />

Keir Dullea was due here to help exploit<br />

the "David and Lisa" opening hero at<br />

Richard Sterns Cinema theatre. Norman<br />

Pyle, who was MGM publicist until his retirement<br />

a few years ago. was brought back<br />

from a Florida vacation to handle the<br />

LaVern Baker, from a year's<br />

publicity . . .<br />

tour of France and Italy, will headline a<br />

new rock 'n" roll stage revue at the Regal<br />

. . . The Tivoli opens with a new stage show<br />

titled "The Jimmy Smith Show." The accompanying<br />

feature film is "White Slave<br />

Ship."<br />

Laurel Goodwin was here in behalf of<br />

"Papa's Delicate Condition." The film opens<br />

at the Woods March 15 . . . The Golf Mill<br />

Theatre's art gallery is featuring paintings<br />

— Our "19th" Year -<br />

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37S0 Ookton St. ' Skokic, Illinois<br />

by Boris Becker, an artist from suburban<br />

Morton Grove . Central Lions Club<br />

will hold a fund-raising dinner with a<br />

screening of William Holden's "The Lion"<br />

Oscar Brotman has been invited to address<br />

. . .<br />

the New England Theatre Ass'n in<br />

Boston.<br />

Carol Hughes, who has been switchboard<br />

operator for Warner Bros, here for three<br />

years, resigned because of ill health . . .<br />

The 62 outlying theatres playing "Gypsy"<br />

on its initial run following tlie Chicago Theatre<br />

showing in the Loop are enthusiastic<br />

about the boxoffice receipts . . . Richard<br />

Graff, manager for Universal, and U-I<br />

publicist Ben Katz hosted a screening of<br />

"Freud." Katz is knee-deep in a big campaign<br />

to herald in the early spring opening<br />

of "The Birds."<br />

.<br />

Milt Simon of Maton Films just received<br />

word that Babe Cobb, well known here while<br />

he was assistant manager of the Roosevelt<br />

and later during his association with RKO,<br />

died in Los Angeles . & Katz has<br />

won the bidding for "Cleopatra." It will<br />

open at the State Lake June 12.<br />

L&M Management, theatre chain started<br />

by Mannie Gottlieb, now has 14 theatres and<br />

drive-ins. J. R. Gottlieb, son of the late<br />

Mannie Gottlieb, is president, and Bob<br />

Bachman is vice-president and general manager.<br />

L&M plans to open some of its outdoor<br />

theatres in mid-March<br />

Deneau, general sales<br />

.<br />

manager<br />

.<br />

for<br />

Sidney<br />

Continental<br />

Distributing Co., arrived here to<br />

confer with Bob Allen, local manager. Allen<br />

will accompany Deneau to Detroit to talk<br />

with theatre owners there.<br />

Jack Gilbreth, formerly of Teitel Film<br />

Corp. and Allied Artists, has joined Colorama<br />

as assistant to Moe Dudelson. district manager.<br />

Colorama offices have been set up at<br />

1325 South Wabash Ave. . . . Sam Levinsohn,<br />

president of Chicago Used Chair Mart, is<br />

heading for Florida on a business and<br />

Charles Teitel left for Los<br />

pleasure trip . , .<br />

Angeles for a visit with his father A. Teitel<br />

. . . Harry Phillips of Ace Seating &<br />

Upholstering Co. suffered a heart attack.<br />

Si Greiver is looking fit following a holiday<br />

in Jamaica . . . Condolences to George<br />

Gulyanics on the death of his 21 -year-old<br />

son in an automobile accident. Gulyanics, a<br />

former Bears quarterback, is owner of the<br />

Tivoli theatre in Mishawaka, Ind. . . . Bob<br />

Hoffman, who has operated the Indiana<br />

theatre in Indiana Harbor, reported the theatre<br />

will be torn down to make way for a<br />

store . . . Dave Gold, who recently took over<br />

the Oak Theatre, said he will continue the<br />

policy of three changes a week. Gold has<br />

appointed John Lan as manager, succeeding<br />

Harry Brow^n, who moved to the Star and<br />

Garter.<br />

John Sparling Named<br />

From Mideost Edition<br />

CUYHOGA PALLS. OHIO—John Sparling,<br />

who had been managing the Schine<br />

theatre in A.shland, Ohio, has taken over<br />

as manager of the State here for the Washington<br />

circuit of Cleveland. He succeeds<br />

Ed Smart, who resigned to join the radio<br />

station WHLO staff, Akron. Sparling and<br />

his wife Pat have three children.<br />

Roadshow Theatres Sue<br />

Detroit Booth Union<br />

From Mideast Edition<br />

DETROIT — The projectionists<br />

union<br />

has u.sed the threat of picketing to force<br />

three big theatres to hire more projectionists<br />

than they need during current roadshow<br />

attractions, the owners of the theatres<br />

charged in a federal court suit.<br />

Owners of the Mercury, United Artists<br />

and Madison theatres allege in the suit<br />

that they will suffer damages in excess of<br />

$100,000 if the practice continues. The theatre<br />

owners a.sk the court to compel arbitration<br />

of the issue, or alternatively to rule<br />

that the union contract does not apply to<br />

roadshows and that they may hire nonunion<br />

help. Roy Ruben, business agent of<br />

the Detroit uinon, said there would be no<br />

comment. The union has 20 days in which<br />

to file an answer.<br />

ST.<br />

LOUIS<br />

I<br />

Continued from page C-li<br />

Chicago and planned here for north St.<br />

Louis county. The development is to be<br />

called the Lewis and Clark Towers. Included<br />

in the plans will be two 16-stoi-y circular<br />

towers: an 80x250-foot mall to provide<br />

space for a goumiet dining room; a<br />

cocktail lounge, a coffee shop, a phannacy,<br />

clothing shops, a grocery, a bakery shop<br />

and other businesses. The theatre and a<br />

bowling alley are planned for a fan section<br />

off the main mall. The size of the<br />

theatre has not been determined.<br />

Seen in St. Louis from Illinois were: Leon<br />

Jarodsky, Paris: Herman Tanner, 'Vandalia<br />

: Forrest Pirtle and Paul Horn, Jerseyville:<br />

Louis Odorizzi, and Fred Benzel,<br />

Staunton. Seen from Missouri were: Paul<br />

Durbin, Bowling Green: Mr. and Mrs. Bill<br />

Collins, DeSoto, and Ken Hirth, Pacific.<br />

Purchases Crawford Elite<br />

From North Central Edition<br />

CRAWFORD, NEB.—Bill Saxton, who<br />

had been managing the Elite Theatre here<br />

for Jim Stockwell, has purchased the property.<br />

Saxton will continue the previous<br />

owner's policy of weekend screen programs.<br />

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BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


about<br />

New Broumas Theatre<br />

For Melbourne, Fla.<br />

MELBOURNE, FLA.—E. J. DcBartolo.<br />

owner-developer of the Brevard Mall Shopping<br />

Center, has announced through the<br />

Melbourne Times that a first-run motion<br />

picture theatre seating 1.000 will be built<br />

in the adjacent Brevard Shops and leased<br />

to John G. Broumas Theatres.<br />

In announcing the theatre, DeBartolo<br />

stated, "We are highly pleased to add a<br />

first-iTin movie house to the Brevard Shops.<br />

This is another step toward establishing<br />

our modern shopping complex as the hub<br />

of Melbourne's community activities."<br />

This playhouse theatre will present the<br />

popular first-run single feature motion<br />

picture program along with news and short<br />

subjects. Plush seats, carpeted aisles and<br />

decorative fabric walls will enhance the<br />

interior. The latest motion picture projection<br />

equipment will include a 50-foot screen<br />

and stereophonic sound system.<br />

The Brevard Mall, first phase of the<br />

mammoth center, comprises 24 units with<br />

more than 300.000 square feet of floor<br />

space. Brevard Shops, an adjacent addition<br />

with 16 units and nearly 200,000<br />

square feet, brings to 40 the number of<br />

stores and services that will complete the<br />

center.<br />

DeBartolo is nationally known for his<br />

achievements in the shopping center field<br />

and has revealed plans for shopping malls<br />

in Cocoa Beach. Jacksonville. Orlando and<br />

Daytona Beach. These, too, DeBartolo<br />

states, will be complete with theatres. The<br />

firm has built 70 major centers in the<br />

eastern half of the United States and<br />

Canada and currently has 12 mall-type<br />

shopping centers under way in other areas.<br />

The Broumas circuit will also operate<br />

theatres to be built at shopping centers in<br />

Jacksonville, Cocoa Beach and Daytona<br />

Beach in Florida. The circuit also is building<br />

shopping centers in Maryland, Ohio<br />

and the District of Columbia.<br />

Tent 21 Ladies Entertain<br />

300 Boys at SA Quarters<br />

ATLANTA—Mrs. Anne E. Lewis. Woman<br />

of the Year in Business, publisher and editor<br />

of the Georgia magazine, was guest<br />

speaker at the monthly luncheon-meeting<br />

of the ladies committee of Tent 21 Wednesday<br />

(13 1 in the Variety clubrooms at the<br />

Atlantan Hotel.<br />

Chaii-man Gladys Houseworth Tribble<br />

presided and introduced new members Edna<br />

Gable Glenn. Adele Janko and Carmen<br />

Lupy for a special welcome. A valentine<br />

motif was carried out in the decoration.^;<br />

arranged by Dubby Ingram.<br />

Following the luncheon, committee members<br />

entertained 300 young.sters at the Salvation<br />

Army Boys Club with a valentine<br />

party, the ladies joining in the games then<br />

serving ice cream, cookies and candy to<br />

their guests. Arrangements for this party<br />

were handled by chairman Ti-ibble, Mary<br />

Detwiler and Tillie Shapiro.<br />

All incoming board members and past<br />

chief barkers of Tent 21 were honored recently<br />

at a cocktail party given by Chief<br />

Barker Herbert Matthews and Mrs. Matthews<br />

at their beautiful home on Hillside<br />

drive. Northwest. Mrs. Tribble and Paulette<br />

Senart. past chairman of the Tent 21<br />

ladies committee, also were special guests.<br />

Community Leaders Premiere Guests<br />

At seme's New Rock Hill Theatre<br />

ROCK HILL, S. C—Senator and Mrs.<br />

Robert W. Hayes of York County and 600<br />

community leaders were guests at the invitational<br />

premiere of Stewart & Everett's<br />

$200,000 Cinema Theatre. Charles B. Trexler,<br />

S&E president, and Robert Brand, theatre<br />

manager, were hosts at the Friday<br />

night affair.<br />

Guests were entertained by the Rock<br />

Hill Elks Club chorus and Robert Carpenter,<br />

a Rock Hill attorney, acted as emcee.<br />

Speakers included mayor John A. Hardin<br />

and H. C. Carruth. president of the Chamber<br />

of Commerce. Ti-exler amiounced that<br />

the theatre would be made available for<br />

civic functions.<br />

The Cinema's grand opening for the<br />

ticket-buying public was held the next<br />

day, leading off with open house at 11 a.m.<br />

and followed by the first public screen program<br />

at 3 pjn. The inaugural feature was<br />

20th Century-Fox's "The Lion," starring<br />

William Holden.<br />

According to<br />

the builders, the Cinema is<br />

Tropicaire 'Flea Market'<br />

Forced Out of Business<br />

MIAMI—The "Plea<br />

Market." where the<br />

bargain-hungry swapped and shopped on<br />

Sundays, is out of business.<br />

The outdoor operation, also known as<br />

the Swap-Meet, was illegal. Metro's Building<br />

and Zoning Department ruled.<br />

Walter Rogells, assistant enforcement<br />

officer for Metro, said the owners of the<br />

"Flea Market." held at the Tropicaire<br />

Drive-In. 7751 Bird Rd.. didn't have a certificate<br />

of occupancy.<br />

In fact, there is no provision in Metro's<br />

zoning code for a "Flea Market," Rogells<br />

added.<br />

He said the marketeers will now have<br />

to go before the zoning board and ask that<br />

such a license be issued.<br />

The department discovered the operation<br />

was illegal when it began investigating<br />

complaints of unfair competition, noise and<br />

congestion. Rogells said.<br />

"Flea Market" operator Jerry Connors<br />

scoffed at the charges. He said he has a<br />

petition, signed by 1.000 satisfied customers<br />

who "have attended, enjoyed and have<br />

found nothing<br />

"<br />

objectionable<br />

mart.<br />

$50,000 Steele Theatre<br />

Lost in Morning Fire<br />

STEELE. ARK.—Fire<br />

the<br />

departments from<br />

Steele. Blytheville Air Force Ba-se and Holland<br />

tried in vain to save the Steele Theatre<br />

from an early morning fire January<br />

24. Clarence McCoUum. owner and operator<br />

of the theatre, estimated the loss at<br />

$50,000 and said the fire might have originated<br />

in the furnace area.<br />

Also destroyed in the fire was a frame<br />

home at the rear of the lot. Telephones,<br />

power and water systems were knocked out<br />

for .several hours when a power line failed<br />

during the theatre fire.<br />

McCollum said he has not decided<br />

whether to rebuild the theatre.<br />

the only theatre in the Carolinas with<br />

spacious all-glass lobby walls of light reflecting<br />

glass. Paving bricks cover the entire<br />

entrance area from the parking strip,<br />

continuing throughout the entire lobby on<br />

all exposed areas, except where carpeting<br />

is used. The front area lighting consists of<br />

44 surface-mounted downlights and 576<br />

feet of concealed fluorescent lamps.<br />

The 600 seats feature nylon upholstery<br />

in three colors and have foam rubber cushions.<br />

The seats are installed on a staggered<br />

pattern, spaced for maximum comfort.<br />

Acoustical panels cover the auditorium<br />

ceiling and wall panels are of perforated<br />

aluminum for the best sound quality.<br />

Zone controlled air conditioning and<br />

heating provide for patron comfort in all<br />

parts of the new theatre.<br />

The theatre was planned by the architectural<br />

firm of Charles W. Wheatley &<br />

Associates. Moore Constioiction was the<br />

general contractor; mechanical phases of<br />

the project were contracted by A. Z. Price<br />

& Associates.<br />

Clare Woods Named<br />

President of United<br />

NEW ORLEANS—C. Clare Woods has<br />

been elected president of United Theatres,<br />

succeeding Edward<br />

Ludman. resigned.<br />

Woods will continue<br />

as general manager:<br />

The new president<br />

came to United in<br />

1955 as head of theatre<br />

operations from<br />

Kansas City, where<br />

he was with Durwood<br />

Theatres a short time.<br />

Clare<br />

Woods<br />

Woods managed<br />

theatres for the Paramount<br />

chain in Denver<br />

and Salt Lake<br />

City. His career in the theatre business extends<br />

over 40 years.<br />

J. George Ziblich was elected chairman<br />

of the board: Herbert W. Maitrejean. vicepresident,<br />

and James T. Richards, secretary-treasurer.<br />

The new officers constitute the board<br />

along with Judge Louis H. Yarrut and Elwood<br />

Clay.<br />

Nellie H. Parish is office manager and<br />

chief accountant: Earl A. Kroeper. buyer<br />

and booker, and Roland J. Hoffman, purchasing<br />

agent.<br />

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BOXOFFICE February 18. 1963 SE-1


. . Amanda<br />

.<br />

. . Gene<br />

. . Joe<br />

i<br />

. . Ellen<br />

. . The<br />

. . Annette<br />

. . Hari-y<br />

written<br />

.<br />

NEW ORLEANS<br />

^ariety Tent 45 sponsored Variety Day at<br />

the Races Thursday (14i for the benefit<br />

of the projected hospital for underprivileged<br />

children. The event was initiated by<br />

Gar Moore, general manager of the Pairgrounds<br />

track and a member of the Variety<br />

Club. The lineup of 275 members sold<br />

tickets at $1 plus taxes, with each dollar<br />

going to the club's fund. C. J. Mabry.<br />

dough guy and a member of the heart fund<br />

committee, pointed out. "The heart of the<br />

show business ties in beautifully with the<br />

-spirit of Valentine's Day."<br />

Phyllis and Kenneth Kurtzman are expecting<br />

the arrival of a baby. He is on the<br />

MGM staff . . . Bernicc Chauvin and<br />

Judith Hanmer. former MGM staffers,<br />

now are enjoying leisure. Bcrnice didn't get<br />

the Touro Hospital job . Solomon of<br />

Pan Pare Pilms. Philadelphia, was in conferring<br />

with buyers and bookers . . . Prances<br />

Griffin has been promoted to manager's<br />

secretary at Paramount, succeeding<br />

Beverly Oubre, who resigned to give birth<br />

to a baby.<br />

Tom Neeley, NTS manager, was in<br />

Lafayette . Gaudet. head of the<br />

NSS accounting department, has retired<br />

after 25 years with the company. Edna<br />

Caldwell succeeds her .<br />

Jacobs. UA<br />

division manager, conferred with Gene<br />

Goodman and staff of the local office . . .<br />

"Son of Plubber" packed 'em in at the RKO<br />

Orpheum . . . Hemy Gentry, manager of<br />

the Martin Cinerama, became a <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

reader.<br />

THE lOWEST COSTJVAY<br />

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PICTURES /<br />

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1327 So.<br />

Wobosh<br />

Chicogo<br />

Abo BiTenson, president of Allied of Gulf<br />

States, and owner of the Tower at Gretna,<br />

is up and around again after confinement<br />

since being struck by a car before Christmas<br />

on St. Charles street . . . George Bannon<br />

of Universal was helping L. C. Montgomery<br />

prepare for the opening at the Joy<br />

of "40 Pounds of Tiouble."<br />

Exhibitors seen here and there calling on<br />

the trade: Joseph Barcelona. Regina. Baton<br />

Rouge: Luther Woodfield. Moonlight Drivein.<br />

West Long Beach. Miss.: Vernon<br />

Cooper, who recently clo-scd the Sumter at<br />

york. Ala., and the Alabama at Livingston;<br />

Pots Williams of the Tyson and Paramount.<br />

Clarksdale. Miss.; Phillip Salles.<br />

Covington; Claude Bourgeois. Biloxi:<br />

Amos<br />

Savoie. Jet Drive-In. Cutoff; Prank De-<br />

Graauw. P&R Enterprises, Abbeville; Jack<br />

Luster. Natchitoches; Billy Everett. Magee<br />

and the 49. Magee. Miss.; H. J. Labat.<br />

Cub at Raceland; George Conrad. Dixie at<br />

Thibodaux; Luke Fontana. Arcade, Slidell:<br />

Sam Daigre. Osage, Plaquemine, and<br />

Jack Minckler. Ritz Theatre and Jack's<br />

Drive-In, Bogalusa.<br />

When Page Baker of Theatre Owners<br />

Service celebrated a birthday recently the<br />

staff extended their best wishes over coffee<br />

for an hour or so after the close of shop.<br />

There also was a cake with candles.<br />

Gloria Barefoot, former head cashier at<br />

20th-Fox absent from Filmrow a couple of<br />

years, is now head of the Kay Enterprises<br />

accounting department . Bache is<br />

the new salesman for MGM. He succeeds<br />

J. P. Mosely, who was advanced to office<br />

manager. Bache was transferred here from<br />

Philadelphia . Cane Theatre in<br />

Natchitoches, a Southern Amusement<br />

house, is closed temporarily for renovation<br />

and refurbishing . Studson,<br />

former Warner staffer, has returned to the<br />

exchange as booking clerk. She replaces<br />

Lanette Holland, who has taken a position<br />

outside of the industry.<br />

. .<br />

Paul Back, Buena Vista salesman, checked<br />

in after a week's trek in southwestern<br />

Louisiana . Beyer, Leona Burroughs<br />

and daughter Mickey are newcomers at<br />

Film Inspections Service . The Temple at<br />

Baton Rouge was closed the 4th by Gulf<br />

States Theatres . . . F. F. Goodiow has acquired<br />

territory distribution rights to Beckman<br />

Pictures' "Some Kind of a Nut."<br />

CHARLOTTE<br />

. . .<br />

paul Mart, representative of the Topaz<br />

Film Corp.. came in from Hollywood<br />

to publicize Howco's "The Case of Patty<br />

Smith" Jake Neil. Paramount office<br />

manager, was happy to recover his auto intact,<br />

after it had rolled down the driveway<br />

and across a busy four-lane highway. It<br />

stopped in a yard just inches from a house.<br />

No property damage was done to or by the<br />

runaway car.<br />

WOMPIs held their board meeting<br />

Wednesday i6i at the S&W Cafeteria with<br />

Amalie Gantt. vice-president, in charge.<br />

Clarinda Craig, service chairman, reported<br />

that a Valentine party would be given for<br />

patients at Green Acres February 12, with<br />

favors and entertainment. Alice Craver,<br />

.social chairman, reported that a Coke party<br />

for WOMPIs nine new members will be<br />

given at Lankford's March 10. Among the<br />

new members welcomed into WOMPI are:<br />

Mrs. Betty Gosey, Howco; Mrs. Bernice<br />

Ferguson, Howco; Mrs. Vivian T. Black,<br />

Wilby Kincey accessory department; Mrs.<br />

Sarah M. Short. Howco. and Mrs. Marion<br />

Childress. Imperial Theatre.<br />

Exhibitors seen on Filmrow the week of<br />

January 28 included South Carolinians<br />

George Ward. Chesnee; Carmen Bunch,<br />

Charleston: M. B. Goodnough. Simpsonville;<br />

Buck Herlong. Saluda, and R. L. Wilburn.<br />

Union. North Carolina exhibitors<br />

busy on the Row that week were J. K.<br />

Whitley. Kannapolis; Rudy Howell, Smithfield;<br />

J. W. Griffin, Forest City; Roy<br />

Champion, Wilson; James Boyd, Scotland<br />

Neck, and M. N. Holder, East Bend.<br />

Films Based on Classics<br />

Praised by Raleigh Times<br />

RALEIGH. N.C.—The first of a series of<br />

film classics revived at the Ambassador<br />

Theatre here drew enthusiastic comments<br />

in the press and large audiences.<br />

Following the presentation of "David<br />

Copperfield." the afternoon Raleigh Times<br />

saluted the theatre editorially for "doing a<br />

real service for this area by bringing back<br />

eight movies of past years based on great<br />

works of literature.<br />

"They are the kind of films which should<br />

draw well," the editorial continued, "and<br />

it is fortunate that the children who<br />

weren't even born when the pictures were<br />

first released will now have an opportunity<br />

to see them. A movie doesn't have to be<br />

brand-new to be wonderful. These are old<br />

—and wonderful."<br />

While agreeing that bringing back the<br />

old movies was "a fine thing to do."<br />

Charles Craven, columnist for the morning<br />

News and Observer, advocated "bringing<br />

back a few more . . . some<br />

maybe not so<br />

literary but very wholesome and entertaining<br />

to guys like us."<br />

Craven confessed he would like to see<br />

again the Keystone Kops series. Harold<br />

Lloyd in his prime. Tom Mix. Fred Thompson.<br />

Hoot Gib.son. Ken Maynard. Buster<br />

Keaton. Clara Bow and the old fight pictures<br />

of Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney.<br />

"The movies were better then and<br />

preached a very uncomplicated moral: The<br />

good guys if good enough will ultimately<br />

win over the bad guys<br />

."<br />

.<br />

The MGM block of "World Heritage"<br />

films also includes Pride and Prejudice.<br />

Little Women. Captains Courageous. A Tale<br />

of Two Cities. Julius Caesar. Kim and The<br />

Good Earth. They are being heavily promoted<br />

through the schools.<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Audrey Caire has been<br />

signed by Tom J. Carradine to star In the<br />

Company of Artists' "Depth of the Unknown.<br />

for the screen by<br />

"<br />

George<br />

Villiers.<br />

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BOXOFTICE February 18, 1963 SE-3


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John Stembler Predicts Big Grosses<br />

For 2nd Preview Engagement Film<br />

ATLANTA—"The Courtship of Eddies<br />

Father." the second Preview Engagenienl<br />

feature for national prerelease on March<br />

15, is scheduled to be shown here at the<br />

Loew's Grand Theatre.<br />

Glenn Ford and Shirley Jones are cast in<br />

the starring roles of the MGM feature, with<br />

costarrinr; roles played by Stella Stevens,<br />

Dina Merrill, young Ronny Howard and<br />

Jerry Van Dyke. Jerry Van Dyke is the<br />

brother of former Atlantan Dick Van Dyke,<br />

now the stai- of his own video show. Roberta<br />

Sherwood, who makes her film debut<br />

in this picture, recently played an engagement<br />

at Copa Atlanta.<br />

The Theatre Owners of America inaugurated<br />

the TOA Hollywood Preview Engagement<br />

last year, its objective being to provide<br />

the theatres with outstanding pictures<br />

during the nonholiday periods during the<br />

year.<br />

Warner Bros. liked the idea and pre-<br />

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. . Phil<br />

. . Sondra<br />

. . Jack<br />

. . Johnny<br />

. . New<br />

—<br />

Silvo Perez Alvarez, a leader of the Cuban<br />

Navy in exile, will be a technical advisor.<br />

Otto Valdes Castillo, of New York, who has<br />

been assisting in preparing the story, reports<br />

he has been threatened for giving information<br />

about the ill-fated invasion. The<br />

filming will be done in the Florida Keys<br />

and Watson has opened an office in 508<br />

Ainsley Bldg., Miami.<br />

Howard Pettengill, advertising and<br />

publicity director for Florida State Theatres<br />

for 20 years, has left the company to<br />

enter the advertising field. Pettengill became<br />

Florida State's fir.st state director of<br />

advertising in 1943 and returned here in<br />

1954. He has master-minded many world<br />

premieres and his ad campaigns have been<br />

adopted by other theatres in various parts<br />

of the country.<br />

13 North Carolina Stars<br />

Invited to Trade Fair<br />

CHARLOTTE — Thirteen celebrities<br />

of<br />

the entertainment world, who either lived<br />

or were born in North Carolina, have been<br />

personally invited by Gov. Terry Sanford<br />

to attend the state's International Trade<br />

Pair here April 28.<br />

Hargrove Bowles jr., chairman of the<br />

state board of conservation and development,<br />

sponsors of the fair, said a "recognition<br />

ceremony" — would be held in honor of<br />

the stars "the first ever staged by any<br />

state so far as we can determine."<br />

"A number of the celebrities already have<br />

indicated they will be able to participate<br />

and that their formal acceptances will<br />

reach the governor's office shortly," Bowles<br />

said. He did not indicate which stars<br />

acknowledged the invitations.<br />

The 13 include:<br />

Ava Gardner, Smithfield, actress: Andy<br />

Griffith, Mount Any, actor: Sidney Blackmer,<br />

Salisbm-y, actor; Kathryn Grayson,<br />

Winston-Salem, singer-actress: Anne Jeffreys,<br />

Goldsboro, singer-actress: Kay<br />

Kyser, Rocky Mount, retired band leader;<br />

David Brinkley of Wilmington, TV newscaster;<br />

Skinnay Ennis, Salisbui'y, vocalist<br />

and band leader; Betty Johnson, Guilford<br />

and Mecklenburg counties, singer: Edward<br />

R. Murrow, radio-TV news analyst, now director<br />

of the U.S. InfoiTnation Agency;<br />

Randolph Scott, Charlotte, actor; John<br />

Scott Trotter, Charlotte, band leader, and<br />

Cai-1 Sandburg, Flat Rock, poet-biographerfolksinger.<br />

The trade fair will be held in the Charlotte<br />

Coliseum. The show involving the<br />

celebrities will be held in the nearby Ovens<br />

Auditorium.<br />

UA's "The Norman Vincent Peale<br />

will star Don Murray in the title<br />

role.<br />

Shirley Booth to Get<br />

Presidential<br />

Assist<br />

Story"<br />

From Western Edition<br />

Hollywood—Oscar and Emmy winner<br />

Shirley Booth has an appointment<br />

with President Kennedy in the White<br />

House on March 14 in her capacity as<br />

chairman of the 1963 Easter Seal Campaign<br />

for Crippled Children.<br />

Miss Booth's meeting with the President<br />

will be given blanket coverage by<br />

television, radio, newspapers and<br />

magazines.<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

^arvin Skinner, veteran salesman on<br />

Thomas P. Tidwell's staff at 20th-Fox<br />

has left film distribution to open his independent<br />

booking agency at 6818<br />

Oakwood<br />

Dr. His initial accounts are C. B. Chambers'<br />

three theatres at Homestead, the<br />

Palms and Ace indoor houses and the<br />

Breezeway Drive-In . Rigg, former<br />

booker with the local Paramount office,<br />

opened his Specialty Booking Service in<br />

Buford Styles of<br />

Atlanta February 8 . . .<br />

Atlanta, who managed the local Universal<br />

branch for many years, is now covering the<br />

Florida territory for the Can Releasing<br />

Corp.<br />

Herb Bennin, MGM division manager from<br />

Atlanta, and Bob Capps, local MGM manager,<br />

left for St. Petersburg to attend an<br />

advance invitational screening of "Mutiny<br />

on the Bounty" at the Center Theatre . . .<br />

R. J. Ingram, who recently retired as Columbia's<br />

district manager in Atlanta, came<br />

in town for a visit with the local Columbia<br />

staff and other friends along Pilmrow.<br />

Fred Mathis, Paramount manager, presented<br />

advance screenings of "My Six<br />

Loves" and "Papa's Delicate Condition" at<br />

the Studio Theatre . Tomlinson,<br />

Warner manager, sent out formal invitations<br />

to civic leaders for a morning screening<br />

of "Spencer's Mountain" at the Florida<br />

Theatre February 19 . . . Vivian Ganas and<br />

members of her WOMPI industry service<br />

committee served as hostesses for the gala<br />

opening of "Phaedra," which Iva Lowe,<br />

WOMPI manager of the San Marco Art<br />

Theatre, staged the night of Febi-uary 8<br />

for a large group of foreign film fans.<br />

Mary Hart, WOMPI finance chairman,<br />

sponsored the first<br />

in a series of Tupperware<br />

home parties in a new fund-raising<br />

drive for the WOMPI treasury ... A group<br />

of WOMPI members served as hostesses at<br />

a valentine birthday and card party held<br />

for residents of the All Saints Home for<br />

the Aged . Smoat is a new booker's<br />

clerk at the MGM office . . . Marty<br />

Shearn, manager of the downtown Center,<br />

staged a sneak preview of "Two for the<br />

Seesaw" during the fourth and final week's<br />

run of "Gypsy."<br />

Vincent Price's name was featured in two<br />

openings here on the same day (8> when<br />

"The Raven," his latest horror film, opened<br />

at the downtown Florida and his art collection<br />

was placed on public display in the<br />

lobby of Sears. Roebuck . . . Danny O'LeaiT.<br />

Edgewood staffer, enjoyed a sea voyage to<br />

Philadelphia as the guest of his uncle, captain<br />

of a frigate in the British Royal Navy.<br />

The Folksters, a sensational quartet<br />

formed here last year, completed their<br />

graduation from coffee houses in an appearance<br />

at the Civic Auditorium before<br />

leaving for Hartford, Conn., on the first<br />

leg of a national concert tour under the<br />

aegis of the Morris Booking Agency.<br />

Filmrow visitors included Mack Grimes,<br />

Bailey Theatres, Atlanta; Hany Dale. Lake<br />

Butler: Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Bailey . Blountstown;<br />

Thomas E. Bell, Victoria, New<br />

Smyrna Beach, and Dave HaiTis, Temple.<br />

Perry . Friedman, auditor from New<br />

York, completed a tour of duty at the<br />

local MGM office . . . Charley Turner.<br />

MGM salesman, left here for a series of<br />

meetings with south Florida exhibitors.<br />

Bob Baugh, former head shipper at the<br />

20th-Fox branch, is now on French Harvey's<br />

staff at the Florida State Theatres<br />

warehouse<br />

. . . First-nan holdovers of the<br />

week were "Phaedra" at the San Marco Art<br />

Theatre and "The Longest Day" at the Five<br />

Points . films arriving on local<br />

screens were "Diamond Head" at the<br />

Florida and "40 Pounds of Trouble" at the<br />

suburban Town and Country.<br />

The ten local drive-ins are equally divided<br />

in price policies. Five circuit—operated<br />

outdoorers—the Atlantic, Main Street, Midway,<br />

Noi-mandy and Southside—sell tickets<br />

to individual patrons. Five independents<br />

Air-Base, Lake Forest, Pinecrest, Ribault<br />

and Twin Hills—have adopted a policy of<br />

admitting patrons at "$1 a carload" ... It<br />

is reported that three new theatre operations<br />

will get underway this year in local<br />

suburbs. New drive-ins are planned by the<br />

Kent Theatres circuit and the Hei-man<br />

Meiselman circuit and a new walk-in theatre<br />

has been announced for the Normandy<br />

shopping center by John G. Broumas of<br />

Chevy Chase, Md.<br />

Three CJA Groups Guests<br />

At 'Divorce' Premiere<br />

MIAMI— "Divorce—Italian Style." winner<br />

of the Cannes Film Festival, will be premiered<br />

at Wometco's Parkway Theatre<br />

Coral Way Wednesday night i20i for<br />

members of three groups In the Combined<br />

Jewish Appeal. Construction, real estate<br />

and insmance division workers will attend<br />

as special guests.<br />

David B. Fleeman, chairman of the construction,<br />

real estate and allied trades division,<br />

announced that the event is being<br />

sponsored by a group of leaders in the division<br />

and of the trades and professions<br />

council. Al Ossip and Harry Diamond are<br />

insurance chairmen.<br />

A short slide film also will be shown<br />

depicting the work of the Greater Miami<br />

Jewish Federation's local agencies, and the<br />

overseas activities of the United Jewish<br />

Appeal.<br />

Daniel Neal Heller, chairman of the<br />

speakers bureau of the Federation, will do<br />

the commentary for the slide film.<br />

"Divorce—Italian Style" also w^ill open<br />

February 20 at Wometco's Mayfair, Sunset<br />

and Normandie theatres.<br />

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BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963<br />

SE-7


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honoring Miss Variety of 1963, Gail<br />

Sammons. who was selected in a contest<br />

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. . . Margaret Irby, Howco, has been named<br />

chairman of the WOMPI International<br />

Ass'n nominating committee . . . The<br />

March of Dimes campaign received many<br />

hours of assistance from Memphis WOMPI<br />

members during January and February in<br />

the typing and mailing of letters.<br />

Scott Lett, sales manager for Howco, and<br />

Charles Arendall, Howco manager, returned<br />

from a trip to New Orleans and left<br />

for a business trip to Nashville.<br />

Eugene S. Echols, Memphis, had more<br />

than a casual interest in the 20th-Pox film,<br />

"The Longest Day," now playing at the<br />

Strand. Echols jotted down his memories<br />

of the D-Day invasion for Cornelius Ryan,<br />

author of the book and screenplay. Echols<br />

received a credit line in the book.<br />

Jerry Berger, who was well known in<br />

Memphis and a frequent visitor in his job<br />

as advertising-publicity director for 20th-<br />

Fox, has been promoted. Berger is the new<br />

director of advertising and publicity for<br />

Pox in South Africa, with headquarters<br />

at Johannesburg, effective March 2.<br />

R. L. Bostick, southern manager for National<br />

Theatre Supply Co., Memphis, attended<br />

the Texas Drive-In Theatre Owners<br />

convention in Dallas . . . Amelia Ellis,<br />

Ellis Drive-In, Millington, is a patient at<br />

Baptist Hospital in Memphis.<br />

Visiting exhibitors from Arkansas included<br />

C. R. Bonner and his father, C. F.<br />

Bonner, Community, Pine Bluff; William<br />

Elias, Elias Drive-In, Osceola: Jack Noel,<br />

Maxie, Trumann; Gordon Hutchins, 64<br />

Drive-In, Russellville ; Jack Lowrey, Ritz.<br />

Russellville: John Staples, Carolyn, Piggott:<br />

B. L. Brixey, Starlite Drive-In, Gassville,<br />

and Eddie Holland, Rialto, North<br />

Little Rock.<br />

Guy Amis, Princess, Lexington; W. P.<br />

Ruffin jr., Ruffin Amusements Co., Cov-<br />

. . .<br />

ington; and Louise Mask, Luez, Bolivar,<br />

R. O.<br />

were in town from Tennessee . . .<br />

Bryan, Strand, Clinton, Ky., and Prank<br />

Heard, Lee Drive-In, Tupelo, Miss., were<br />

booking in Memphis . . . T. A. Ray has<br />

The<br />

closed the Yell at Yellville, Ark.<br />

Melbourne Theatre at Melbourne, Ark., has<br />

been closed.<br />

Loew's Downtown State<br />

Up for Sale in Memphis<br />

MEMPHIS—Anybody need a great big<br />

beautiful theatre on Main street in Memphis<br />

where many of the great hits such as<br />

"Gone With the Wind" have been shown?<br />

Well, sir, Loew's State is up for sale.<br />

Orville Crouch of Washington, southern<br />

division manager for Loew's. said his company<br />

has talked to several persons but<br />

hasn't come up with a deal yet.<br />

A downtown civic theatre is being considered<br />

by one group which has expressed<br />

interest in purchasing the big State, a<br />

2,235-seat theatre which always has been<br />

a first run.<br />

Loew's also owns, operates and will retain<br />

the Palace Theatre in downtown Memphis.<br />

Between Cinerama features, the Palace<br />

shows regular first-run films.<br />

'Longest Day' Spells<br />

Biggest Memphis Hit<br />

MEMPHIS — "The Longest Day," 20th-<br />

Pox, playing on a reserved seat schedule<br />

at advanced prices, did 300 per cent of<br />

average business at the Strand the opening<br />

week.<br />

(Averoge Is 100)<br />

Guild—Shoot the Piano Player (Astor) 75<br />

Molco^40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ) 150<br />

Palace— Swordsmen of Siena (MGM); The Sovoge<br />

Guns (MGM) 100<br />

Plaza— Who's Got the Action? (Pora), 2nd wk. . . 90<br />

Stote—The Password Is Couroge (MGM) 100<br />

Strond— The Longest Day (20th-Fox) 300<br />

Studio— Never on Sunday {LopertJ, revival 100<br />

Warner— Sodom and Gomorrah f20th-Fox), 2nd wk, 100<br />

F-37 Re-Elects President<br />

From Mideast Edition<br />

CINCINNATI—lATSE Local F-37, at its<br />

annual meeting January 15, re-elected<br />

Tony KnoUman, 20th-Fox head booker, as<br />

president and business agent and Ann<br />

Keck, Warners secretary, as secretarytreasurer.<br />

Newly elected were vice-president,<br />

Nate Mutnick, MGM booker; guardian,<br />

Morris Hail, 20th-Fox booker; trustees<br />

—bookers Chic Weinberg, MGM ; Don Benning.<br />

Paramount, and Loraine Inabritt,<br />

20th-Fox secretary. Re-elected for the executive<br />

committee were bookers John Kallmeyer,<br />

20th-Fox, and Wilbur Hetherington,<br />

UA.<br />

More Work for R. Sylbert<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Richard Sylbert, art director<br />

in charge of David Susskind's filming<br />

of "All the Way Home," has been given<br />

another assignment by producer-director<br />

John Prankenheimer. He will handle all the<br />

art direction for Frankenheimer's "Seven<br />

Days in May, " Confessor," and<br />

"Flowers of Hiroshima."<br />

Former Para. Ejcchcmge Sold<br />

MEMPHIS—A one-story building at 362<br />

South Second, for many years the home of<br />

Paramount's exchange, has been sold for<br />

$30,000 and will become part of the Memphis<br />

operations of Good Foods Co. Pai-amount<br />

is now located at 502 South Second<br />

street in Memphis.<br />

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ROWLEYITES AT DALLAS—Managers and partners of<br />

Rowley llnited circuit held their quarterly meeting in Dallas during<br />

the Texas Drive-In Theatre Ow-ners Ass'n convention. John<br />

Rowley presided at the sessions on coming product, merchandising,<br />

concessions and advertising. Rowley announced that John<br />

Callahan of Oak Cliff, Dallas suburb, won the concessions contest;<br />

Wade Wallace of Killeen was second, and Charles Dalton<br />

of Mount Pleasant was third. The prize for each is an expensepaid<br />

trip to the Show-A-Rama convention in Kansas City<br />

March 5-7.<br />

Biackie Biacksione<br />

Dies, Years With WB<br />

OKLAHOMA CITY — Funeral<br />

services<br />

were held here Thursday i7i for W. C.<br />

"Biackie' Blackstone, a familiar figure In<br />

the motion picture business In Oklahoma<br />

for many years. He was 79 years old and<br />

was born In Poplar Bluff. Mo. In 1905 he<br />

moved to Pairview, Okla.<br />

In his early days. Biackie traveled with<br />

a minstrel show, playing a "Peck" horn in<br />

the band in the daily parades and concerts<br />

in front of the big tent. At night, he played<br />

the piano in the show orchestra. He was<br />

one of the original jazz piano players.<br />

In the early 1920s, Biackie operated the<br />

Cozy Theatre in Chickasha and played<br />

the piano, cueing the pictures as the silent<br />

movies unfolded on the screen. After disposing<br />

of his theatre, he moved to Oklahoma<br />

City, and became a motion picture<br />

salesman for the old First National Exhibitors<br />

Co., which later was taken over by<br />

Warner Bros. He traveled for Warners<br />

many years before being retired by the<br />

company several years ago.<br />

He is siu-vived by his wife, who lives on<br />

a small acreage in the western part of<br />

Oklahoma City near Lake Overholtzer.<br />

In making his round as a film peddler,<br />

Blackstone was in the heighth of his glory<br />

when he could find a piano in the home of<br />

an exhibitor, or in a theatre where he would<br />

take over and entertain the fans. He was<br />

always willing to entertain anybody anywhere<br />

there was a piano. Following the<br />

first turtle derby which Variety Club of<br />

Oklahoma sponsored several years ago at<br />

old Belle Isle Park, all spectators were invited<br />

into a large dance pavilion, where a<br />

jukebox was playing for dancing at 25<br />

cents each per session. Then Biackie spied<br />

a piano over in one corner and started<br />

playing his ragtime jazz. That just about<br />

ended the dancing, as the couples crowded<br />

around to listen.<br />

Blackstone was an honorary life member<br />

of the Colosseum Motion Picture Salesmen<br />

of America and also of Variety Tent<br />

22.<br />

Increased '"^'«="^t;" Production<br />

riuuui.iiuu<br />

Urged by TDITOA<br />

DALLAS—The Texas Drive-In Theatre<br />

Owners Ass'n wound up the largest convention<br />

in its 11 -year histoi-y Thursday i7 i<br />

again with an appeal to producers to increase<br />

production, which reached a new<br />

low of only 138 new pictures in 1962. The<br />

convention declared the making of expensive<br />

pictures and showing them on long,<br />

upped-price runs is destnactive : reiterated<br />

condemnation of sale of post '48 pictures to<br />

television, and called for self-regulation<br />

by producers and distributors to forestall<br />

censorship. A record 417 delegates were<br />

registered.<br />

Robert E.<br />

Davis of Sherman was elected<br />

chairman of the board; Albert H. Reynolds<br />

of Dallas, president, and A. R. Milentz of<br />

Liberty, third vice-president. Re-elected<br />

were Earl Podolnick, Austin, first vicepresident:<br />

S. K. Barry. San Antonio, second<br />

vice-president: John L. Fagan, Borger,<br />

secretary, and A. J. Valentine, Lockhart,<br />

treasurer.<br />

New directors, elected to three-year<br />

terms: Davis and Valentine: W. E. Cox,<br />

Seminole: Jack Arthur, Stephen ville<br />

Wayne Long. Monahans: Henry L. Durst.<br />

Kerrville: Han-y D. McCartney. Dallas;<br />

Bob Milentz jr.. Liberty; Eddie Joseph.<br />

Austin, and H. D. Griffith, Houston.<br />

The fifth annual John H. Hardin gold<br />

statuette award to "the outstanding Texas<br />

drive-in exhibitor for 1962" went to Bob<br />

Davis of Perrin Drive-In. Sherman, who<br />

was uppcd to<br />

board chaii-man of TDITOA<br />

after serving as president in 1961-62.<br />

The showman of the year award went to<br />

Si H. Fabian, president of Stanley Warner<br />

Theatres, and was accepted by Philip F.<br />

Harling. The presentations were made at<br />

the closing presidential banquet and dance<br />

at the Statler-Hilton Hotel, sponsored by<br />

the Coca-Cola Co.<br />

The theme of the three-day conclave<br />

i5-7i, was "Today's Planning Is Tomorrow's<br />

Progress!"<br />

During the work session Wednesday the<br />

417 delegates were told by Edwin Tobolowsky,<br />

general counsel of TDITOA. that members<br />

are upset about network tele\ision<br />

showings of relatively new movies on Sunday<br />

nights. To them, this is "Sunday<br />

night suicide." and a special resolution was<br />

passed condemning this free showing of<br />

late film releases. Tobolowsky pointed to<br />

the Febl^lary 3 showing over ABC-TV of<br />

"The Magnificent Seven" as an example.<br />

"This picture was released in 1961 and<br />

hasn't yet been shown at many drive-in<br />

theatres. It's awfully hard to get someone<br />

to pay 50 or 60 cents to come to a diive-in<br />

to see a movie they can stay home and see<br />

for nothing. The drive-in owners blame<br />

distributors for the recent movies on television<br />

and call it 'unfair competition.' The<br />

worst thing about it is these pictures are<br />

produced from money received from exhibitors<br />

from showing other pictures,"<br />

Tobolowsky emphasized.<br />

The drive-in theatre owners are equally<br />

'Continued on next pagei<br />

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BOXOFHCE February 18, 1963 SW-1


Increased Film Production Urged<br />

In Resolution Adopted by TDITOA<br />

Earl Podolnik. president of Trans-Texas Theatres and convention chairman,<br />

opens the Wednesday breakfast meeting sponsored by American International Pictures.<br />

I Continued from preceding pagei<br />

disturbed over pay television. A pay television<br />

station has been licensed on an experimental<br />

basis in Hartford. Conn., by<br />

the FCC. "They, these stations, are going<br />

to bid for the same entertainment dollar<br />

that we are. They also will be bidding for<br />

the same pictures as we," he said.<br />

New lieutenant governor Smith, a Lubbock<br />

exhibitor, at the Thursday afternoon<br />

business session, told the delegates: "I don't<br />

know of any individual business that has<br />

been harassed as much as the theatre business,<br />

but the public never hears of the good<br />

the exhibitors and theatre owners do. As to<br />

the possibility of censorship, sometimes I<br />

think that some people would do away with<br />

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BOXOFFICE Febmary 18. 1963 SW-3


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OKLAHOMA CITY<br />

J^ick C'rumpler. operator of the Gentry and<br />

69 Drive-In at Chccotah. has been very<br />

busy for the past few months. In addition<br />

to his theatre operations he is also Checotah's<br />

city manager. Due to the influx of<br />

workers on the nearby Eufaula dam project,<br />

many new homes are being constructed in<br />

the town. Dick has charge of laying new<br />

w-ater and sewer lines and paving of streets,<br />

and little time for the operation of hi.s<br />

theatres, but when this is all over and the<br />

dam has been completed he is very optimistic<br />

about the future economy of the<br />

town and hopes it will prove very beneficial<br />

to the grosses in his theatres.<br />

City manager Crumpler was here conferring<br />

with Gov. George Nigh and<br />

several other interested parties from eastern<br />

Oklahoma who were planning to construct<br />

two large lodges on the shores of<br />

Lake Eufaula. He was instrumental in helping<br />

the interim governor in lining up a<br />

committee who would sign a contract for<br />

the construction of the lodges. Crumpler<br />

is a former director of the Water Re-<br />

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sources Ass'n of several midwestern states,<br />

and recently attended a meeting of the<br />

association in St. Louis. Dick was a close<br />

personal friend of the late Senator Robert<br />

S. Kerr and worked with him on several<br />

of the water projects in Oklahoma. When<br />

the Eufaula dam is completed. Checotah<br />

will be bounded by water on three sides,<br />

some of it very close to the city limits.<br />

In Eufaula we had a few minutes with<br />

Mil Dowling, who operates the Palace Theatre<br />

and the Decoy sporting goods store.<br />

He is also vitally interested in the Eufaula<br />

dam project and the two lodges. He, too.<br />

spent time in Oklahoma City on behalf of<br />

the lodges. Several years ago while the<br />

dam project was still in the drawing<br />

stages Dowling saw the handwriting on<br />

the wall, and in order to get in on the<br />

ground floor, he opened the sporting goods<br />

shop. He reports good business in the theatre<br />

and sport shop during the construction<br />

of the big dam. Eufaula. like Checotah.<br />

will be bordered by water on thiee sides<br />

up to the city limits. After a few minutes<br />

with Dowling, he took off for a Chamber<br />

of Commerce meeting of which he is president.<br />

Dale Smith, who operates the Movie<br />

Park Drive-In in Siloam Springs, Ark., recently<br />

moved into a newly constructed<br />

home in the blackjacks in the northern<br />

part of town. Dale supervised the building<br />

of the new home, but is not looking forward<br />

to all the work he is going to have<br />

to do to get a yard started in the blackjacks.<br />

As soon as the weather breaks<br />

he is starting work on his drive-in which<br />

he hopes to reopen about April.<br />

AMARILLO<br />

Calem Productions, which shot "Hud" at<br />

Goodnight and Claude last spring for<br />

Paramount release, has announced plans to<br />

film "The Gay Place" in and around Austin<br />

with a June 1 starting date. This new one,<br />

which will be released by Columbia Pictures,<br />

will star Paul Newman and be directed by<br />

Martin Ritt. The screenplay will be based on<br />

the novel of the same name with its plot involving<br />

the Texas legislature.<br />

. .<br />

Interstate city manager Jack King authorized<br />

the overhauling of the Paramount<br />

screen curtain track and curtain motor<br />

placement along with the complete auditorium<br />

relamping, including the center<br />

chandelier, under the supervision of Brown<br />

Wilson . Paramount projectionist Jimmy<br />

Cheshire has become the area RCA field<br />

man to service wire service teletypes in<br />

radio and TV stations covering the Panhandle<br />

and Plains and a part of Oklahoma.<br />

Palo Dure Drive-In projectionist James<br />

E. Anderson became the father of another<br />

daughter recently. During the day Anderson<br />

teaches social sciences at James Bowie<br />

Junior High School. He now has four<br />

children . Tascosa Drive-In is again<br />

blocked off at its entrance by the expressway<br />

construction. However, the place has<br />

remained open every night behind the barricade<br />

. . . This city enjoyed two weeks of<br />

summertime weather before temperatures<br />

went back to normal over the weekend. On<br />

Sunday aOi a slow rain began, the first<br />

moisture since December 2. Naturally this<br />

came about preceding a trip to Dallas by<br />

this reporter, the first one there in 18<br />

months, delaying our visit to the Texas<br />

Drive-In Theatre Owners Ass'n convention.<br />

Twin projectionist Charles A. Fetters, who<br />

badly mangled his thumb in a freak accident<br />

a couple of months ago, now has the cast<br />

and bandage off and reports the tip that<br />

had to be fitted back is still extremely tender.<br />

SAN ANTONIO<br />

^ale Robertson, Hollywood, took in the San<br />

Antonio Livestock Exposition and Rodeo<br />

. . . Augmenting the four day stage show at<br />

the National Theatre were Senor Marcelo<br />

and Leila Guizar, both well known to Latin-<br />

American theatregoers. . actor<br />

Chill Wills came in from Hollywood for a<br />

brief visit . . . Laurel Goodwin, star of Paramount's<br />

"Papa's Delicate Condition" which<br />

opens at the Majestic soon, was here beating<br />

the drums for her newest picture.<br />

Douglas Largen. erstwhile actor, theatreman<br />

and film tradepaper writer, and Lessie<br />

Marshall were married here recently . . .<br />

Ramerio Cortes, emcee and stage show<br />

booker, was in town from his Los Angeles<br />

headquarters . . . Visiting the film offices<br />

were Sergio Martinez, the Azteca. Houston;<br />

Jose Martinez, the Zavala, Batesville;<br />

Blondie Hubbard, Hub Drive-In. Pearsall;<br />

Raul Solis, Jersey Drive-In. Falfurrias, and<br />

Mamberto Villareal, El Charro Drive-In, San<br />

Antonio.<br />

The Austin American said Colimibia Pictures<br />

plans to make a film there this summer.<br />

The Austin coordinator of the venture<br />

is Buck McCuUough. operator of the Forty<br />

Acres private club and hotel. He said that<br />

the cast will include Paul Newman and<br />

Predric March. The picture is titled "The<br />

Gay Place."<br />

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'Mutiny' Scores 350<br />

In Omaha Opening<br />

OMAHA—The floodgates were opened<br />

when the Cooper Foundation Theatres reopened<br />

its Cooper Theatre here with<br />

"Mutiny on the Bounty" and sellouts have<br />

been numerous. The first week's run hit 350<br />

per cent of average, City Manager Jack<br />

Klingel reported, and the advance ticket<br />

sales continue to be heavy. Other first-run<br />

offerings in Omaha were good as a rule, including<br />

two holdovers and a plus-average<br />

week for "Who's Got the Action?" at the<br />

Orpheum.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Admiral—A Child Is Woiting (UA), 2nd wk 110<br />

Cooper—Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM) 350<br />

Indian Hills—The WondertuI World of the<br />

brothers Grimm [MGM-Cincrama), 7th wk 250<br />

Omaha—Sodom ond Gomorrah (20th-Fox), 2nd wk. tOO<br />

Orpheum—Who's Got the Action? (Para) 135<br />

State—The Password Is Courage (MGM); Kill<br />

or Cure (MGM) 75<br />

Only 4 Mill City Houses<br />

Go Above Average Mark<br />

MINNEAPOLIS — <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

percentages<br />

looked more like golf scores in the Mill City<br />

this week as only six of the 12 first-run<br />

houses managed to break 100. MGM -Cinerama's<br />

"The Wonderful World of the<br />

Brothers Grimm," 28th week at the Cooper,<br />

easily outdistanced everything else, with<br />

only the reissued "An American in Paris, "<br />

debuting at the St. Louis Park, coming<br />

close with 135 per cent. "Mutiny on the<br />

Bounty," in a seventh week at the Academy,<br />

held up well at 120 per cent.<br />

Academy—Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 7th wk. 120<br />

Campus—Fate of o Man (UA) 100<br />

Century—Gypsy iWB), 7th wk 70<br />

Cooper—The Wonderful World of the Brothers<br />

Grimm (MGM-Cinerama), 28th wk 1 60<br />

Gopher— In Search of the Costowoys (BV), 7th wk. 100<br />

Lyric—The Robe (20th-Fox), reissue, 2nd wk 90<br />

Mann—The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 17th wk. .. 90<br />

Orpheum—Toles of Terror (AIR), 2nd wk 90<br />

State—40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ) 120<br />

St. Louis Park—An Americon in Poris (MGM),<br />

reissue 1 35<br />

Suburban World— Crooks Anonymous (Janus),<br />

2nd wk 80<br />

World—Two for the Seesow (UA), 3rd wk 90<br />

First-Run Levels Continue<br />

To Droop in Milwaukee<br />

MILWAUKEE—Grosses for the second<br />

week in a row were below normal. The<br />

weather's been murderous on the boxoffice.<br />

The best figure reported was on "40 Pounds<br />

of Trouble," leading the first-run setup.<br />

With 'Variety Club Week in the offing and<br />

plenty of recognition being given locally,<br />

perhaps some of this will rub off to increase<br />

the traffic.<br />

Downer— Riff Roft Girls (Cont'l) 120<br />

Palace—The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 7th wk 125<br />

Riverside—Who's Got the Action? (Para) 100<br />

Strand— Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 7th wk. ..125<br />

Times— Divorce— Italian Style (Embossy), 6th wk. 125<br />

Towne—40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 2nd wk. ..140<br />

Warner— Samson ond the 7 Mirccles of the World<br />

(AlP) 125<br />

Wisconsin—Sodom ond Gomorrah (20th-Fox),<br />

2nd wk 125<br />

'Get-Acquainted' Party<br />

On Variety Week Program<br />

OMAHA—One of the activities of Tent<br />

16 in observance of Variety Clubs International's<br />

"Variety Week" was a getacquainted<br />

party for press. TV, radio folk.<br />

Chief Barker Don Shane and members of<br />

his crew were hosts at the gathering at the<br />

Fonim Room of the Sheraton-Pontenelle<br />

Hotel. Making good the chief barker's<br />

promise, there were "no speeches and no<br />

solicitations."<br />

Madison s<br />

One-Man Film Censorship<br />

Gives Way Under Newspaper Attack<br />

MADISON, WIS. — The recent disturbance<br />

over the censoring approach regarding<br />

"Phaedra" at one of the local theatres<br />

has developed a number of reactions.<br />

The Madison Capital Times took a<br />

mighty dim view of the police inspector's<br />

walking into the theatre and asking that a<br />

few scenes be deleted on pain of having the<br />

theatre closed. According to the editor, the<br />

inspector has taken upon himself too much<br />

authority.<br />

Following a few editorials and articles<br />

on the matter, which subsequently brought<br />

a number of letters to the editor protesting<br />

the inspector's "uncalled for" action, the<br />

chief of police was quoted as saying he<br />

would favor taking the censorship work out<br />

of the police department and suggested<br />

that a civic group do the censorship honors.<br />

In sounding out thinking on this censorship<br />

business, the paper in its "Question<br />

of the Day" column, came up with some interesting<br />

responses to the question.<br />

PAYS $2 PER QUESTION<br />

To encourage readers, the paper pays $2<br />

for each question submitted and used. The<br />

"inquiring reporter" was stationed at<br />

Sentry Foods. The question: Should Movies<br />

Be Censored? If So. How?<br />

The five responses published were obtained<br />

from two homemakers, a salesman, a<br />

Department of Agriculture worker and a<br />

telephone installer. Their answers are<br />

shown below.<br />

Homemaker (ai : "I've been doing some<br />

reading about that through our church<br />

paper. I believe perhaps stricter control of<br />

moral standards by the producers themselves<br />

would handle the problem—the industry<br />

enforcing a code, rather than government<br />

censorship. I don't favor the government<br />

stepping in. The local theatre<br />

owner should be more concerned, too."<br />

TRUSTS PUBLIC'S JUDGMENT<br />

Homemaker


Goodi<br />

. . Heinle<br />

MINNEAPOLIS<br />

.<br />

i which has been as<br />

mediocre as the boxoffice grosses lately i<br />

por once the biegest news in the Mill City<br />

isn't the weather<br />

but this: Macos Century will premiere the<br />

much-discussed $40 million, foiu-hour-plus.<br />

20th Century-Fox Liz Taylor-Richard Burton<br />

epic. "Cleopatra," in its Century Theatre.<br />

Minneapolis, on June 12 as part of a<br />

70-city saturation campaign. Hard tickets<br />

and 14 shows a week will be the policy.<br />

Tom Martin, local Century manager, is<br />

much enthused and reports favorable public<br />

response even at this early date. The<br />

official announcement was made by Maco<br />

president C. W. Winchell last week in the<br />

Minneapolis Star.<br />

Pastoral discount coupons are still flowing<br />

into the Lyric Theatre. Minneapolis.<br />

and the Riviera Theatre. St. Paul, on "The<br />

Robe." Last week it was reported that 54<br />

per cent of the matinee audience for the<br />

first weekend were coupon-holders, and the<br />

second weekend had a return of 53 per<br />

cent. Not bad, as once again there wasn't<br />

an empty seat in the house at the Lyric<br />

all Sunday afternoon.<br />

Jerry Benane, stagehand at the Lyric,<br />

died Saturday i9i at his home in Minneapolis.<br />

Jerry had been at the Lyric from<br />

the days of the "Blue Mouse," some 27<br />

years ago. He was one of the most wellliked<br />

stagehands on Hennepin avenue, and.<br />

needless to say, there will be an emptiness<br />

at the Lyric for some time to come. He was<br />

74.<br />

Seems that there is some mild competition<br />

in the making for novel canopy decor.<br />

Cutout letters have been seen around the<br />

Loop as well as a giant-size Jackie Gleason<br />

"Gigot " cutout, but this week Bud Wiggins,<br />

manager of the State Theatre, has<br />

Tony Cui-tis. Suzanne Pleshette and Claire<br />

Wilcox in a sitting pose on top of the marquee.<br />

Cutouts were made from the 24-sheets.<br />

It really attracts the eye, and, by the looks<br />

of the percentages this week, did the trick<br />

in selling tickets.<br />

Genevieve Donovan, cashier at Columbia<br />

for 33 years, was guest of honor at a retirement<br />

party given at the home of Bryon<br />

Shapiro, branch manager. She was presented<br />

with a strong of cultured pearls.<br />

After a vacation of travel. Miss Donovan<br />

will make her home in Milbank, S.D. Her<br />

replacement in the Minneapolis office is<br />

Mrs. Janice Moore.<br />

Roger Dietz, formerly head booker and<br />

more recently a member of Columbia's<br />

Mill City branch sales staff, has been<br />

dropped in a realignment of branch personnel<br />

. . . Theatre closings: Walla, Wal-<br />

Professor Showman Saysi<br />

Always Get Yoar /<br />

SPECIAL<br />

/<br />

/ i<br />

Frain<br />

Gm4 W Due^dablt<br />

The Quality U The Fme«t .<br />

And The Service The Fastest<br />

halla. N.D.: Arcadia. Hannah, N.D.; Gem.<br />

Balaton— all closed for land because ofi<br />

the winter.<br />

Bill Diehl, popular St. Paul Dispatch columnist,<br />

devoted an entire recent column<br />

to urging students to attend the MGM<br />

World Heritage Series pictures. They are<br />

being shown at the Orpheum Theatre. Minneapolis.<br />

Freeman Parsons of Sauk Centre was reelected<br />

president of the Northwest Tlieatre<br />

Corp. at the recent annual meeting. Other<br />

officers, all<br />

re-elected, are James G. Randgaard.<br />

Staples, treasurer, and Mrs. Dorothy<br />

Duray. Minneapolis, secretary. The<br />

board includes Donald W. Buckley. Redwood<br />

Falls: Fred Schnee, Richfield: James<br />

G. Randgaard. and Charles Creamer. Minneapolis.<br />

They. too. had all served previously.<br />

MILWAUKEE<br />

^Jonte Blue, veteran of the silent movie era.<br />

was the honored guest at Press Club<br />

manager George Moffat's annual circus<br />

party Sunday i3i. Blue flew in from Hollywood<br />

for the occasion, which was a benefit<br />

for the Shrine Circus. Last year Moffat<br />

sent 500 youngsters to the circus.<br />

Everyone donated his services for the affair,<br />

even Frank Fischl. the club's chef,<br />

who picked up the tab for the sumptuous<br />

dinner. Contributions amounted to more<br />

than $300. It also gave the club's mixologist<br />

Louis A. Theurer. a star of the silent<br />

era in his own right, an opportunity to<br />

swap "the good old days" with Monte.<br />

"Louie" has appeared in roles with Francis<br />

X. Bushman. Beverly Bayne. Wallace<br />

Beei-y. Gloria Swanson and others of that<br />

period. And by the way. the 500-pound<br />

brass bell from the ship Milwaukee lused<br />

to start things off) was gonged by Estelle<br />

Steinbach. managing director of the Strand<br />

Theatre. She happened to be sitting beside<br />

the bell and was signalled by emcee Cliff<br />

Bermack to get the proceedings under way.<br />

Al Camillo. veteran showman here, was<br />

tendered a farewell testimonial dinner at<br />

swanky Aliota's. Al was an executive for<br />

years with various circuits and put over<br />

some of the biggest promotions ever attempted<br />

in these parts. His most recent<br />

was for the Ti-app family film. He is now<br />

associated with General Theatrical Co. of<br />

San Franci.sco as booker-buyer. Universal's<br />

Pat Halloran and Delfts Fred Florence<br />

were responsible for the turnout of about 50<br />

folks from the industi-y.<br />

State senators Nomian Sussman and Lynn<br />

Stalbaum have introduced a bill at Madison<br />

which would change the lottery laws to<br />

permit Wisconsin residents to participate<br />

in radio or TV contests by sending in their<br />

names. Exhibitors have long felt the need<br />

for a change in the lottery law, since every<br />

time they want to run a contest of one sort<br />

or another, the lottery law is held up to<br />

restrict or limit the possibilities. If the<br />

bill is passed, this may mean the opening<br />

wedge, for showmen.<br />

Joe Reynolds, manager of the Towne<br />

Theatre, is heading up an as yet unnamed<br />

group of youngsters in the deserving and<br />

underprivileged category. He is being assisted<br />

by newly elected sheriff "Mike"<br />

Wolke. who has accepted the title of<br />

Variety Club's honorary chairman of the<br />

underprivileged children's group. Reynolds<br />

expects to amass the largest number of<br />

names ever collected and has a number of<br />

plans under consideration for promotion.<br />

He expects the results to bring increased<br />

busine.ss to the Towne Theatre and other<br />

hou.ses.<br />

Earl L. "Duke" Clemens, pianist, died here<br />

at the age of 53 February 2. He began playing<br />

the piano professionally at 17 and at<br />

one time had his own band, which played<br />

at the Riverside Theatre and on radio stations.<br />

Of late he has Ijeen playing night<br />

club engagements. He joined the Milwaukee<br />

Musicians A.ss'n. Local 8. in 1936.<br />

Add to the film ratings in <strong>Boxoffice</strong>'s<br />

Index, those of the Better Films Council of<br />

Milwaukee County. They are as follows:<br />

Family: I'Very Goodi —My Six Loves: 40<br />

Pounds of Trouble: Swordsman of Siena:<br />

Papa's Delicate Condition. iGood) —It's<br />

Only Money. Adults and Young People:<br />

(Excellent! —Mutiny on the Bounty: The<br />

Longest Day. iVery Goodi —Damon and<br />

Pythias: The Password Is Courage: i Goodi<br />

—A Child Is Waiting. iFain —Tower of<br />

London. Adults;<br />

i<br />

—Gypsy: Sodom<br />

and Gomorrah: iPain —Where Ti-uth Lies<br />

and Phaedra.<br />

OMAHA<br />

prank Hannon, manager of the Warner<br />

Bros, exchange in Omaha before it was<br />

merged with the Des Moines branch several<br />

years ago. has been in Clarkson Hospital a<br />

couple of months. Frank was with Warners<br />

approximately 30 years . . . A. E.<br />

Thacker jr.. who has the State Theatre at<br />

South Sioux City, flew to St. Louis to participate<br />

in the Missouri river improvement<br />

Reports are that<br />

project discussions . . .<br />

Dorothy Weaver is so pleased w'ith her new<br />

job at Modern Sound Pictures that she<br />

turned down an offer to join the staff of a<br />

film exchange in San Francisco. Dorothy,<br />

who probably tops the feminine list in years<br />

of service on Filmrow in Omaha, went to<br />

Modern Sound when the 20th -Fox exchange<br />

here was closed.<br />

Whether it was the spring thaw ithat<br />

lasted about two daysi or the flipping of<br />

the calendar to February, drive-in exhibitors<br />

have shown a flurry of activity on the<br />

Row- in hopes of an Easter opening date.<br />

Among those who came in during the balmy<br />

spell were Mr. and Mrs. Edgar T. Becker,<br />

who have purchased the Hi-View Drive-In<br />

at Hartington from Adrian Mueting of<br />

Pocahontas. Iowa . Saggau. veteran<br />

exhibitor at Denison. Iowa, is recuperating<br />

from the flu.<br />

Meyer Stern, the sage of the Row and<br />

representative for American International<br />

Pictures in this territory, said "The Raven."<br />

showing at the Varsity in Lincoln and<br />

Orpheum in Sioux City, ranked among the<br />

best business-getters he has had . . . Willis<br />

Warner, who has the Hilltop Drive-In at<br />

Port Dodge. Iowa, reports a busy season at<br />

his bowling alley there.<br />

Vern Brotvn is scheduled to take over the<br />

(Continued on page NC-4i<br />

NC-2 BOXOFFICE Febi-uary 18, 1963


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BOXOFFICE Febi-uaiy 18, 1963<br />

NC-3


. . Richard<br />

. . Walt<br />

Requiem for<br />

a Theatre<br />

The following requiem for a theatre appeared in a recent edition of the<br />

StrawbcriT Point dowai Press-Journal. Thanks to its writer, editor Vic Gallo.<br />

the "interment" was fitting the dignity of a proud lady.<br />

Funeral services for the Orpheum although they proved beyond a shadow<br />

Theatre in Strawberi-y Point will be held of a doubt that the public still wanted<br />

in the latter part of next week. Manager<br />

John Schloss will officiate at serv-<br />

not want to pay for them.<br />

movies, they also proved that they did<br />

ices. Burial will be in the minds of the Dr. Schloss. upon the advice of consulting<br />

physicians, administered some<br />

people of the area.<br />

The Orpheum Theatre, born in Strawberry<br />

Point several decades ago. lived a institution in that much-asked for stu-<br />

"miracle dings" in the dying days of the<br />

colorful life. During her early days she dent prices were installed. These dnigs,<br />

was a much appreciated child and proved to cure little and the malady increased<br />

even more than it was originally.<br />

climbed to her peak during the war and<br />

postwar days. Following the advent of Her patronage increased not at all—her<br />

television the Orpheum developed an income became less.<br />

acute case of "neglectitis" on the part of In her dying days the Oi-pheum. although<br />

ill. was veiy seldom visited by<br />

the people of the area and became vei-y<br />

friends and neighbors who undoubtedly<br />

ill. She almost expired several times<br />

during the past few years but transfusions<br />

and the care of "Dr." Bob<br />

Thomas managed to pull her through for<br />

another hack at the world.<br />

The Orpheum was given another<br />

transfusion last winter and the task of<br />

nursing her back to health fell to the<br />

hands of "Dr." John Schloss who. at<br />

times seemed to have her well on the<br />

road to recover^'. At one time during the<br />

summer months the Orpheum. although<br />

on her sick bed. was hostess to<br />

the entire area and was once again the<br />

scene of full houses reminding one of the<br />

old days. Unfortunately those full<br />

houses were "free" to the public and,<br />

DES MOINES<br />

J^orrie Steinman left town with a wide<br />

grin. The Man from Minneapolis was<br />

quite pleased with cooperation of Des<br />

Moines public school authorities on his<br />

campaign for MGM's Heritage series of<br />

classic films which opened here at the<br />

Paramount February 14.<br />

In for "The Longest Day" preview were<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Metcalf from Cedar<br />

Rapids and Nick Yiannis of Dubuque.<br />

Loud praise was accorded the 20th-Fox film<br />

by the preview audience at the Ingersoll<br />

Theatre February 7. The picture will open<br />

here February 20 with a Heart Fund benefit,<br />

followed by the reserved-seat run at<br />

the Ingersoll the following day.<br />

Exhibitors George Carpentier and Bob<br />

Danico from the Quad-Cities area and Bob<br />

Malek. Independence, visited Filmrow during<br />

the week . . . Bill Krueger of St. Louis,<br />

representing K. Gordon Murray, is busy<br />

in this trade territory this month.<br />

Nat Nathanson, Allied Artists district<br />

manager and midwest representative for<br />

the Variety Club, was in the Iowa capitol<br />

and attended a luncheon with the local<br />

Variety crew at the Standard Club. He<br />

had hoped to be on hand for the Des Moines<br />

tent's installation and inaugural ball Saturday<br />

but a severe cold and fever sent<br />

him back home to Chicago a day early.<br />

You can't beat atmosphere. And the local<br />

Columbia exchange has gone all out with<br />

exotic Hawaiian decor to let exhibitors and<br />

the world know about "Diamond Head."<br />

felt sorry for her in her plight but<br />

nevertheless were unable to visit her in<br />

spite of the fact that she was dying.<br />

Had many of these visits occurred,<br />

physicians in charge feel that she might<br />

have taken heart and pulled through her<br />

last malady.<br />

It is significant that in her dying<br />

days the Orpheum in Strawben-y Point<br />

wUl go out in a blaze of glory by playing<br />

host to the much-talked about "The<br />

Music Man"—as her next-to-last show.<br />

She is preceded in death by many of<br />

her brothers and sisters. Sui-vivors include<br />

the movie fans of the area. She<br />

will be missed by many.<br />

The 13th street office, with its palm trees,<br />

pineapple, fishnet and grass skirts, is so<br />

Waikiki that a visitor imagines he hears<br />

the rush of waves on a sandy beach. There's<br />

even Hawaiian music piped in and friends<br />

are hoping Joe Jacobs, exchange manager,<br />

will cook up a luau in his lei! The film<br />

opens in Des Moines at the Capri Theatre<br />

February 21.<br />

"The Robe" has been re-released by 20th<br />

Century-Fox and Dave Gold, manager of<br />

the local Fox exchange, points to some good<br />

merchandising of the film in the Minneapolis-St.<br />

Paul area. Theatre discount<br />

coupons were made available through<br />

churches for the picture. Result—a solid<br />

bit of business in the Twin Cities.<br />

Des Moines Services Held<br />

For Exhibitor Jake Cohen<br />

DES MOINES — Funeral services<br />

were<br />

held here February 7 for Jake Cohen. Ottumwa<br />

theatre operator for nearly 40<br />

years. Cohen died after suffering a heart<br />

attack in Phoenix. Ariz., where he had been<br />

vacationing. He was 69.<br />

He entered the theatre business in Ottumwa<br />

in 1923 and was associated with<br />

Central States Theatre Corp. Earlier, he<br />

had been with Tri-States Theatre Corp. In<br />

Des Moines and at one time had operated a<br />

theatre at State Center.<br />

Surviving are his wife Paye: a daughter,<br />

Mrs. Paul Molmud of Los Angeles, Calif.;<br />

his son Bernard of Davenport, four sisters<br />

and two brothers.<br />

Lopert Pictures" "Electra" is based on the<br />

ancient Greek play of Euripides.<br />

OMAHA<br />

I<br />

Continued from page NC-2i<br />

. . . Ernia<br />

Riallo Theatre at Missouri Valley February<br />

28. The Rialto was among the movie holdings<br />

of the late Nate Sandler ... Ed Cohen,<br />

Columbia .salesman, is still having to take<br />

therapy for a back injury suffered in an<br />

accident the first of the year<br />

DeLand. United Artists booker, visited her<br />

home in Osceola last week and brought her<br />

mother back for a visit in Omaha.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Hanson of the<br />

Golden Buckle Theatre at Rockwell City<br />

have been taking "new tangled dancing"<br />

lessons at Fort Dodge . Max of<br />

the Max Theatre at Sibley, Iowa, is sporting<br />

a new car.<br />

Janie Moore has kept the Pix Theatre at<br />

Woodbine, Iowa, operating at a good clip<br />

despite rugged winter weather. Janie is a<br />

high school student and her dad Ken, who<br />

owns the theatre, has a number of supermarkets<br />

in the area . Hagedone,<br />

owner of the Rialto Theatre at Cozad, reported<br />

he had lost a number of full-grown<br />

hogs on his farm during the severe weather.<br />

. . . Cecil Waller, resumed<br />

Mrs. Gertrude Horstman is still keeping<br />

the Princess Theatre at Odebolt nanning<br />

full steam ahead. She debated whether to<br />

continue after the death of her<br />

who<br />

husband<br />

last year<br />

operations at his King Theatre at Ida<br />

Grove after selling the lowana at Red Oak.<br />

has been helping his son David get a new<br />

meat market under way.<br />

Leo Thomassen of Butte, hardware store<br />

owner, was on the Row to book for the theatre<br />

he manages for the American Legion.<br />

Other exhibitors on the Row included Nebraskans<br />

Irwin Beck. Wilber: Sid Metcalf,<br />

Nebraska City: Tom Sandberg. Holdrege,<br />

and lowans John Rentfle, Audubon: S. J.<br />

Backer, Harlan, and A. F. Mueting.<br />

Pocahontas.<br />

516,000 Presley Discs<br />

Out on His New Film<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—In the first week of its<br />

release, RCA Victor has shipped a nearrecord<br />

516.000 copies of the first Elvis<br />

Presley single from his new motion picture,<br />

MGM's "It Happened at the World's Fair."<br />

The new 45 is fronted by "One Broken<br />

Heart for Sale" and backed with "They Remind<br />

Me Too Much of You." two of the ten<br />

new songs Elvis introduces in the production<br />

scheduled for spring release.<br />

A&A Adds David Horowitz<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD — David Horowitz has<br />

been added to the publicity and promotion<br />

staff of The Associates & Aldrich Co. to begin<br />

work immediately on the company's<br />

current hit. "What Ever Happened to Baby<br />

Jane?" as well as two upcoming projects,<br />

"Two for Texas." to be produced and directed<br />

by Aldrich for Warner Bros, and a<br />

new television series to star Victor Buono.<br />

English composer Ron Goodwin has<br />

written a lush score for Universal's "Lancelot<br />

and Guinevere," orchestrated for 82 pieces<br />

with special stress on strings and brass.<br />

NC-4 BOXOFTICE Febmary 18, 1963


—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

,<br />

'Lawrence' Welcome<br />

Is Hearty in Detroit<br />

DETROIT—With the Mercury Theatre<br />

advertising last days on "The Longest Day,"<br />

business got the needed shot in the arm.<br />

Most downtown theatres showed increased<br />

business with the weather break and the<br />

cold temperatures moderating somewhat.<br />

"Lawrence of Arabia" was the big leader<br />

here in its opening week.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Adams The Hook (MGM), 2nd wk Not available<br />

Fox Not Tonight, Henry (SR), 2nd wk.; 7th<br />

Commandment (Crown) 135<br />

Grond Circus— Billy Budd (AA) 105<br />

Madison Lawrence of Arabia (Col) 175<br />

Mercury The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 15th wk. 130<br />

Michigan Gypsy (WB), 5th wk 115<br />

Polms Term ot Trial (WB) 100<br />

Trans-Lux Krim World Without Shame (SR),<br />

3rd wk 80<br />

"Mutiny' and 'Seesaw' Top<br />

Frostbitten Cincinnati<br />

CINCINNATI—Excepting for the continued<br />

success of "Mutiny on the Bounty"<br />

at the Valley and a nice, warm reception<br />

for "Two for the Seesaw" at Keith's, local<br />

first-run business was almost as dispiriting<br />

as the weather, which continued "impossible."<br />

Albee Gypsy (WB), 5th wk 100<br />

Copitol The Lion (20th-Fox), 2nd wk 50<br />

Esquire The Loneliness of the Long Distance<br />

Runner (Confl), 2nd wk 75<br />

Grand The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 15th wk. ..100<br />

Guild Boccaccio '70 (Embassy), 8th wk 90<br />

Hyde Park A Kind of Loving (Governor), moveover 75<br />

Keith Two for the Seesow (UA) 1 50<br />

Palace Term of Trial (WB) 90<br />

Valley Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 8th wk. . .200<br />

Many First Runs Fall<br />

Below Par in Cleveland<br />

CLEVELAND — We still have cold<br />

weather, but the main thing putting the<br />

chill on local boxoffices is the 75-day-old<br />

newspaper strike which, at this writing,<br />

showed no signs of settlement.<br />

Allen Borobbas (Col), 2nd wk 100<br />

Colon Art Term of Trial (WB) 125<br />

Continental Art Anna Karenino (MGM-SR),<br />

reissue 90<br />

Heights Art Summerskin (Angel) 100<br />

Hippodrome The Longest Day (20th-Fox),<br />

14th wk 80<br />

Ohio Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 8th wk 80<br />

Paloce Sodom ond Gomorrah (20th-Fox), 3rd wk. 100<br />

Stillmon Who's<br />

State Two for<br />

Westwood Art<br />

Got<br />

the<br />

Ingmar<br />

the Action?<br />

Seesaw<br />

Bergman<br />

(UA)<br />

60<br />

85<br />

95<br />

(Para), 2nd wk. . .<br />

Festival (Janus) . .<br />

WB Buys 'Missourian'<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Motion picture rights to<br />

"The Missourian," Sam Peeples novel concerning<br />

the post-Civil War era, have been<br />

purchased by Warner Bros., it was announced<br />

by Jack L. Warner. Stamng roles<br />

are intended for Robert Mitchum and Ty<br />

Hardin. Peeples has been signed to screenplay<br />

the film, slated for early production.<br />

"The Missounan" deals with the struggles<br />

during the reconstruction era in the twrder<br />

state of Missouri.<br />

Parents Job to Check Films Their<br />

Kids See, Not Silly<br />

BOWLING GREEN, OHIO—Selection<br />

of<br />

motion pictures children see is not the<br />

duty of do-gooders but of parents. Prank<br />

Nickens, Cla-Zel Theatre manager, here<br />

feels.<br />

Nickens, a theatreman who likes his<br />

work and his product, also is a writer and<br />

speaker of note. He explained his views<br />

on censorship at a recent meeting of the<br />

Kiwanis Club.<br />

"Parents must take the time and trouble<br />

to learn about the movies their children<br />

are seeing," he said. "The information is<br />

available through their churches, organizations,<br />

press, etc. It is their job and not that<br />

of self-appointed do-gooders and publicity<br />

seekers.<br />

MANY COURT DEFEATS<br />

"Censorship has lost more than its share<br />

of com-t decisions. It has proven in many<br />

local instances to be silly and preposterous.<br />

Of course, this does not keep many<br />

groups from agitating for censorship. It<br />

bothers them not at all that censorship in<br />

movies prior to release can only be followed<br />

by censorship of every other medium of<br />

communication and education, whittling<br />

away at the very foundation of our free<br />

society."<br />

Nickens said:<br />

—The Increase of adult films was an<br />

essential development of moviemaking.<br />

This has resulted in problems, both social<br />

and moral, but these problems can be solved<br />

with good taste and common sense.<br />

—Each theatreman has a real responsibility<br />

to the people that make up his audience.<br />

One cannot dismiss the protests of<br />

religious groups, organizations and parents<br />

lightly.<br />

BOUND BY GOOD TASTE<br />

—The movie industry has a responsibility<br />

to keep within the limits of good<br />

taste.<br />

—The public has the responsibility to<br />

realize that "adult" and "filth" are not<br />

necessarily synonymous.<br />

—Laws protect us from obscene films<br />

and obscene books.<br />

Otto a salty character invented by Nickens<br />

several years ago to make philosophical<br />

and humorous "Otto Sez" comments<br />

in the ads for the Portage Drive-In, which<br />

he managed at that time, is becoming nationally<br />

known. Nickens has sold his "Otto<br />

Sez" writings, which have been appearing<br />

in the local Daily Sentinel Tribune since<br />

April 1962, to the Hopkins Syndicate, which<br />

will release the feature to newspapers over<br />

the country.<br />

Nickens turns out the bitey Abe Martinish<br />

hits by the hundreds. He holds the sayings<br />

to a one-line story, the reader making<br />

Do-Gooders<br />

his own point from his personal interpretations.<br />

Theatreman Nickens has been interested<br />

in motion pictures and in writing since he<br />

high school at Chattanooga. Tenn.,<br />

was in<br />

where he started as an usher in a theatre.<br />

He came to Bowling from Knoxville, Tenn.,<br />

where he managed a theatre for 22 years.<br />

He is secretary of the Chamber of Commerce,<br />

teacher in the Methodist Sunday<br />

School and a member of the Kiwanis Club.<br />

Asked if he ever tired of looking at movies,<br />

he said. "No. Every time you see the<br />

same picture you find something in it you<br />

didn't notice before."<br />

Robins Writ Halts Sale<br />

Of State Theatre Stock<br />

YOUNGSTOWN—A temporary injunction<br />

was issued in Mahoning County common<br />

pleas court here to halt the sale of<br />

any stock in the State Theatre Co. The<br />

injunction was obtained by the Robins<br />

Theatre Co.. Warren. Ohio, which charged<br />

breach of contract.<br />

Stock of the State Theatre Co. was offered<br />

for sale following the death last June<br />

14 of E. C. Prinsen, who operated both the<br />

Palace and State theatres. The Palace has<br />

been taken over by Robins Amusement Co.,<br />

Warren, while the State has been operated<br />

by the managerial staff in charge at the<br />

time of Prinsen's death.<br />

Robins also offered to buy the State<br />

stock. The Stanley Warner Corp. and Associated<br />

Theatres of Pittsburgh also were<br />

seeking to take over the State. R. M. Hammond,<br />

an attorney handling the transaction<br />

for the State, did not announce the<br />

result of his negotiations, but reports were<br />

circulating that a south side businessman,<br />

not previously identified with the negotiations,<br />

had entered into the transaction<br />

with one of the amusement companies.<br />

Tony Richardson to Make<br />

Several Films for UA<br />

From Eastern Edition<br />

NEW YORK—A multi-picture deal was<br />

signed this week by Tony Richardson,<br />

British filmmaker, and his Woodfall Films,<br />

with Arthur B. Krim. president of United<br />

Artists. First production to be made under<br />

the pact will be "Lonely Girl." based on<br />

the no\'eI by Edna O'Brien and staiTing<br />

Rita Tushingham. Richardson will sei-ve as<br />

producer on the picture and a director will<br />

be announced soon.<br />

Richardson recently completed "Tom<br />

Jones" for United Artists and is currently<br />

represented on U.S. screens by "The Loneliness<br />

of the Long Distance Runner."<br />

Jonn^Uvt^<br />

BOONTON, N. J.<br />

Large Core<br />

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in Kentucky—Standard Vendors of Louisville, Inc., Louisville — Phone<br />

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In Michigan— National Thcotrc Supply, Detroit—Woodward 1-2447<br />

BOXOmCE :: February 18. 1963 ME-1


. . . 74-year-old<br />

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And The Service The Fastest<br />

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C INCI N N A T I<br />

^inerama is with us again with the opening<br />

of "The Best of Cinerama" February<br />

14 at the Capitol. It is scheduled for<br />

a four-week run, to be followed by MGM-<br />

Cinerama's "How the West Was Won"<br />

March 14. Publicists Karl Bruss. MGM.<br />

and Jules Curly. Warners of Pittsburgh,<br />

were in to arrange the publicity and promotion<br />

schedules for the new production.<br />

Ray Nemo, Columbia exploiteer. is setting<br />

up an extensive promotional campaign<br />

for "Diamond Head." scheduled for<br />

The art Guild<br />

the Keith February 21 . . .<br />

has a new policy for film schedules, adding<br />

a late show on Satuiday nights and<br />

eliminating the Saturday matinee.<br />

. . . Charles Palmer,<br />

Edward Salzberg of Screen Classics, who<br />

suffered a heart attack at Christmas time,<br />

is convalescing nicely at his home . . .<br />

The mother of Dorthea Lang. MGM assistant<br />

cashier, is in St. Francis Hospital<br />

. . . Margaret Woodruff. Columbia booker.<br />

was in Bellefontaine last weekend due to<br />

illness in her family<br />

recently appointed Realart sales manager,<br />

is back in his old "stamping grounds."<br />

West Virginia and Kentucky, being greeted<br />

with open arms by his many exhibitor<br />

friends.<br />

Quite a few visitors were seen on Filmrow<br />

s<br />

> Always Gtl Yovr /<br />

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^SPECIAL '<br />

Corn Seasoning - Boxes - Salt<br />

DISTRIBUTORS OK CRETORS' POPCORN M.\CHINES<br />

Detroit 8, Mich. Nights-UN 3-1468<br />

including Hugh Owens, Paramount vicepresident,<br />

and Herbert Gillis, regional sales<br />

manager; Ted Levy. BV divisional manager:<br />

Lou Marks, MGM central division<br />

sales manager, and Harry Schocket, UA<br />

auditor. Also noted were exhibitors Harold<br />

Moore. Charleston. W. Va.; Max Goldberg.<br />

Maysville. Ky.: Ohioans C. E. Pfister, Troy:<br />

Harry Wheeler. Galipolis: Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Robert McClain. Lebanon: Bill Settos,<br />

Moe Potasky and<br />

Wally Allen. Springfield:<br />

Steve Vradelis. Dayton. Away during the<br />

week were Jack Pinberg, UA manager to<br />

Springfield, and Murray Baker, district<br />

manager for Continental Distributing, to<br />

Indianapolis.<br />

'Longest Day' Welcomed<br />

By Civic Leaders, Band<br />

From Southeast Edition<br />

MEMPHIS— "The Longest Day" was welcomed<br />

to the Strand Theatre with live<br />

band music and city officials January 31.<br />

The 72-piece Messick High School band<br />

played for a half -hour preceding the opening,<br />

appearing before the theatre on Main<br />

street as Hollywood searchlights fanned<br />

back and forth across the sky.<br />

Mayor Henry Loeb headed the guest list<br />

of civic dignitaries. Several 20th Century-<br />

Fox officials also attended the opening of<br />

the reserved-seat engagement. Jerry<br />

Berger, 20th-Fox advertising executive<br />

from St. Louis, and L. F. Bailey, Strand<br />

manager, were in charge of arrangements.<br />

Advance tickets were available at Goldsmith's<br />

store as well as at the theatre.<br />

Protestant Group Against<br />

Trend Toward Censorship<br />

DESK SPACE TO RENT<br />

ALBANY—The New York State Council<br />

of Churches, representing Federated Protestantism,<br />

in its "Statement of Legislative<br />

Principles for 1963," declared that it opposes<br />

"legislation which tends toward indiscriminate<br />

censorship."<br />

"We are concerned," the statement continued,<br />

"with the influence of mass media<br />

where it is used to excite prurient interest,<br />

to offend decency and is obscene or portrays<br />

brutality and crime as desirable or<br />

acceptable. We are also concerned with an<br />

over-emphasis upon the use of media to<br />

'entertain' rather than to enhance knowledge<br />

and understanding of significant public<br />

issues and problems. We support legislation<br />

which encourages the use of mass<br />

media in a responsible manner and which<br />

improves the content, both morally and<br />

intellectually of the infoi-mation disseminated."<br />

The coimcil supported the joint legislative<br />

committee on offensive and obscene<br />

material's film classification bill last yeai-<br />

—almost identical with the one recently introduced<br />

by assemblyman Luigl R. Mai-ano.<br />

In Heart of Detroit—Close to Major Theatre Offices— Prestige Location<br />

Contact BOXOFFICE, 906 Fox Theatre BIdg., Detroit 1, Mich. Phone WOodword 2-1144.<br />

Far Hills Charges<br />

Dismissal Denied<br />

DAYTON, OHIO— Motions to dismiss indictments<br />

against the Far Hills Theatre Co,<br />

of Oakwood and its manager Edward Eads,<br />

accused of exhibiting an obscene film, have<br />

been overruled by Montgomery County<br />

common pleas Judge Carl D. Kessler.<br />

The manager and the corporation were<br />

indicted by a grand jury in February 1962<br />

on charges of exhibiting "The Immoral Mr.<br />

Teas," alleged to be obscene. These Indictments<br />

followed testimony by 20 citizens,<br />

selected by county pro.secutor Paul R.<br />

Young. The citizens and members of the<br />

grand jury viewed the films .simultaneously,<br />

then the citizens testified before the grand<br />

jury which returned the indictment.<br />

Harry Wright, Columbus, counsel for<br />

Eads and the theatre, argued that the indictments<br />

were vague, insufficient and were<br />

founded upon incompetent evidence obtained<br />

illegally. He further asked for authorization<br />

to inspect the grand jury proceedings.<br />

On this point. Judge Kessler said that<br />

grand jury proceedings must be held in<br />

secrecy, but, he added, if the defendant's<br />

only possible method of protecting his constitutional<br />

rights was by inquiring into<br />

them, the court would grant the request.<br />

"Such is not the case, however," he said.<br />

Judge Kessler noted that Eads' attorney<br />

can still contest the indictments on grounds<br />

that the evidence claimed as the basis of<br />

the indictment was illegally obtained.<br />

Kessler said: "It would seem to this court<br />

that the evidence may well be construed to<br />

. . .<br />

have been illegally held at the time of the<br />

indictments and the court would be<br />

required to suppress and possibly return the<br />

evidence."<br />

In addition to "Mr. Teas." the films are<br />

"Sins of Youth." "Twilight Girls. "Fast Set"<br />

and "Love Is My Profession."<br />

BOWLING<br />

DETROIT—Some of the teams switched<br />

position a bit in the Nightingale Club<br />

Bowling League:<br />

Teom W L Team W L<br />

NTS 37 39 Mercury 50 26<br />

Armstrong .36 40 Ark Loncs 41 35<br />

Local 199 .<br />

. .3S'/2 *0'/2 Not. Carbon 41 35<br />

TEC 23 53 Altec 40' j 35'/,<br />

High scores: Ken Grenke. 200-208. 587;<br />

Bill Fouchey, 204-195, 568: Don Lewis, 204-<br />

190, 566: Jack Lindenthal, 197-191. 565;<br />

Carl Mingione. 211. 555: John Ondejko,<br />

225. 552; Matt Haskin. 225. 552; Fred<br />

Warendorp, 545; Nick Forest. 226. 540;<br />

John Locniskar 190. 524. Julius Pavella.<br />

505.<br />

Bowling notes: Secretary Floyd Akins<br />

says it started like a dull day. then the<br />

gang saw how easy the pins fell . . . Ken<br />

Grenke was top scorer . . . Hop-Skip &<br />

Jump Fouchey was the runnerup . . .<br />

Don "Pull Nose" Lewis was in the top trio<br />

Jack Lindenthal brought<br />

his ball from way outside to score . . .<br />

Freddie Warendorp made high three for his<br />

division, replacing his partner, Carl Bewersdorf<br />

. . . John Ondejko and Matt Haskin<br />

needed another strike to tie for high<br />

single . . . Twig Dewitt made the 5-6 split<br />

when his ball backed up to skin the fivepin<br />

and drop it on the six-pin . . . Lou<br />

Zumsteg. the newest Nightingale, was welcomed,<br />

especially with his backup ball.<br />

ME-2 BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


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BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963 ME-3


CLEVELAND<br />

Dubcrt Kraber jr.. attending Miami Univeisity<br />

at Oxford, lias been hospitalized<br />

with a leg injury. However, he made the<br />

dean's list. He is the son-in-law of Jack<br />

Silverthonie of the Hippodrome Theatre<br />

Betty Bluffestone. Imperial Pictures,<br />

has gone to Jacksonville. Fla.. to escape<br />

Ohio's winter. She is on a two-week<br />

vacation.<br />

From Frank Murphy. Loew's city manager,<br />

comes news of a special showing Friday<br />

night of "The Courtship of Eddie's Father"<br />

for which the Stillman closed its regular<br />

screen program at 6 p.m.. then reopened for<br />

the special preview. It was a riotous success.<br />

Loew's State next will get "The<br />

; a screen game,<br />

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honors. As a box-office attraction,<br />

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been o favorite with theatre goers for<br />

over 15 years. Write today for complete detolls.<br />

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Hook." with Kirk Douglas. Nick Adams and<br />

Robert Walker.<br />

Jimmie Dodd, emcee for television's<br />

Mickey Mouse Club, spent a few days here,<br />

beginning February 14 . . . Mary Lou<br />

Weaver, longtime secretary for Warner<br />

Bros., has moved to Buena Vista a.s .secretary<br />

to Ted Levy . . . Edna Charns, who<br />

worked for Warner several years ago, will<br />

leave Paramount to become secretary to<br />

Bill Twig at Warners.<br />

Right after Mary Ann Yemec. Allied<br />

Artists staffer, had her blue and white convertible<br />

washed, someone stole it while she<br />

was bowling. She is slightly cheered by the<br />

fact the police have one helpful clue—it's<br />

one of the few clean cars in Cleveland . . .<br />

Stella Smitaner. secretary at Schine Theatres,<br />

bowled three games last week for an<br />

impressive score and was high on her team.<br />

Rudy Norton, Imperial Pictures, is delighted<br />

with grosses in the key town engagements<br />

of "The Raven." AIP release . . .<br />

Sent on from New York to handle the advance<br />

ballyhoo for Columbia's "Diamond<br />

Head," coming to the Hippodrome, is Lou<br />

Zablen. Lou Orlove will handle the same<br />

mission for Universal's "40 Pounds of<br />

Trouble."<br />

Morrie Lefko, once with RKO in Cleveland,<br />

is the new sales manager for MGM.<br />

He has been assistant to Charles Boasberg<br />

on "The Ten Commandments" and<br />

"Around the World in 80 Days." He also<br />

worked on "Ben-Hur" campaigns . . . MGM<br />

started its new centralized bookkeeping<br />

February 15. Headquarters will be in Detroit<br />

for the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Detroit,<br />

Indianapolis and Pittsburgh districts.<br />

THE BIG COMBINATIONS<br />

COME FROM<br />

Allied Film Exchange Imperial Pictures<br />

1026 Fox Building<br />

2108 Payne Ave.<br />

Detroit, MIcll.<br />

Cleveland, Ohio.


—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

—<br />

Big, Bright Welcome<br />

Greets 'Longest Day'<br />

NEW HAVEN—The big news here was<br />

the Connecticut premiere of 20th-Fox's<br />

"The Longest Day." which would seem to be<br />

settled in for a nice long run at the Whalley.<br />

(Average Is 100)<br />

Crown Tales of Poris (Times); Dreom Wife<br />

(20th-Fox), reissue, 2nd wk 100<br />

Lincoln Divorce— Itolion Style (Embassy), 7th wk. 100<br />

Loew's College Two for the Seesaw (UA) 140<br />

Paramount Who's Got the Action? (Para);<br />

Where the Truth Lies (Para) 115<br />

Roger Shermon Boccaccio '70 (Embassy) 130<br />

Whalley The Longest Day (20th-Fox) 225<br />

Sub-Zero Temperatures Keep<br />

Downtown Boston Deserted<br />

BOSTON—Business was off at local<br />

first-run houses following a wave of subzero<br />

temperatures that virtually left the<br />

downtown area deserted. Even Saturday<br />

night business has been poor. Five new arrivals<br />

all were fair in view of the general<br />

decline. "Who's Got the Action?" was<br />

nicely above average at the Paramount.<br />

"The Lion" was only slightly above average<br />

at the Music Hall. "The Best of Cinerama"<br />

was above average at the Boston.<br />

"Diamond Head" opened nicely above<br />

average at the Orpheum.<br />

Astor The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 1 9f h wk 130<br />

Beacon Hill Term of Trial (WB), 3rd wk 120<br />

Boston The Best of Cinerama (Cinerama) 1 70<br />

Capri Boccaccio '70 (Embassy), 11th wk 120<br />

Center Festivol Girls (SR), 2nd wk 140<br />

Exeter Billy Budd (AA), 8fh wk 125<br />

Fenway Hiroshima, Mon Amour (Zenith), revivoi 115<br />

Gary Lowrence of Arabia (Col), 8th wk 200<br />

Mayflower The Manchurian Candidate (UA),<br />

2nd run<br />

[ 1 25<br />

Memorial 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 3rd wk. ..170<br />

Music Hell The Lion (20th-Fox) 120<br />

Orpheum Diamond Head (Col) 145<br />

Poramount Who's Got the Action? (Pora) 130<br />

Pork Square Divorce— Itolion Style (Embassy),<br />

21sf wk 160<br />

Saxon Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 13th wk. ..130<br />

State Searching for Venus (SR) 160<br />

'Seesaw' Brings Hartford Elm<br />

A Hearty First-Run Week<br />

HARTFORD—"Two for the Seesaw"<br />

brought gratified beams to exhibition anew,<br />

chalking up a handsome 175 in its first<br />

Perakos Elm week.<br />

Allyn Strategic Air Command (Pora), reissue<br />

Art Cinema The Festival Girls (SR); Three<br />

.... 90<br />

Blondes in His Life (SR), 2nd wk 140<br />

Cinerama The Wonderful World of the Brothers<br />

Grimm (MGM-Cincroma), 19th wk 90<br />

Cine Webb A Kind of Loving (Governor) ...100<br />

'<br />

Elm Two for the Seesaw (UA)<br />

'175<br />

E. M. Loew Reptilicus (AlP); No Time to Kill<br />

(IND) 90<br />

Loew's Poloce 40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ);<br />

Mystery Submarine (Univ), 3rd wk 95<br />

Loew's Poll Rice Girl (Ultra); Fatal Desire (Ultra) 100<br />

Rivoli Yojimbo (Seneca) 90<br />

Strand Term of Trial (WB)<br />

1 00<br />

Boston Area Exhibitors<br />

See Two Crown Releases<br />

BOSTON—First National Pictures Corp.<br />

held a meeting and luncheon for exhibitors<br />

for "First Spaceship on Venus " and "Varan<br />

the Unbelievable" Thursday il4i. A<br />

screening of the two films was held at the<br />

Universal screening room at 10 o'clock and<br />

a luncheon followed in the Oval Room of<br />

the Sheraton Plaza.<br />

Arthur Sachson. general sales manager<br />

of Crown International, addressed the exhibitors.<br />

Harry Segal, president of First<br />

National Pictures, detailed the advertising<br />

and press campaign set up for the combination<br />

films, which will premiere at the<br />

Pilgrim Theatre April 10.<br />

Courant Welcomes Trend<br />

To Wholesome Pictures<br />

HARTFORD — Under the heading. "A<br />

Trend Toward Better Movies?" the Hartford<br />

Courant, morning newspaper, commented<br />

editorially:<br />

"According to the Motion Picture Ass'n<br />

of America, for the second consecutive sixmonth<br />

period. Hollywood's production<br />

schedule shows an overwhelming trend toward<br />

wholesome motion picture themes.<br />

The report was made to Eric Johnston,<br />

head of the as.sociation. by his code director.<br />

It followed an analysis of pictures<br />

and scripts submitted for code approval<br />

during the past six months.<br />

"No picture submitted during this<br />

period deals with juvenile delinquency,<br />

dope addiction, prostitution, abortion or<br />

gangsterism." said the report.<br />

"The cjaiic will say. of course, that the<br />

shock value has gone out of the morbid<br />

themes, so that now the real shocker comes<br />

when a customer finds himself treated to<br />

a wholesome story. Sin is actually pretty<br />

morbid stuff, and it can be glamorized only<br />

to a point when it becomes tedious unless<br />

there is a real point to be made. Many pictures<br />

in recent years have consisted merely<br />

in shocks to the accepted mores. It is about<br />

as creative as setting off torpedoes inside<br />

the theatre. This. too. has shock value.<br />

"Nor is there any need to revert to the<br />

Nice Nellyism of the first quarter of the<br />

century, when the human figure above the<br />

ankle was swathed in great layers of cloth,<br />

and the facts of life were ignored or whispered<br />

about. The British have shown repeatedly<br />

how they can take adult themes,<br />

treat them creatively, even humorously,<br />

and come up with fine pictures that tell you<br />

something about the world we live in and<br />

the kind of people who inhabit it.<br />

"The motion picture industry has. on<br />

occasion, risen to great heights. In recent<br />

years, it has shown an absorption with<br />

decadence that might indicate approaching<br />

senility.<br />

Let us hope that the latest report<br />

of good, wholesome pictures means the industry<br />

has reached a new. higher plateau<br />

of operation."<br />

E. M. Loew Building<br />

Theatre in Boston<br />

BOSTON—E. M. Loew is building a new<br />

theatre on the site of the old Lancaster<br />

Theatre in the North Station area. The inside<br />

of the old theatre has been completely<br />

torn out with three walls left standing.<br />

and the new theatre is being built inside<br />

this frame. It will be called the 'West End<br />

Cinema.<br />

The new theatre will seat approximately<br />

550. 'William Riseman is the architect in<br />

the estimated $200,000 building operation.<br />

It is understood that the new theatre will<br />

be operated as an art house.<br />

35th Year for Leo Lajoie<br />

WORCESTER—Leo Lajoie, Capitol resident<br />

manager for New England Theatres,<br />

is marking his 35th year in exhibition. He<br />

started at the Capitol as an usher, becoming<br />

assistant manager and, finally, manager<br />

in 1946, upon retirement of industry<br />

veteran Elmer Daniels, The latter has since<br />

died.<br />

Williamstown Project<br />

Includes New Theatre<br />

HARTFORD — Independent<br />

exhibitor<br />

Peter Desmond has joined forces with<br />

Robert Lewis, former manager of dining<br />

.service for United Airlines at Idlewild International<br />

Airport, New York, and Arthur<br />

Bratton. who operated the Country Gift<br />

Shop, 'Williamstown, Mass., for 15 years,<br />

in forming Bratton, Inc., for financing and<br />

construction of a quarter-million dollar<br />

amusement project in 'Williamstown.<br />

The project will include a restaurant, to<br />

be managed by Lewis: a gift shop, to be<br />

managed by Bratton, and a 399-seat motion<br />

picture theatre, to be managed by<br />

Desmond.<br />

Desmond told<br />

<strong>Boxoffice</strong> that the theatre,<br />

to be operating by late spring, will<br />

feature both U.S. and European product<br />

as well as occasional "live" attractions. "'We<br />

will place special emphasis on a stimulating<br />

and constructive program for the<br />

young people of the area," he added.<br />

Architect for Bratton's interests, on<br />

North street, in 'Williamstown, is Jack Sinclair<br />

of King, Sinclair & Austin, West Hartford.<br />

State Seeking to Recover<br />

On Middlesex Realty Co.<br />

HARTFORD — The state has a fiscal<br />

headache over its efforts to sell the Middlesex<br />

Realty Corp- property in Middletown.<br />

formerly owned by the Adorno family, on<br />

which it is owed -$129,000.<br />

The late Sal Adorno sr. was a Connecticut<br />

film industry pioneer; his son Sal jr.<br />

owns and operates the Middletown Drivein,<br />

and another son, Mike, operates the<br />

Palace, both in Middletown.<br />

State treasurer Gerald A. Lamb has rejected<br />

the sole bid of $42,500 received from<br />

a Middletown businessman, Charles Facius,<br />

as "insufficient" for this prop)erty in which<br />

the state has invested considerably.<br />

The state now intends to negotiate for<br />

private sale of the property, hoping to get<br />

a more favorable response. A state loan of<br />

$140,000 was made on the property, which<br />

contains the long-shuttered Middlesex<br />

Theatre.<br />

Remodeling Wins Citation<br />

For Paramount in Lynn<br />

LYNN, MASS. — The Lynn Paramount<br />

Theatre has been awarded a community<br />

betterment citation by the Lynn Area<br />

Chamber of Commerce in recognition of<br />

the theatre's improvement project. The<br />

citation was presented to Joseph Bryant,<br />

who is in his third year as manager of the<br />

theatre.<br />

Installation of a new- marquee and front<br />

was underscored by the CofC in its citation<br />

as improving the neighborhood of 169<br />

Union St., adding greatly to the lighting of<br />

that area and providing an attractive theatre<br />

exterior.<br />

The interior of the Paramount also has<br />

been improved by addition of an attractive<br />

new traveler curtain in gold Piberglas. A<br />

new candy counter will be added this<br />

spring.<br />

William J, McCafferty jr., appointed in<br />

May 1961. is Bryant's assistant manager.<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963 NE-1


"<br />

. . The<br />

Willimantic Woman Manager Stresses<br />

Courtesy in Pleasing<br />

By ALLEN M. WIDEM<br />

WILLIMANTIC. CONN—Mrs. Margaret<br />

Moiteiiseii, first woman manager of the<br />

Stanley Warner Capitol in the 35-year history<br />

of the downtown, first-run outlet, is<br />

a realist when it comes to looking at local<br />

exhibition potential.<br />

Newly appointed to the Willimantic post<br />

by James M. Totman. SW zone manager.<br />

Mrs. Mortensen feels strongly that "extending<br />

every courtesy" to the moviegoing<br />

public and fostering "good public relations<br />

will pay off handsomely for any motion<br />

pictuie showcase.<br />

The trim, blue-eyed mother of five still<br />

retains a touch of her native Alabama<br />

accent.<br />

As for public relations, she told <strong>Boxoffice</strong>:<br />

"I don't mean only getting publicity<br />

for the theatre itself. I believe we should<br />

treat the public in a polite manner at all<br />

times: too often, for example, when a person<br />

calls for information, they can get a<br />

curt answer from the cashier or boxoffice<br />

attendant. This practice doesn't help our<br />

image on the community level, in my<br />

opinion."<br />

At the same time, there is little fear for<br />

HARTFORD<br />

^he Stanley Warner Strand bought a full<br />

page in the Hartford Courant's Sunday<br />

magazine section for the Connecticut<br />

premiere of 20th-Fox's "Sodom and Gomorrah."<br />

The last time a similar practice<br />

occurred in this area marked Joseph E.<br />

Levine's introduction of "Hercules."<br />

WTIC-TV has slated a February 24 telecast,<br />

starting at noon, on motion picture<br />

industry patterns and principles, the participants<br />

to include Sperie P. Perakos, general<br />

manager, Perakos Theatre Associates,<br />

and professors John Balmer and Edgar<br />

Kloten of the University of Hartford.<br />

Bob Tirrell, Hartford district manager for<br />

Lockwood & Gordon Theatres, has moved<br />

his office from the Lenox Building, 957 Albany<br />

Ave., to the Cinerama Building. 492<br />

Farmington Ave. Jack Hynes, who has<br />

been managing the Central, West Hartford,<br />

is to be assigned elsewhere: the Central,<br />

of course, is now back in the Schuman<br />

combine and Thomas Ogbmn is supervising<br />

that and the Lyric. Hartford. Meanwhile.<br />

Hynes has been serving as a relief<br />

Professor Showman Saysf-<br />

Alwayi Get Yovr /<br />

i<br />

SPECIAL<br />

The Quality it The Fmeil<br />

And The Service The Faiteit<br />

1327 So.<br />

Woboih<br />

Chicago<br />

Theatregoers<br />

the local theatre as long as top-quality<br />

attractions continue to get into distribution.<br />

The appeal of "getting out" for an<br />

evening shouldn't be forgotten by the management<br />

level in "selling" the theatre to<br />

the suburban housewife as well as the city<br />

dweller. Restaurants, for example, can<br />

gear their advertising to remind newspaper<br />

readers of the novelty or change of merely<br />

getting on new clothes and driving in the<br />

family car to the downtown area.<br />

Mrs. Mortensen, who worked as a theatre<br />

cashier in Alabama, joined the Capitol<br />

staff two years ago as cashier, expressing<br />

a fondness for the "excitement" of exhibition.<br />

She feels that conveying this atmosphere<br />

of "excitement" to the personnel of<br />

a theatre (at the moment the Capitol has<br />

a payroll of 12 persons) can aid a boxoffice<br />

statement tremendously.<br />

"We've got to tell the crew itself that<br />

there IS something exciting about this<br />

work," she asserted. "Even if you're an<br />

usher, you can feel the excitement. There is<br />

a lot of paperwork, to be sure, but the individual<br />

interested in the business will derive<br />

some satisfaction from totaling the<br />

receipts to 'see how we did.' "<br />

manager in metropolitan Hartford L&G<br />

situations.<br />

Thomas F. O'Neill, board chairman of<br />

RKO. operating a $10 million experimental<br />

pay TV project via WHCT-TV here, is most<br />

hopeful of profitable returns. He told a<br />

gathering of Hartford business and industrial<br />

leaders; "It is altogether possible that<br />

in the course of the next ten years, the<br />

contribution to the gross national product<br />

generated by subscription television 'combining<br />

equipment and services) would be<br />

in the neighborhood of eight or nine billion.<br />

In my judgment, and yours as well, I<br />

think, this would undoubtedly be a contribution<br />

to the American economy as well as<br />

to the communications industry."<br />

Attorney Theodore J. DiLorenzo, son of<br />

the late film industry pioneer. A. J. Di-<br />

Lorenzo. was named to the executive committee<br />

for the Hartford Republican Lincoln<br />

Day dinner.<br />

Hartford Talent Utilized<br />

On Experimental Pay TV<br />

HARTFORD — WHCT-TV. home base<br />

for America's first over-the-air subscription<br />

TV experiment, has started telecasting<br />

its first locally produced program on Sundays<br />

at 5:30 p.m.. featuring concerts by<br />

the faculty. Hartt College of Music. University<br />

of Hartford.<br />

Except for sports events, it also marks<br />

the station's first "live" subscription TV<br />

performance.<br />

RKO General will spend some $10 million<br />

over three years for its subscription TV experiment<br />

here.<br />

In other activity, Charles O. Wood, general<br />

manager, hosted composer Gian<br />

Carlo Menotti and producer Jean<br />

Dalrymple at a press reception prior to the<br />

telecast of Menotti's three-act opera. "The<br />

Consul."<br />

NEW HA V E N<br />

I^on Gorton, producer of the upcoming<br />

Warner Bros, release. "Panic Button,"<br />

which costars Maurice Chevalier, Jayne<br />

Mansfield and Eleanor Parker, told of filming<br />

experiences at a meeting of the Stamford<br />

Exchange Club. He said he worked<br />

nine and a half months attempting to find<br />

a financial backer and then worked on the<br />

film production itself for another 12<br />

months. His next project. "Oddballs." story<br />

of a group of suburban Connecticut men<br />

who become U.S. ambassadors, will be<br />

filmed in the Stamford region this summer.<br />

The subsequent-run American, Bridgeport,<br />

has dropped Monday through Thursday<br />

performances temporarily ... A Nazi<br />

battle flag, stolen from the Whalley Theatre<br />

lobby, where it had been used to publicize<br />

20th-Fox's "The Longest Day," has<br />

been retm-ned "with apologies," FYanklin<br />

E. Ferguson. Bailey Theatres general manager,<br />

reported. The two students responsible<br />

told Ferguson they had taken the flag<br />

as a prank.<br />

Sal Adorno jr., owner-manager of the<br />

Middletown Drive-In. Middletown, has<br />

been elected second vice-president of the<br />

Middletown Kiwanis Club . Stanley<br />

Warner Garde. New London, is inviting<br />

patrons over 60 to join its Golden Age<br />

Club and save on admission prices . .<br />

.<br />

Franklin E. Ferguson, general manager of<br />

the Bailey Theatres, was a New York business<br />

visitor . . . James M. Totman. SW<br />

zone manager, trekked upstate, accompanied<br />

by assistant zone manager James<br />

Bracken.<br />

Court Halts Stock Issue<br />

By Shulman Family Firm<br />

HARTFORD—The Connecticut Supreme<br />

Court of Errors has affirmed the issuance<br />

of an injunction restraining the Randolph<br />

Corp. of Hartford from issuing additional<br />

shares of stock.<br />

Associate Justice John H. King, who<br />

wrote the decision, said the coi-poration was<br />

founded in 1931 to deal in Hartford real<br />

estate.<br />

All ten outstanding shares of stock are<br />

now owned by six brothers and sisters. No<br />

dividends have ever been paid by the corporation<br />

and no stock has ever been sold.<br />

Justice King added. The stock is now<br />

worth greatly in excess of its original price<br />

of $100 a share.<br />

Three of the brothers and sisters—Mrs.<br />

Lisbeth S. Levine of West Hartford.<br />

Beatrice Shulman and Albert H. Shulman.<br />

both of Hartford—obtained the injunction<br />

against the corporation and the other<br />

three, Maurice W. Shulman ifilm industry<br />

pioneer and current operator of the Webster<br />

Theatre, Hartford) and Joseph L.<br />

Shulman. both of Hartford, and Mrs.<br />

Sophie S. Walsh of Putney. Vt.<br />

The plaintiffs' group owns four and<br />

eight-tenths shares of stock while the defendants<br />

owns five and two-tenths.<br />

Issuance of additional stock was voted,<br />

the high court held, in violation of statutory<br />

provisions pertaimng to necessary approval<br />

of directors and stockholders.<br />

Denis Sanders has been signed to direct<br />

"The Norman Vincent Peale Story." a United<br />

Artists release.<br />

NE-2 BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


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. . George<br />

BOSTON<br />

r M. Loew has purchased the Colonial<br />

Theatre in Portsmouth. N. H., giving<br />

two theatres in that city . . "Bucky"<br />

him .<br />

Harris. Universal film exploitation chief<br />

in Boston, is running groups of screenings<br />

on "Freud" for college and university professors<br />

at the Universal screening room.<br />

"Freud" opened at the Capri Theatre February<br />

14 . . . Sam Richmond, general manager<br />

of Sack Theatres in Boston, has returned<br />

from a two-week vacation.<br />

Julian Rifkin. president of Theatre Owners<br />

of New England, appeared on radio station<br />

WEEI with Heywood Vincent, commentator,<br />

in a panel discussion on the picture<br />

situation in Boston. Rifkin and the<br />

commentator took telephone calls from<br />

listeners who had heard the discussion . . .<br />

Ellis Gordon. Boston distributor, has<br />

booked "Festival Girls" into the Centre<br />

Theatre.<br />

.<br />

. . . For Otto<br />

Joseph E. Levine, president of Embassy<br />

Pictures Corp. and coproducer of the legit<br />

show. "Photo Finish." starring Peter Ustinov,<br />

now at the Colonial Theatre trying<br />

out in Boston, has plans for making a film<br />

of the show Kraska. Boston<br />

publicist for Levine. has been working on<br />

"Photo Finish" in Boston<br />

Premingers "The Cardinal." which is being<br />

shot in Boston. Quincy. Brookline and<br />

Lynn. Bill Barnes, casting director, has<br />

auditioned over 200 extras at the Kenmore<br />

Hotel where the unit is quartered.<br />

Rotary Sponsoring Series<br />

MERIDEN. CONN.—Leo Ricci's Capitol<br />

Theatre has started a series of Rotary<br />

Club-sponsored Rodgers and Hammerstein<br />

attractions, charging $1.50 top. The<br />

first film was 20th Century-Fox's "Carmen<br />

Jones."<br />

ENDLESS<br />

BURNS THE ENTIRE<br />

POSITIVE ROD<br />

Sove Carbon Cost


in<br />

Art Moger AIP Ad-Pub<br />

Director for NE Area<br />

BOSTON — Art Moger has been appointed<br />

as advertising-publicity director<br />

for the New England<br />

area for American<br />

International P i c-<br />

tures, according to an<br />

announcement b y<br />

Harvey Appell. New<br />

England manager of<br />

the company.<br />

Moger served in<br />

this capacity for<br />

Warner Bros. Pictures<br />

and more recently<br />

as a motion<br />

picture producers'<br />

Art Moger<br />

representative. H i s<br />

offices will be located in the new AIP exchange<br />

at 46 Church St.<br />

VERMONT<br />

Cpecial discount tickets were offered to<br />

high school students when "Billy<br />

Budd" was shown at the Flynn Theatre in<br />

Burlington. The kids were able to purhase<br />

the tickets either at their school or at the<br />

theatre's boxoffice.<br />

To U.S. for Tirst Eagle'<br />

From Eastern Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD — Andrew and Virginia<br />

Stone were due to sail from Naples on the<br />

19th for the U.S. They are due to start a<br />

film tentatively titled "The First Eagle"<br />

soon for MGM.<br />

NEW HAMPSHIRE<br />

lyjanchester's leading movie theatres have<br />

seemed to be in sort of a midwinter<br />

"hibernation." as far as recent newspaper<br />

advertising has been concerned. For instance,<br />

on February 6. the Manchester<br />

Union Leader "theatre page" consisted of<br />

only a one-inch ad for the Palace, where<br />

a Greek film was being featured, and a<br />

three-inch ad for both the State and<br />

Strand. All three establishments are under<br />

the same management<br />

A move which has been under way for<br />

some time to get the state interested in<br />

the operation of "Steamtown, USA," an antique<br />

excursion train project in Keene. has<br />

gained momentum now that one of its old<br />

locomotives and other train equipment<br />

will appear in the Otto Preminger film,<br />

"The Cardinal," which will be made in the<br />

Boston area. A public hearing was called<br />

by Gov. John W. King and the executive<br />

council for February 15 to discuss the promotional<br />

plan.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. OIney of Lisbon,<br />

believed to be New Hampshire's oldest married<br />

couple, celebrated the 70th anniversary<br />

of their marriage February 2. Due to the<br />

failing health of Mrs. Olney, who is 93. no<br />

open house or reception was held. OIney.<br />

92. operated the Lisbon Theatre from 1926<br />

until 1930 and has also been well known as<br />

a resort hotel owner in the North Country.<br />

Foreign motion pictures will be shown in<br />

Claremont to raise funds for the community's<br />

1963 Community Ambassador project.<br />

The film schedule is as follows: "La BeUe<br />

Americaine," French, April 3; "The Gold of<br />

Naples," Italian, April 24, and "The Green<br />

Main. British. May " 8.<br />

In a letter to the Manchester Union<br />

Leader. Richard J. Hauge jr. of Nashua<br />

suggested a law that would ban the sale on<br />

church property of newspapers which publish<br />

advertising of indecent movie shows.<br />

Drive-in movie attendance by teenagers<br />

could well be affected if the legislature approves<br />

a bill requiring young people to take<br />

driver-training courses or wait until they<br />

are 18 years old before applying for a<br />

driver's license. The measure received substantial<br />

support at a legislative hearing,<br />

but it was opposed by a spokesman for the<br />

Manchester Police Department, who said it<br />

might create a greater "enforcement problem"<br />

because present training facilities are<br />

inadequate to handle all the youngsters in<br />

the 16-17 year bracket.<br />

Books Showcase Feature<br />

NEW HAVEN—The first 20th Century-<br />

"<br />

Fox "Showcase Presentation the Connecticut<br />

exchange territory. "Sodom and<br />

Gomorrah." was booked day-and-date into<br />

the Perakos Hi-Way and the Lockwood<br />

& Gordon-E. M. Loew jointly operated<br />

Candlelite Pix Twin Drive-In.<br />

George Duning will compose the score and<br />

conduct the music for Paramount's "Who's<br />

Been Sleeping in My Bed?"<br />

Join the Widening Circle<br />

Send in your reports to BOXOFFICE<br />

on response of patrons to pictures<br />

you show. Be one of the many who<br />

report to—<br />

THE EXHIBITOR HAS HIS SAY<br />

A Widely Read Weekly Feature of Special Interest<br />

Address yotir letters to Editor.<br />

'Exhibitor Has Ks Say," 825<br />

Van Brunt Bird.. Kansas Qty 24,<br />

Mo.<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

Always in the Forefront With the News<br />

BOXOFTICE February 18, 1963 NE-7


OF<br />

vrcosT<br />

LEADERSHIP<br />

College graduates are penetrating more and<br />

more into industry. Now 58 ^f of the graduates<br />

of men's colleges land jobs directly on the<br />

corporate payroll.<br />

Business gets the lion's share of the college<br />

product because business needs it and can provide<br />

challenge and opportunity to the oncoming<br />

classes. About 88 Sc of executive posts in<br />

business are held by college alumni, according<br />

to a recent study of the 100 largest corporations.<br />

Business always will need the college-trained<br />

mind for the brauipower that management requires<br />

and the brainwork that research and<br />

development demand. Competition by business<br />

for the ablest graduates grows sharper<br />

every year.<br />

But the cost of leadership is going up. The upward<br />

surge in our birthrate, plus a rapid rise<br />

in the percentage of high school students going<br />

on to college, has caught colleges in a<br />

financial squeeze. Some face serious shortages<br />

in classrooms, laboratories, libraries and,<br />

above all, in competent teachers.<br />

Corporate support of higher education in ten<br />

years has risen substantially to more than<br />

$200 million for 1962. By 1970 this investment<br />

in educated manpower will need to reach $500<br />

million annually if business wishes to insure<br />

the continued effective operation of the<br />

sources of supply.<br />

College is business' best friend, certainly. But<br />

business recognizes that it must give as well<br />

as get. Higher education needs financial help<br />

and needs it now. Business should re-examine<br />

its needs and plan its support accordingly.<br />

If you would like factual data on what the college<br />

crisis means to you, to business and to the notion, write<br />

for the free booklet: "COLLEGE IS AMERICA'S BEST<br />

FRIEND", c/o Higher Education, Box 36, Times Square<br />

Station, New York 36, N. Y.<br />

,,6»«8.<br />

^^^^^<br />

SUPPORT THE COLLEGE OF YOUR CHOICE<br />

Published as a service in cooperation with The Advertising Council<br />

and the Council for Financial Aid to Education.<br />

BOXOFFICE<br />

HIOHCR IDUCATIOIf<br />

$<br />

KMP IT<br />

aitlOHT<br />

NE-8 BOXOFFICE February 18, 1963


2 Lively New Films<br />

On the Toronto Scene<br />

TORONTO—Two new features basked<br />

in the week's limelight, these being "Two<br />

for the Seesaw" at Loew's Uptown and<br />

"Phaedra" at the Hyland. but still out in<br />

front was "Lawrence of Arabia" in its second<br />

week at the Odeon Carlton. "Gypsy"<br />

also looked good at the Famous Players<br />

Imperial where it was having a second<br />

week. "Mutiny on the Bounty" was held for<br />

a 12th week at the University and it was<br />

the eighth week for "The Longest Day" at<br />

the Tivoli and "Divorce—Italian Style" at<br />

the Towne.<br />

; Average Is 1 00)<br />

Corlton— Lawrence of Arabio (Col), 2nd wk 120<br />

Eglinfon—The Best of Cineromo (Cineromo), 5th wk. 105<br />

Hollywood—Who's Got the Action? (Para), 3rd wk. 100<br />

Hyland—Phoedro (Lopert) 110<br />

Imperial—Gypsy (WB), 2nd wk 110<br />

Loew's—40 Pounds of Trouble (Univ), 3rd wk 105<br />

Nortown—West Side Story (UA), 2nd wk 100<br />

Tivoli—The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 8th wk 105<br />

Towne— Divorce— Italian Style (IFD), 8th wk 100<br />

University— Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM), 12th wk. 105<br />

Uptown—Two for the Seesaw (UA) 115<br />

Montreal Patrons Brave<br />

Snows, Sub-Zero Readings<br />

MONTREAI^Despite a number of tough<br />

snowstorms and temperatures often below<br />

zero, leading local theatres had fair boxoffice<br />

returns in the week under review.<br />

This reflected the strength of several good<br />

holdovers like "Mutiny on the Bounty" at<br />

the Alouette, "The Best of Cinerama" at<br />

the Imperial and "The Longest Day" at<br />

the Seville, and some comparative newcomers,<br />

such as "Divorce—Italian Style"<br />

at the Cinema Place Ville Marie, and "Desire<br />

Under the Elms" at the Westmount<br />

and "Phaedra" at the Snowdon.<br />

Alouette—Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM)<br />

11th wk Excellent<br />

Avenue—Tiaro Tahiti (SR), 6th wk Good<br />

Copitol—Girls! Girls! Girls! (Poro), 3rd wk Good<br />

Cinema Place Ville Marie— Divorce— Italian Style<br />

(IFD)<br />

Excellent<br />

Dorval Theatre (Red Room)—Pillow Talk (Univ) ..Good<br />

Dorval Theatre (Solle Doree)—The Eddy Duchin<br />

Story (Col) Good<br />

Imperial—The Best of Cinerama (Cinerama),<br />

3rd wk Excellent<br />

Kent— Billy Budd (AA), 4th wk Good<br />

Le Parisien—Comment Reussir en Amour (SR),<br />

2nd wk Good<br />

Loew's—Toras Bulba (UA), 3rd wk Good<br />

Palace— Period of Adjustment (MGM), 3rd wk. Good<br />

Seville—The Longest Doy (20th-Fox), 14th wk. Excellent<br />

Snowdon— Phaedra Lopert), 2nd wk Excellent<br />

Westmount—Desire Under the Elms (Para), 2nd wk. Good<br />

'Day' and "Bounty' Retain<br />

Pull in Wintry Vancouver<br />

VANCOUVER—Tough weather conditions<br />

slowed down business, but the two<br />

roadshow pictures, "Mutiny on the Bounty"<br />

and "The Longest Day," did well, as did<br />

"Boccaccio '70."<br />

Capitol—What Ever Happened to Boby Jane? (WB) Good<br />

Orpheum— In Search of the Castaways (BV),<br />

2nd wk .'.<br />

. . .Good<br />

Ridge—The Longest Day (20th-Fox), 7th wk. Capacity<br />

Stanley—Mutiny on the Bounty (MGM),<br />

^'fi<br />

^ w|i Very Good<br />

Strond—The Best of Cinerama (Cineromo) Foir<br />

Studio— Boccaccio '70 (IFD), 4th wk Good<br />

Vogue— Taros Bulbo (UA), 4th wk Fair<br />

To Drop Ontario Charters<br />

TORONTO—Legal notice has been given<br />

for application to surrender the Ontario<br />

company charter for each of three enterprises<br />

in the theatre field. The applications,<br />

all signed by H. T. Blumson. .secretarytreasurer,<br />

are for the following: J. Arthur<br />

Rank Screen Advertising Services of<br />

Canada, Odeon Theatres of Ontario and<br />

Andwell Theatres.<br />

Foreign Films Playing Big Part<br />

In<br />

Upbuilding of Attendance<br />

VANCOUVER—The growth of "internationalism"<br />

in the film industry is encouraging<br />

more people to go to the theatres, and<br />

is the bright spot in the movie business.<br />

Prank H. Fisher, general manager of Odeon<br />

Theatres and president of Canadian Picture<br />

Pioneers, declared in an interview here<br />

with Mike Tytherleigh of the Vancouver<br />

Province.<br />

Fisher was here to speak at a recent<br />

meeting of the British Columbia Pioneers<br />

branch.<br />

He told Tytherleigh that he's really excited<br />

about the future of the movie industry.<br />

After a series of lows, motion picture<br />

attendance made extraordinary progress in<br />

the last 18 months, he said, and foreign<br />

pictures have had much to do with the increase—they<br />

have built up a discriminating<br />

audience.<br />

AUDIENCES DEMANDING QUALITY<br />

"The growth in audiences demanding<br />

quality has made Hollywood and all producers<br />

produce better films." he said, and<br />

pointed out that in a city such as Vancouver<br />

there is as much of the good foreign<br />

product available as in a large metropolis<br />

like New York City.<br />

This is a radical change from a few years<br />

back. Then there were few foreign films<br />

showing except in the big centers. Tytherleigh<br />

pointed out that of the films showing<br />

in Vancouver Odeon theatres at this<br />

writing, only one was a Hollywood product.<br />

And at Famous Players theatres with Hollywood<br />

product, three were tied up with reserved-seat<br />

pictures.<br />

The growth in film internationalism, and<br />

the film festivals, is encouraging more persons<br />

to treat the movies as an evening out<br />

instead of just a time-filler. Fi.=;her feels.<br />

And he credits film festivals with playing<br />

an important part in the growth of movie<br />

internationalism. They have encouraged<br />

people to see what other countries were<br />

producing with the results those films<br />

shown have become commercial.<br />

Have the film festivals, by encouraging<br />

audiences to see films which start them<br />

talking and thinking, killed themselves?<br />

Has their success in making the unusual<br />

into the commercial been their own death<br />

sentence?<br />

FESTIVALS CAN EXPERIMENT<br />

Fisher feels that this is not the case.<br />

There is room for festivals where the showings<br />

can be more experimental: where directors<br />

can give full rein to their creative<br />

impulses, where the audiences will be<br />

guinea pigs for testing these impulses.<br />

One other change that Fisher has noticed<br />

in the past few years has been in the case<br />

of those persons who boasted that they<br />

hadn't seen a motion picture for a year or<br />

so.<br />

He used to say to them that it was their<br />

loss. Now he finds the same persons coming<br />

up to him and saying: "I saw a great<br />

picture the other day" because so many<br />

more films today deal with ideas rather<br />

than gangsters and girls.<br />

In concrete terms of progress. Odeon is<br />

spending $250,000 on renovation of the<br />

Plaza Theatre downtown, which will be renamed<br />

the Odeon when it reopens with<br />

"Lawrence of Arabia" on a roadshow policy.<br />

It will be the first Odeon house here to<br />

play the hard-ticket plan.<br />

Also Odeon is renovating two theatres in<br />

eastern Canada: building year-around<br />

drive-ins in Toronto and Ottawa: constructing<br />

a drive-in in Winnipeg, and has<br />

leased the New Westminster Drive-In here<br />

from Les Young and associates.<br />

Elections Telecasts<br />

May Cut Awards Show<br />

OTTAWA—Some confusion prevails over<br />

arrangements in Canada for the Academy<br />

Awards program from Hollywood on the<br />

night of April 8 because this is the official<br />

date selected for federal elections following<br />

the sudden dissolution of Parliament February<br />

4 as a result of adoption of a nonconfidence<br />

vote in the Commons against<br />

the government.<br />

E'ections in the countiy's 265 ridings on<br />

April 8. for which the machinery was immediately<br />

set in motion last week, will<br />

mean a tieup of practically all television<br />

and radio stations for voting retui-ns and<br />

political statements from the time the polls<br />

c'ose until long after midnight because of<br />

the time difference between east and west<br />

coasts, thus conflicting with the Oscar<br />

awards program from California.<br />

The Canadian Broadcasting Coi-p., the<br />

government agency, and many stations are<br />

already committed to carry the awards<br />

broadcast starting around U p.m.. it is<br />

reported. But election news may be given<br />

priority by the Board of Broadcast Governor.s.<br />

the controlling body.<br />

Meanwhile no announcement has been<br />

forthcoming regarding sweepstakes or<br />

other prize competitions by sponsors in<br />

connection with the film awards.<br />

Philip Ober will portray Tony Randall's<br />

employer again in Universal's "The Brass<br />

Bottle." with Burl Ives and Barbara Eden<br />

rounding out the cast. Hari-y Keller will<br />

direct and Robert Arthur produce.


. . Eddie<br />

MONTREAL<br />

Morman Jewison. toiiner CBC director<br />

who now is in Hollywood, went thiouRli<br />

a busy round of promotion visits here in<br />

behalf of his first feature film, "40 Pounds<br />

of Trouble. " which is opening at the Capitol<br />

on the 22nd. He commented that Tony<br />

Curtis, star of the film, has learned to act<br />

because he is cooperative and tries to improve.<br />

Canadians in Hollywood have<br />

formed a "little Canadian club" under the<br />

leadership of Lome Green. Jewison reported.<br />

Jewison has completed "The Thrill<br />

of It All." his second film, and is now directing<br />

a Broadway musical, an adaptation<br />

of "The Miracle on 34th Street." It is<br />

scheduled to open in Detroit in July.<br />

Jean-Pierre Desmarais of Select Films<br />

reports he is making fine progress with his<br />

Cine Club system. New units have been<br />

formed at Mount Joli. Riniouski. Rivieredu-Loup.<br />

Victoriaville, Drummondville.<br />

Joliette, Jonquieres. Chicoutlmi and Beauharnois.<br />

Denise Fournier, formerly at Associated<br />

Screen Industries, has joined Select Films<br />

as secretary Maurice Duhamel. for<br />

many years<br />

. . .<br />

with the Auclair Cinema circuit,<br />

has resigned to join the Elysee Cinema<br />

group here . White, Warner Bros.,<br />

motored with friends for a weekend of skiing<br />

at Stowe, Vt. . . . Jack Kroll, salesman<br />

for Warner Bros., was in the Maritime provinces<br />

. . . Harry Cohen, executive at Atlas<br />

Films, and wife have left for Hawaii where<br />

they will be holidaying for a month.<br />

Michael Frank, salesman for 20th-Fox.<br />

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over 15 years. Write today for complete details.<br />

Be sure to give seating or car capacity.<br />

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No Theatre Tax Relief<br />

In Ontario's Budget<br />

TORONTO — Exhibitors of Ontario experienced<br />

disappointment over the lack of<br />

any taxation relief for theatres in the<br />

1963-64 budget when it was brought down<br />

in the legislature here by piTivincial treasurer<br />

James Allan.<br />

No mention was made of changes in the<br />

Ontario hospitals tax act under which the<br />

amusement tax is collected although it had<br />

been clearly indicated during the past year<br />

by the Motion Picture Theatres Ass'n of<br />

Ontario and film industry spokesmen that<br />

a downward revision in the ticket levy was<br />

essential because of the economic state of<br />

theatres.<br />

A degree of satisfaction for theatre owners<br />

as well as for the general public was<br />

provided in an adjustment of the retail<br />

sales tax through which the exemption was<br />

raised for purchases of less than 21 cents<br />

from the former limit of 17 cents. This<br />

meant that two soft drinks or two 10-cent<br />

candy bars would be tax free, along with<br />

other items costing less than 21 cents.<br />

It was recognized that this concession<br />

would help sales at refreshment bars in<br />

theatres while relieving the inconvenience<br />

of odd change in small purchases. But<br />

1963-64 receipts from the retail sales tax<br />

were estimated in the budget at $180,000.-<br />

000. Incidentally, the budget as a whole<br />

dealt with sums totalling well over one<br />

billion dollars.<br />

The provincial treasurer noted that no<br />

new taxes had been created while no inci-eases<br />

were made in existing levies but<br />

the lengthy document contained only scattered<br />

concessions of minor nature.<br />

There is still the possibility of legislative<br />

changes in the assessment act and of government<br />

revision of theatre regulations as<br />

requested by exhibitors in view of business<br />

stringency in the entertainment field.<br />

'Mockingbird' Named<br />

Award Winner Again<br />

From Western Edition<br />

HOLLYWOOD—Marking its fourth major<br />

award despite the fact that its only engagement<br />

to date has been at the Pox Wilshire<br />

Theatre here. Universal's "To Kill a<br />

Mockingbird" has been awarded the Parents'<br />

special medal in the March issue of<br />

Pai-ents' Magazine. It already has won<br />

Photoplay's Gold Medal award, been named<br />

Seventeen's Picture of the Month, and received<br />

Scholastic magazine's Bell Ringer<br />

award. Many critics and guilds have named<br />

it on their ten-best lists of the year's top<br />

films.<br />

"To Kill a Mockingbird" was to be premiered<br />

at the New York's Radio City Music<br />

Hall Thursday (14).<br />

* *<br />

Allied Artists' "Billy Budd" has been<br />

nominated for the British equivalent of<br />

the Academy Award as best picture of 1962<br />

by Britain's Society of Film and Television<br />

Arts. To date, meanwhile, the<br />

Cinemascope picturization of Herman Melville's<br />

sea classic has been listed either as<br />

best picture of the year or among the ten<br />

best by 18 leading American newspaper<br />

and magazine critics.<br />

"Billy Budd" stars Robert Ryan. Peter<br />

Ustinov and Melvyn Douglas, and introduces<br />

Terence Stamp in the title role.<br />

T O R O N T O<br />

lyjayor Donald Summerville, a member of<br />

the local Variety Crew, issued a proclamation<br />

for the observance of Variety Week<br />

starting the 17th. A major event will be a<br />

luncheon on the 19th at the Park Plaza<br />

The University featured a special Saturday<br />

showing . . .<br />

for young people of "Mu-<br />

'<br />

tiny on the Bounty at 99 cents.<br />

.<br />

The Stratford Shakespearean Festival<br />

has made an offer to Theatre Holding<br />

Corp.. Toronto, headed by Herb Allen, to<br />

purchase the 999-seat Avon in the western<br />

Ontario city. The festival has used the<br />

Avon for the last seven summers in addition<br />

to its own auditorium<br />

A. Gaskin. who had served<br />

. .<br />

since<br />

Robert<br />

1949 as<br />

an official of the motion pictm-e censorship<br />

division of the Ontario government,<br />

The advance ticket sale has<br />

died here . . .<br />

opened for the fifth annual variety show<br />

sponsored by the Moramos Shrine Club to<br />

be held soon in the Famous Players Capitol<br />

at Windsor with proceeds to go to the<br />

Shriners hospitals at Montreal and Winnipeg.<br />

Manager Bert Brown of the Famous<br />

Players Imperial had a near-capacity<br />

crowd of 3.000 for the Wednesday night<br />

$12,000 Added in 1962<br />

To CPP Fund for Needy<br />

TORONTO — Glowing reports on 1962<br />

activities and the further progress of the<br />

benevolent fund were presented at the 22nd<br />

annual dinner meeting of the Canadian<br />

Picture Pioneers Wednesday il3i at the<br />

Royal York Hotel, with President Frank H.<br />

Fisher in the chair.<br />

Upwards of $12,000 was added to the<br />

fund for aid of needy veterans of the film<br />

entertainment field, according to the annual<br />

report. The Vancouver CPP branch<br />

led off with a $5,000 contribution while<br />

substantial amounts came from Toronto.<br />

Winnipeg, Calgary and other centers.<br />

The 11th annual CPP golf championship<br />

tournament here last August was a resounding<br />

success with 434 tickets being sold,<br />

resulting in a $1,500 boost to the benevolent<br />

fund. No less than 228 golfers made a bid<br />

for the trophies and special prizes.<br />

Len Bishop. Toronto, was responsible for<br />

a healthy membership report while the<br />

work of other chairmen received waitn<br />

recogirition. Preparations were taken up<br />

for special observance next June of the<br />

60th anniversai-y of the motion picture<br />

theatre business in Canada.<br />

'Bell' Antonio' Arrives<br />

TORONTO—"Bell' Antonio" from Italy<br />

was the new one at the International<br />

Cinema, and also at one studio of the Little<br />

Cinema where "Days of Thrills and<br />

Laughter" took a second week in the other<br />

half. "The Pive-Day Lover" enjoyed a third<br />

week at two cinemas, the Christie and New<br />

Yorker while "Kill or Cure" went a third<br />

week at the Capitol Fine Arts. After a long<br />

run with "Oliver Twist." the Kent Cinema<br />

turned to "Red Shoes" and "Look Back in<br />

Anger" with Richard Burton getting the<br />

play as star of the latter picture. The Bayview<br />

continued "Doctor Without Scruples."<br />

performance of "The Great Waltz" in the<br />

Golden operetta series. This picture was<br />

seen recently as a television program but<br />

it didn't hurt the theatre revival. The operetta<br />

series also is showing weekly at the<br />

FPC Tivoli in Hamilton, the Capitol. London,<br />

and elsewhere in Ontario.<br />

The engagement of "40 Pounds of Trouble"<br />

at Toronto Loew's got a nice boost at<br />

the boxoffice through the visit here of its<br />

director. Norman Jewison. a former resident<br />

of this city who found time during his<br />

stay for a visit with his family. Jewison has<br />

another picture coming up. "The Thrill of<br />

It<br />

All."<br />

. .<br />

Eaton Auditorium, 1,275 seats, had a<br />

capacity crowd for the showing of nine<br />

films in a one-night show sponsored by<br />

the Toronto Movie Club, the president of<br />

which is J. P. Fitzgerald, whose "Blue<br />

Mountain Magic" was an award winner at<br />

the 1962 Tokyo Film Festival . . . The<br />

Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra had an<br />

excellent crowd for its concert Sunday<br />

night in the Odeon Palace . Shadow Productions<br />

of Hollywood and Toronto will<br />

produce a feature called "Unbranded<br />

"<br />

in<br />

Northern Ontario, the male star being<br />

John Hart.<br />

VANCOUVER<br />

\A7ally Hamilton of Trans-Canada Films<br />

here. Gordon Sutherland and Bob Mc-<br />

Ewan are new members of the Canadian<br />

Ivan Ackery. manager<br />

Picture Pioneers . . .<br />

of the Orpheum. was ill . . . Russell Simpson,<br />

former local exchange manager who<br />

has been in the east the last few years, is<br />

back in British Columbia running the<br />

Avalon tulip fann.<br />

Kenneth Stauffer, owner of the Cave<br />

supper club downtown and well known in<br />

the motion picture business, has opened a<br />

second night club, the Cock 'n' Bull, out on<br />

Broadway.<br />

^^mA\ii///Af^i^<br />

WATCH PROJECTIOS IMPROVE<br />

with<br />

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ECHNIKOTE £<br />

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PRODUCTS<br />

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Wow.' — The Only<br />

ANTI-STATIC SCREEN §^<br />

XR-171 Pearl • Repel! Dust<br />

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Available from your authorized<br />

Theatre Equipment Supply Dealer:<br />

Export—Westrex Corp.<br />

TECHNIKOTE CORP. 63 Srabring St.. B'klyn 31,3, N.Y. I<br />

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES<br />

For Rent or Sal*: 24 fully equipped<br />

Brunswick lanes, well established operalinq<br />

business, choicest location. "LaSalle,"<br />

9-15 Granville Street, Vancouver, B. C.<br />

BOXOFFICE Febi-uary 18, 1963 K-3


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 BOXOFTICE :: Pebmary 18, 1963


• 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 />

• SHOWMANOISING IDEAS<br />

BOXOfFICt<br />

wrnnm.<br />

THE GUIDE TO g BETTER BOOKING AND B U S I N E S S - B U I L D I N G<br />

Reverse Selling: Radio Spoof Campaign<br />

Fills<br />

Reopened Small-Town Antique<br />

Don Stott, theatre owner of Prince<br />

Frederick, Md., has bought up a couple of<br />

closed small-town theatres in the last year,<br />

and now has five operations, counting the<br />

Waldorf 301 Drive-In and two theatres in<br />

the Prince Frederick area.<br />

He is "having a ball" getting the two reopened<br />

houses going again, he relates. His<br />

latest ventui-e is the old Opera House in<br />

Berryville, a rustic town east of Winchester<br />

in northern Virginia (population<br />

1,600). The building is owned by an amateur<br />

theatrical group, and also is used by<br />

local Catholics for Sunday masses. Stott<br />

could only get a lease for Friday and Saturday<br />

on "very desirable" terms.<br />

"Since I couldn't call the building mine,<br />

I decided to make the best of it as is; that<br />

is, without spending any money on it,"<br />

Stott reports.<br />

ANTIQUE OPERA HOUSE<br />

"The building is almost 75 years old and<br />

looks it. It is a perfect copy of a typical<br />

old-fashioned western opera house, complete<br />

with curved balcony, wooden floors,<br />

old chandeliers—the whole bit. It would<br />

make a perfect nickelodeon in New York<br />

City, but in a small town people don't<br />

really appreciate real antiques, and I know<br />

it."<br />

Stott figui-ed that ordinary advertising<br />

wouldn't create much business for the<br />

antique theatre opening. His judgment was<br />

to kid about his operation, make the Berryville<br />

folk think going to the Opera House<br />

would be fun.<br />

"I arranged a tremendous spoof radio<br />

campaign," Stott relates. Here are samples<br />

of some of his copy:<br />

You've heard of theatre-in-the-round:<br />

now here is theatre-falling-down.<br />

Please have exact change; our cashier<br />

is stupid.<br />

Cleanest restrooms under the stars.<br />

The show starts as soon as we can<br />

find a projectionist.<br />

We've put in windows this weel


CITATION WINNERS FOR JANUARY 1963<br />

Mae a. JensEiN, ni(iiiafiear in the Halifax<br />

Mail Star involving a theatre. The layout,<br />

eight columns wide and lacking only about<br />

two inches in being full depth, was sold to<br />

the Roy L. Josey Co., appliances, television<br />

and home furnishings retailer.<br />

An impressive part of the huge ad played<br />

up "If a Man Answers." For example the<br />

header depicted Bobby Darin phoning<br />

Sandra Dee, with most of the space in<br />

black and title and copy either in revei-se<br />

type or irregular copy balloon. The Oxford's<br />

ad measured approximately 7x9 inches.<br />

A heavy radio and newspaper schedule was<br />

used.<br />

A three-column reproduction of this photo appeared<br />

on the first page of the Pacifica Tribune in<br />

co-op ad promotion arranged by Monager John<br />

Heothcote for "It's Only Money" at the Seavue<br />

Theotre. Virginio Schloegel, who is Miss Pacifica,<br />

agreed to visit the theatre and throw some "lucky<br />

money" around for benefit of the cameramen.<br />

Making Funny Money<br />

Bring In Real Slufi<br />

The furmy (Enjoyment Certificate)<br />

money available from Paramount for "It's<br />

Only Money" brought in plenty of the genuine<br />

green stuff at the Seavue Theatre in<br />

suburban Pacifica (Sharp Parki near San<br />

Francisco.<br />

John Heathcote, manager, took over the<br />

main Paramount pressbook idea and made<br />

it a money-maker. First he had the Paramount<br />

funny money numbered, then he<br />

went to the merchants with a sales promotion<br />

plan based on the title.<br />

The plan called for the merchants to go<br />

in on a co-op ad page, distribution of numbered<br />

funny money to customers: printing<br />

of the winning numbers in the newspapers,<br />

and for the winners to pick up their prizes,<br />

double passes to "It's Only Money," at the<br />

Seavue Theatre boxoffice.<br />

Heathcote sold a full-page co-op ad lineup.<br />

It had this heading:<br />

"It's Only Money"—But You Can Save<br />

Lots of It If You Shop at These Fine<br />

Stores! In Pacifica Manor Shopping<br />

Center . . . FREE. Free Double Pass<br />

Show Tickets—Pick Up Your Lucky<br />

Numbered Funny Money From Any of<br />

the Merchants Below . . . Check Your<br />

Winning Serial Numbers in Next Week's<br />

Tribune or the Participating Shops.<br />

Each ad carried a line refen-ing to<br />

money, such as, "You're Money Wise When<br />

You Shop at . . . Your Money Goes a Long<br />

Way. etc." The Seavue Theatre paid for<br />

its own ad on the double truck. The<br />

Pacifica Tribune had a photo on page one<br />

and a story about the lucky money numbers<br />

on other pages.<br />

The participating merchants pasted the<br />

co-op page in their windows for weekend<br />

shoppers to see.<br />

"In closing, I mention that they were<br />

hanging from the chandeliers Friday<br />

night and Saturday." Heathcote reports. "I<br />

hurriedly scheduled an extra early opening<br />

(11:30) to manage the young folk . . . Our<br />

fumiy money is bringing in plenty of green<br />

stuff."<br />

— 26 — BOXOFFICE Showmandiser Feb. 18, 1963


Stamps, Lucky Lease<br />

Win for 'Landlady'<br />

The campaign put on for Columbia Pictures'<br />

Lucky Lease Sweepstakes, a promotion<br />

for "The Notorious Landlady," by L. E.<br />

Snyder jr. and his Modern Theatre staffers<br />

in Tulsa, Okla.. won first prize in the Tulsa<br />

PKjpulation category.<br />

The Columbia film played day and date<br />

at Snyder's downtown OiTiheum Theatre<br />

and Bellaire and Apache drive-ins.<br />

Snyder gives the credit<br />

for the winning<br />

campaign to Warren Patton and his aides.<br />

The Lucky Lease Sweepstakes, in which<br />

more than 1.000 prizes were awarded in a<br />

national drawing, was publicized in Tulsa<br />

by 12 Thrif-T-Wise supermarkets and by<br />

290 one-minute spots on KAKC in a twoweek<br />

period, plus five television spots.<br />

The tieup with Thrif-T-Wise included<br />

the introduction at the three Snyder operations<br />

of S&H Green trading stamps—ten<br />

stamps with each adult ticket purchase.<br />

More than 10,000 handbills were distributed<br />

announcing the coming of "The Notorious<br />

Landlady" and the launching of the stamp<br />

giveaway.<br />

The theatres and the 12 stores also<br />

distributed<br />

over 5,000 entry blanks for the<br />

Lucky Lease Sweepstakes.<br />

Pressbook advertising was revised a bit<br />

for the Snyder theatres' showing of "The<br />

Notorious Landlady." Special two and<br />

three-column ads featured the comedy<br />

angle by showing Kim Novak in boxing<br />

gloves rather than in the bathtub scene.<br />

These were used during the first week of<br />

the engagement. For the last week, the ads<br />

switched to the bathtub scene.<br />

"In this manner," Snyder repKsrts, "we<br />

were able to entice the family audience<br />

during the first seven to ten days of the<br />

engagement."<br />

A two-color ad, approximately 4 cols. 14<br />

inches, on opening day featured a border of<br />

the S&H stamps printed in green ink.<br />

A Showmanship Extra!<br />

Research Service<br />

Providing special service for individual<br />

customers who go out of their way to show<br />

their interest in pictures is a part of good<br />

showmanship practice at the Heart Theatre<br />

in Hartford, Mich., operated by Mrs.<br />

Lillian V. Stembaugh, whose personalized<br />

theatre operation has been noted before in<br />

these pages.<br />

Mrs. Stembaugh was recently asked by a<br />

good patron, whom she describes as "a very<br />

intelligent lady." about oldtime picture information—such<br />

as the feminine lead opposite<br />

Rudolph Valentino in "The Sheik."<br />

She took the trouble to search out the<br />

answer.<br />

"When someone is interested in the<br />

movies I try to keep them that way," Mrs.<br />

Stembaugh says.<br />

Dragon Ballyhoo Is<br />

Hit<br />

W. L. Webb of the Gaumont Theatre in<br />

Camden Town. England, won much attention<br />

with a dragon street promotion,<br />

consisting of three men in a Chinese serpent-like<br />

outfit, led around the city by<br />

Manager Webb himself carrying signs for<br />

"Flower Drum Song."<br />

Circus<br />

Musical<br />

Needs<br />

Circus-Type<br />

Ballyhoo<br />

The oldtime song has made "the man<br />

on the flying trapeze" as much a part of<br />

a circus as elephants and popcorn, but<br />

a downtown sidewalk definitely is no<br />

place for a trapeze act, so Frank Henson<br />

and assistant Bob Ragsdale settled for<br />

the next best, a trampoline act, as an<br />

out-front ballyhoo for "BQly Rose's<br />

Jumbo" at Loew's State Theatre in New<br />

Orleans.<br />

Three men performed at intervals on<br />

the spring-net beside the State marquee,<br />

as seen in the accompanying photo.<br />

And what is a circus without clowns.<br />

So the New Orleans showmen added two<br />

funnymen to their campaign. The<br />

comics were given the job of filling imprinted<br />

balloons from a tank of helium<br />

gas while the trio did their stuff on the<br />

trampoline.<br />

"Jumbo" bookings did not coincide<br />

with good outdoor promotion weather in<br />

many situations, but apparently this<br />

circus film needs circus-type promotion,<br />

for it ran 23 days at Loew's State, and<br />

Henson and Ragsdale feel their jumping<br />

acrobats, clowTis and balloons had a<br />

bearing on theii- success with "Jumbo."<br />

More than 2,000 of the imprinted balloons<br />

were passed out by the clowns in<br />

two days the out-front act was retained.<br />

The clowns were two youngsters obtained<br />

through a want ad. and they had<br />

quite a time along Canal street.<br />

Prize List Includes Exhibitor Trip to Japan<br />

A national contest operating on both the<br />

exhibitor and patron levels and highlighting<br />

the giveaway of six trips (each for two)<br />

to Japan and 257 other top prizes, has<br />

been arranged by Paramount Pictm'es for<br />

"A Girl Named Tamiko."<br />

Exhibitor entries will be based on the<br />

best local promotions of the "Tamiko" patron<br />

contest, which is a letter-writing<br />

competition based on the theme, "I believe<br />

that 'A Girl Named Tamiko' was right tor<br />

wrong! in breaking with tradition." Both<br />

patron and exhibitor entries must be submitted<br />

by August 31. The niles of the patrons'<br />

contest also apply to the exhibitor<br />

contest.<br />

Five (double) trips to Japan are being<br />

offered in the national contest. In addition,<br />

an exhibitor, theatre manager or theatre<br />

promotional executive can win the<br />

sixth trip to Japan for himself and a<br />

companion. All six trips to Japan are via<br />

Japan Air Lines (from their points of departure<br />

> . with other ai'rangements in<br />

Japan made through the Japan Hotel<br />

Ass'n, Japan National Tourist Ass'n. Japan<br />

Travel Bureau and Japan National Railways.<br />

The list of prizes in both the exhibitor<br />

and patron contests totals 24 Yashica movie<br />

cameras. 12 sewing machines, 50 Selkomatic<br />

men's watches, five cultured pearl<br />

necklaces, ten Micronic radios. 11 Sekonic<br />

light meters, 50 Seiko ladies watches, ten<br />

BOXOFFICE Showmandiger Feb. 18, 1963 — 27 —<br />

Pansonic radios, 50 Mr. Sneekers gift<br />

packages. 25 Skyway bicycles and ten boxes<br />

of Japanese silks.<br />

A contest trailer, a colorful 40x60 lobby<br />

display and special entry blank mats are<br />

being serviced free to exhibitors. Complete<br />

details are featured in Paiamount's press<br />

book.<br />

Crown Int'l Awards 18<br />

Citations to Exhibitors<br />

Newton P. Jacobs, president of Ci-own International<br />

Pictures, has awarded CISA<br />

(Crown International Space Agency) citations<br />

for outstanding "First Spaceship on<br />

Venus" promotional campaigns to 18 exhibitors<br />

in the northwest. Detroit and Toronto<br />

areas.<br />

Northwest territory showmen presented<br />

CISA citations are Edward H. Stuckey,<br />

Andrew J. Grainger. Henry E. Capogiia.<br />

Jack C. Kull and Robert J. Savage.<br />

Detroit area men wimiing the awards<br />

for their "First Spaceshop on Venus" campaigns<br />

are Frank Christie. Non-is Hunt.<br />

Doug Forbes, Roy Brown, Jack Lovett, Bob<br />

Hazard, Bob Saffle. Mark McDougald, Jim<br />

Bonholzer and Jerry Pomian.<br />

Canadian winners to date are Harry<br />

Rosenberg, Les Mitchell, and Martin<br />

Simpson.


I Para<br />

—John<br />

XHIBITOR HAS HIS SAY<br />

lABOUT PICTURE SI<br />

B-<br />

ALLIED ARTISTS<br />

Tall Stranger. The iAA, reissue)—Joel<br />

McCrea. Virginia Mayo. Barry Kelley. This<br />

1957 release, made in color and Cinema-<br />

Scope, made a good supporting feature for<br />

my Friday-Saturday change.— I. Roche,<br />

Starlitc Drive-In, Chipley. Pla. Pop. 3.100.<br />

BUENA VISTA<br />

Bon Voyage iBV) — Fred MacMurray.<br />

Jane Wyman. Michael Callan. Deborah<br />

Walley. Lacks the Disney sparkle which was<br />

in "Professor," "Parent Trap' and "Big<br />

Red." It did a little above average, but<br />

nothing extra. Good to see Jane Wyman<br />

again. Played Fri., Sat. Weather: Rainy.—<br />

James Hardy, Crescent Theatre. Jasonville.<br />

Ind. Pop. 2,500.<br />

COLUMBIA<br />

Mothra (Colt—All- Japanese cast. This<br />

one didn't even fool the kids in the special<br />

effects department. A fairly good try, but<br />

they don't make science-fiction movies as<br />

good as they used to. Remember "War of<br />

the Worlds" and "When Worlds Collide"?<br />

This one did above average for me, though.<br />

Played Fri., Sat. Weather: Cold.—James<br />

Hardy, Crescent Theatre. Jasonville, Ind.<br />

Pop. 2,500.<br />

Three Stooges in Orbit, The iCol) —<br />

Stooges, Edson Stroll. Carol Chiistensen.<br />

Not quite as good as their "Meet Hercules."<br />

but it will please. It gave me my best Saturday<br />

since "Hatari!" Played Fri.. Sat.<br />

Weather: Cold.—James Hardy, Crescent<br />

Theatre, Jasonville, Ind. Pop. 2,500.<br />

METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER<br />

Lolita iMGMi —James Mason, Sue Lyon.<br />

Shelley Winters. Peter Sellers. This picture<br />

will have its main appeal to those who<br />

want to see how they ever made a movie<br />

from such a daring book. Shelley Winters'<br />

performance was excellent—should win her<br />

an Oscar nomination. Sue Lyon is an attractive<br />

newcomer. Hope she appears on<br />

the screen again. No complaints on this<br />

one as we advertised it "for adults only"<br />

and said that it was a highly controversial<br />

drama. Played Fri. through Thurs.<br />

Weather: Mild.—Donald E. Bohatka, Catlow<br />

Theatre, Barrington, 111. Pop. 5,400.<br />

Lolita MOM I—James Mason, Sue Lyon,<br />

I<br />

Shelley Winters, Peter Sellers. This was<br />

highly overrated. The worst picture Leo<br />

has made in a long time. I gue.ss they knew<br />

Thinks Public Prevues<br />

Would Be Good Idea<br />

T^oes anyone have a good, economical<br />

idea of how we could show "Prevues"<br />

free to the public, possibly every<br />

noon, possibly in the outer lobby or<br />

concourse of theatres all over the country?<br />

I believe such a practice would<br />

do much more than present methods<br />

are doing to sel coming attractions.<br />

Marion Theatre.<br />

Marion, S.C.<br />

A. A. RICHARDS<br />

what it was, as they stayed away. Small<br />

towns— lay off it. However, the girl. Sue<br />

Lyon, shows some sign of a good actress if<br />

given better roles than this. Played Wed.,<br />

Thurs. Weather: Rainy.—James Hardy,<br />

Crescent Theatre, Jasonville, Ind. Pop.<br />

2,500.<br />

PARAMOUNT<br />

Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The<br />

I Wayne. James Stewart, Vera<br />

Miles. Color would have made this a super.<br />

As it was. it was still good and should draw<br />

them in anywhere. Any picture which has a<br />

title song does well for me. Played Sun..<br />

Mon., Tues. Weather: Good.— B. W. Berglund.<br />

Trail Theatre, New Town, N. D. Pop.<br />

1,200.<br />

Pigeon That Took Rome, The (Para)—<br />

Charlton Heston. Elsa Martinelli, Harry<br />

Guardino. One of the year's funniest pictures.<br />

An excellent comedy that will appeal<br />

principally to the adults. A real sleeper<br />

'Hatari!' Is Type of Film<br />

Exhibitors Need Most<br />

T don't usually seem to be able to find<br />

the time to write, but I felt that I<br />

had to say something about "Hatari!"<br />

which I played January 20-22. This is<br />

one of the finest pictures to come along<br />

in ten years, as far as I'm concerned.<br />

It seems to me that the film industry,<br />

which knows itself how good this picture<br />

is, would wake up to the fact that<br />

more entertainment like this would<br />

bring people back to the theatre.<br />

Canadian is a town of 2,800 population<br />

and a very good share of this figure<br />

attended the theatre during the<br />

three-day run. The thing that amazed<br />

me was that I did not hear one person<br />

who did not enjoy the picture. As I<br />

said before, this type entertainment<br />

would sure help matters—and TV<br />

would do some suffering as we exhibitors<br />

have been doing.<br />

CHARLES TOWNSEND<br />

Palace Theatre,<br />

Canadian, Tex.<br />

if there ever was one. Why wasn't it made<br />

in color? Anyone can see black and white<br />

at home on TV. Very good story with an<br />

excellent cast. It was nice to see "Ben-<br />

Hur" out of his chariot and into a modern<br />

picture. Highly recommended for your best<br />

playing time. Played Sun.. Mon., Tues.<br />

Weather: Mild.—Donald E. Bohatka, Catlow<br />

Theatre, Barrington, 111. Pop. 5,400.<br />

20th CENTURY-FOX<br />

Satan Never Sleeps (20th -Fox)—William<br />

Holden. Clifton Webb, France Nuyen. A<br />

fine picture, but a real dog at the boxoffice<br />

for us. Maybe Satan didn't sleep, but everyone<br />

else must have been—both nights.<br />

Played Wed.. Thurs—Joe Machetta. Emerson<br />

Theatre. Brush. Colo. Pop. 3,600.<br />

UNITED ARTISTS<br />

Bird Man of Alcatraz (UA)—Burt Lan-<br />

— 28 —<br />

Anybody Have a Reply<br />

To This Question?<br />

IJaving been an exhibitor in the same<br />

spot for 30 years and a weekly<br />

reader of BOXOFFICE for about 25<br />

years, I feel that it would not be unreasonable<br />

to ask a question. 1 notice<br />

in the reviews in The Exihibitor Has<br />

His Say that many refer to and call<br />

TV "the Idiot Box."<br />

Since most programs on TV are<br />

filmed and old and new movies made<br />

for theatres, would it not, therefore,<br />

be proper for these same exhibitors<br />

to refer to the theatres as THE IDIOT<br />

HOUSES and THE IDIOT DRIVE-<br />

INS? I don't understand how a person<br />

becomes an "idiot" when he looks at a<br />

good movie on TV and the same person<br />

is quit* normal when he is looking<br />

at the same thing in a theatre. Do you?<br />

Justice Theatre,<br />

KernersvUle, N. C.<br />

J. T. JUSTICE JR.<br />

caster, Karl Maiden, Thelma Ritter. Not<br />

only was the story incredible but Burt Lancaster's<br />

portrayal as the Bird Man was (as<br />

usual) excellent. Hell do doubt receive a<br />

nomination for best actor in this. A fine<br />

motion picture that was enjoyed by everyone.<br />

Played Sun. through Wed.—Joe Machetta,<br />

Emerson Theatre, Brush, Colo. Pop.<br />

3,600.<br />

UNIVERSAL<br />

Comin' Round the Mountain and Feudin',<br />

Fussin' and A-Fightin' (Universal reissue<br />

combo)—Thought this double feature.<br />

with one featuring Abbott and Costello and<br />

the other Ma and Pa Kettle, would do more<br />

than usual. But it only did average due to<br />

holiday buying. People had Christmas<br />

on their minds and not going to the movies.<br />

Played Fri.. Sat. Weather: Icy and cold.—<br />

James Hardy. Crescent Theatre, Jasonville,<br />

Ind. Pop. 2,500.<br />

Lover Come Back (Univ.)—Rock Hudson.<br />

Doris Day. Tony Randall. Well worth<br />

playing! Despite its sophisticated theme,<br />

for the stars are good enough to fill any<br />

theatre, be it in the Ozarks or Broadway.<br />

Very well attended. Played Sun., Mon..<br />

Tues.—Paul Fournier. Acadia Theatre, St.<br />

Leonard, N. B. Pop. 2,150.<br />

That Touch of Mink (Univi — Cary<br />

Grant, Doris Day, Gig Young. With all the<br />

sports competition, free beer and food given<br />

by local candidate, we did pretty well after<br />

ail. The picture is very spicy but highly<br />

entertaining. Played Sat., Sun.. Mon.<br />

Weather: Cool.—Carl P. Anderka. Rainbow<br />

Theatre, Castroville, Tex. Pop. 1,500.<br />

WARNER BROS.<br />

(WBi—Troy Donahue,<br />

Rome Adventure<br />

Suzanne Pleshette, Angle Dickinson. The<br />

scenery in this was worth the price of an<br />

admission ticket. Miss Pleshette was very<br />

good and I was asked when I was going to<br />

play another one of her movies. The Italian<br />

singer in this looked like a twin to<br />

Merv Griffin. This was very well done,<br />

though business was only average—too<br />

much competition from New Year's celebrating.<br />

Play it. You'll be glad you did.<br />

Played Tues.. Wed. Weather: Cold.—James<br />

Hardy. Crescent Theatre. Jasonville, Ind.<br />

Pop. 2,500.<br />

BOXOFFICE Showmondiaer :: Feb. 18, 1963


OXOFFICE<br />

—<br />

OOKINGUIDE<br />

B^<br />

An interpretive analysis of lay ond tradepress reviews. Running time is in parentheses. The plus end<br />

minus signs indlcote degree or merit. Listings cover current reviews, updated regularly. This department<br />

also serves as an ALPHABETICAL INDEX to feature releases. (C; is for CinemoScope; y VistoVision;<br />

(P: Panavision; t Tcchnirama; s Other anomorphic processes. Symbol Vi denotes BOXOFFICE Blue Ribbon<br />

Award; color photography. Legion of Decency (LOD) ratings: A1— Unobjectionable for General Potronage;<br />

A2— Unobjectionable for Adults or Adolescents; A3— Unobjectionable for Adults; 8—Objectionable<br />

in Port for All; C—Condemned. For listings by company in the order of release, see FEATURE CHART.<br />

++ Very Good; + Good; — Fair; — Poor; = Very Poor.<br />

Review digest<br />

AND ALPHABETICAL INDEX<br />

•J V n<br />

1^ o<br />

2672 Airborne (78) Ac Diamond-SR 10- 8-62 ±<br />

2663 UQAImost Anjels (93) Dr/Music.BV 9-10-62 Al ±<br />

2637 ©Assignment Outer Space<br />

(79) SF-Fantasy AlP 6-11-62 ±<br />

— B<br />

26640Barabbas (134) ® 70 Bib<br />

2703 O Beauty and the Beast (77)<br />

Dr Col 9-10-62 A2 ++<br />

Fairy Tale UA 2-11-63 Al ff<br />

Bell' Antonio (97) Eng-dubbed<br />

Drama Embassy 5-21-62 C +<br />

2683 ©Bellboy and the Playgirls, The<br />

(94) Novelty-Comedy UPRO 11-19-62 ±<br />

2634 Belle Sommers (62) Drama Col 5-28-62 A2 ±<br />

2653 ©Best of Enemies, The (104) ®<br />

War Comedy-Drama Col 8- 6-62 Al +<br />

2640 Big Wave, The (73) Drama AA 6-18-62 Al +<br />

2662 U Billy Budd (123) (g) Sea Drama. .AA 9- 3-62 A2 ft<br />

2690 u©Billy Rose's Jumbo (125)<br />

P Mus MGM 12-10-62 Al |f<br />

2641 Bird Man of Alcatraz (142) Dr...UA 6-25-62 A2 4+<br />

2667 Bloody Brood, Tlie (69) Cr AstOf 9-24-62 B +<br />

Boccaccio '70 (148) Eng-dubbed<br />

Episodes Embassy 7-16-62 C +<br />

2631 0©Bon Voyage (132) © Comedy.. BV 5-21-62 Al W<br />

2669 Bourbon St. Shadows (70) Cr MPA 10- 1-62 +<br />

2640©Boys' Night Out (115) © Com.. MGM 6-18-62 A3 ff<br />

2651 Brain That Wouldn't Die, The<br />

(71) Horror Dr AlP 7-30-62 B ±<br />

1<br />

2633 Cabinet of Caligari, The (104)<br />

© Horror Drama 20tti-Fox<br />

2702 Cairo (91) Crime Drama MGM<br />

2658 Carnival of Souls (91)<br />

Psycho-Melodrama<br />

Herts-Lion<br />

2673 Carry On, Teacher (86) Com. . . . Governor<br />

2659 ©Centurion, The (77) Spectacle PIP<br />

2661 ©Chapman Report. The (125) Drama WB<br />

2697 Child Is Waiting, A (102) Dr UA<br />

2639 Clown and the Kid (65) Com-Drama UA<br />

2660 Coming-Out Party, A (98) Com Union<br />

2645 Concrete Jungle, The (86) Dr. .. Fanfare<br />

2650 Confessions of an Opium Eater<br />

(85) Shock Melodrama AA<br />

2693 Connection, The (93) Drama F-A-W<br />

2696 ©Constantine and the Cross (114)<br />

(D Spectacle Drama Embassy<br />

2620 Convicts 4 (reviewed as "Reprieve")<br />

(106) Drama AA<br />

2621 0©Count


REVIEW DIGEST<br />

AND ALPHABETICAL INDEX<br />

In the summary t+ ji rated 2 pluse*, - o« 2 minutei. W Very Good; + Good; — Fair;<br />

1


Feoture productions by company in order of releose. Running time is in parentheses. © it for CinemoScope;<br />

(?) VistaVision; ® Ponovision; ® Techniroma; g) Other onomorphic processes. Symbol O denotes BOXOFFICE<br />

Blue Ribbon Award; © Color Photography. Letters and combinations thereof indicate story type—(Complete<br />

key on next page). For review dates and Picture Guide page numbers, see REVIEW DIGEST.<br />

Feature<br />

ALLIED ARTISTS 3 U<br />

chart<br />

The Friohtened City (97) D..6211<br />

Herbert Lom. John Gregson.<br />

Yvonne Romain


FEATURE<br />

CHART<br />

Oi* k«y to l«tt*n and combtnoHoni th«r«ot IndlcoHng itory typ«: (Ad) Advantura Dromo; (Ac) Action<br />

Dromo; (An) Animotod-Actlon; (C) Comedy; (CD) Comedy -Dromo; (Cr) Crime Drama; (DM) Dromo<br />

with Music; (Doc) Documentary; (Dr) Dromo; (F) Fontosy; (Ho) Horror Drama; (Hi) Historicol Dromo; (M) Musical;<br />

(My) Mystery; (OD) Outdoor Dromo (S) Spectacle; (SF) Science-Fiction; (W) Western.


.<br />

WARNER<br />

. D<br />

D.<br />

Alain<br />

.<br />

FEATURE<br />

CHART<br />

UNIVERSAL<br />

I<br />

©Thai Touch of Mink<br />

(99) ® ;i-*^*<br />

Cary Grant, Boris Djj. Gig<br />

Young, Audrey Meadows<br />

Information Received (77) D..6217<br />

Sablna Sesselman. Wm. Sylvester<br />

©The Spiral Hoad (140) ..D. .6218<br />

Rock Hudson, Burl Ives.<br />

Gena Rowlands<br />

©The Phantom of the Opera<br />

^(84) Ho.. 6219<br />

Herbert Lom, Heather Sears,<br />

Michael Gough, Bdw. de Soaza<br />

©No Man Is an Island<br />

(114) D..6220<br />

Jeffrey Hunter, Marshall Thompson,<br />

Barbara Perez<br />

©If a Man Answer* (102) .C. .6221<br />

8an*a Doe. Bobby Darin,<br />

Mlchellne Pr««le, John Lund<br />

Stagecoach to Dancers' Rock<br />

(72) W..6222<br />

Warren Bteveoe, Martin Undau,<br />

Jod; Uwraora, Jodr Du<br />

Freud (139) D..6301<br />

(Special Release)<br />

Montgomery Clltt, Susannah York,<br />

larry Parks, Susan Koiiner<br />

©40 Pounds of Trouble<br />

(109) ® C..6304<br />

Tony Pirtls, Suainne Pleshette,<br />

Phil Silvers, Larry Storch<br />

Mystery Submarine (92) . .Ac. .6305<br />

Bdvrard Judd, laurence Payne,<br />

James Rohert^on Justice<br />

To Kill a Mockingbird<br />

(129) D. .6306<br />

Gregory Peck. Mary Badfaam,<br />

Phillip Alford, John Megna<br />

©The Birds (120 0..<br />

Rod Taylor, Suzanne Pleshette,<br />

Jessica Tandy, Tlppl Hedrcn<br />

©The Ugly Amvican (135) D.<br />

Marlon Brando, Sandra Church. GUI<br />

Okada, Pat Hlncle. Jocelyn Brando<br />

©Lancelot and Guinnve<br />

(..) (B Ad..<br />

CV>rnel WUde. Jau Wallace<br />

©A Gathering of Eagles (..)..D..<br />

Rock IliKbon. Rod Taylor, Mary<br />

Peich. Barry Siilllran<br />

©For Love or Money (..)....C..<br />

Kirk Douglas, Mllzl Oaynor,<br />

Gig Yffling. TTielma Rltter<br />

BROS.<br />

©Merrill's Marauders<br />

(98) © D..165<br />

Jeff dandier, Ty Bardin<br />

t>©The M usic Man (151) ® M .<br />

. 168<br />

Robert Preston. Shirley Jones<br />

(Special engagemeate only)<br />

Guns of Darkness (103) . .Ad. .169<br />

Leslie Caron. David NIven<br />

©The Story of the Count of<br />

Monte Cristo (101) d).. Ad.. 167<br />

Louis Jourdan. Yvonne Furneaui<br />

©The Chapman Report (125) 0. .251<br />

Bfrem Zimballst jr., Shelley Winters,<br />

Jane Fonda, Claire Bloom, CHynls<br />

Johns<br />

What Ever Happened to Batiy<br />

Jane? (132) D..252<br />

Joan Cravrford, Bette D«t1»<br />

©Gay Purr-ee (85) An.. 253<br />

Voices or Judy Oarltod, Bobert<br />

Ooulet, Red Bottnns, Hennlone<br />

Olngold<br />

©Gypsy (143) ® M..254<br />

Rosalind Russell. Natalie Wood,<br />

Karl Maiden<br />

Term of Trial (113) D..255<br />

I/iiirence Olivier, Slmone Slgnoret.<br />

Terervce Stamp. Sarah Miles<br />

Days of Wine and Roses<br />

(117) D..256<br />

Jack l/eromon, Lee Remlck<br />

©Critic's Choice (100)


. . Apr<br />

Jan<br />

. Nov<br />

.<br />

May<br />

^HORTS CHART<br />

•=1; 9<br />

BUENA VISTA<br />

(All in color)<br />

FEATURETTE SPECIALS<br />

lis Horse With the Flying<br />

Tail (48) Jan 62<br />

LIVE A(niON SPECIALS<br />

(Three-reel)<br />

131 Water Birds (31). reissue Set) £2<br />

REISSUE CARTOONS<br />

(7 mins.)<br />

17104 Early to Bed Apr 62<br />

17105 Canine Caddy May 62<br />

17106 Springtime (or Pluto Jun 62<br />

17107 Dog Watch Jul 62<br />

1710SThe Arl of Skiing Aug 62<br />

17109 How to Play Baseball Sep 62<br />

17110 Mickey's Delayed Date Oct 62<br />

17111 Chicken Little No> 62<br />

17112 Two Chips and a Miss Dec 62<br />

SINGLE REEL CARTOONS<br />

125 AguamanU (9) Jan 62<br />

.<br />

COLUMBIA<br />

ASSORTED & COMEDY FAVORITES<br />

(Reissues)<br />

6425 Let Down Your<br />

Aerial (17) Apr 62<br />

6426 Clunked in the<br />

Clink (16) May 62<br />

S436 Microspook (16) Jun 62<br />

7421 Spies and Guys (I9/2) Sep 62<br />

7431 Strop. Look and Listen<br />

(151,2) Oct 62<br />

7422 General Nuisance (18) Nov 62<br />

7432 Tall, Dark and Gruesome<br />

(16) Nov 62<br />

7423 Hook a Crook (16) ... Dec 62<br />

7433 Training for Trouble<br />

(I5V2) Dec 62<br />

7434 He Popped His<br />

Pistol (16) Jan 63<br />

CANDID MICROPHONE<br />

(Reissues)<br />

ffi54Noi 4, Series 3 (11).. Apr 62<br />

6555 No. 5, Series 3<br />

(10


Opinions on Current Productions<br />

^EATURE REVIEWS<br />

Symbol O denotes color; © CinemoScope; ® VistaVision; ® Techniromo; ® Other onamorphic processes. For story synopsis on each picture, see reverse side.<br />

Papa's Delicate Condition<br />

Paramount (6212)<br />

98 Minutes<br />

Ratio:<br />

1.85-1<br />

Cotnedy<br />

O<br />

Rel. March '63<br />

Jackie Gleason, long big on TV and rapidly becoming a<br />

screen name thi-ough "Gigot," "The Hustler" and "Requiem<br />

for a Heavyweight," has himself an acting field<br />

day in this heart-warming period comedy based on the<br />

autobiographical novel by Corinne Griffith, silent days<br />

screen star. The mature moviegoers will enjoy it for its<br />

nostalgic glimpses of the pre-World War I small-town<br />

settings and costumes and the women wUl delight in the<br />

natui-al and appealing portrayal of Linda Bnihl, who<br />

plays the six-year-old Corrie, Papa's favorite. It should<br />

do good business generally, especially in family situations.<br />

Papa's liking for drink is merely suggested and his<br />

escapades, including buying a dnig store and taking over<br />

a circus just to get a pony for little Conie, seem more<br />

generous than reckless and director George Marshall<br />

always points up the humor of Papa's "condition."<br />

Gleason gets the maximum of laughs and also manages a<br />

few touching moments effectively. Glynis Johns is<br />

charming as his loving, sensible spouse and Charlie<br />

Ruggles adds one of his lovable portrayals as Papa's<br />

disapproving father-in-law. Technicolor enhances the<br />

gaudy backgroimds, especially the circus parade.<br />

Jackie Gleason. Glynis Johns, Charlie Ruggles, Laurel<br />

Goodwin, Linda Bruhl, Murray Hamilton, Elisha Cook.<br />

The Passionate Demons<br />

Ratio:<br />

1.85-1<br />

Manson-Slates Right 86 Minutes Rel.<br />

Melodrama<br />

Significant only in that it bears the label of Scandina\'ia's<br />

initial effort in the pronounced "new wave"<br />

atmosphere, this Nils Reinhardt Christensen-directed effort,<br />

released in the U.S. via Manson, can readily bear<br />

examination by the ai-t theatre crowd and perhaps by the<br />

action-adventure audiences in the larger, metropolitan<br />

centers, although small-town situations may find the lack<br />

of marquee "names" plus the foreign locale a bit remote<br />

for their particular, more habit-formed patrons.<br />

Margrete Robsahm is introduced as a promiscuous young<br />

lady bored with her aristocratic, free-living situation in<br />

modern-day Sweden who takes up with a young seaman,<br />

Toralv Maurstad. for apparent "kicks." She is indeed a<br />

"looker." in the action crowd's vemaculai', and seems<br />

destined for international recognition of sorts. The<br />

"passionate demons" of the title are Miss Robsahm's<br />

equally bored, equally out for "kicks" free-living pals, and<br />

in situations where such identification could easily imply<br />

a science-fiction or horror effort, it might be well to<br />

insert a line or two of plotting intent in daily newspaper<br />

ads. This is a Concord Film Production, dubbed for the<br />

American market.<br />

Margrete Robsalun, Toralv Maurstad, Henki Kolstad,<br />

Sissel Tull, Elisabeth Bang, Ronnaug Alten.<br />

Cleopatra's Daughter<br />

Ratio: Adventure Spectacle<br />

2.35-1 s O<br />

93 Minutes<br />

Rel. Feb. '63<br />

., CL Medallion<br />

I Bo<br />

— This Explorer Film attraction, released in the U.S. via<br />

Medallion Pictures, contains the very essence of escapist<br />

spectacle, not unlike some of the best-grossing Imports<br />

that have wended their way to American screens in past<br />

years. It has been dii-ected by Fernando Cerchio and<br />

Robert McNamara with the prime objective of imaginatively<br />

concocted adventm-e ably enough delineated by a<br />

sizable cast featuring our land's own Debra Paget and<br />

Robert Alda perhaps best remembered as leading man in<br />

i<br />

Warners' "The Story of George Gershwin" some years<br />

ago), plus Italy's Ettore Manni, as the chap of Miss<br />

Paget's choice, and Corrad Rani, who seeks her favors<br />

unsuccessfully. The story is relatively uncluttered, revolving<br />

around adventures of Shila, Cleopatra's daughter,<br />

left in Syria by her famous mother when the Roman<br />

legions invaded Egypt. Rani, taking over the kingdom,<br />

wants Miss Paget as his bride, but finds unanticipated<br />

demise for himself, instead, the deed instigated at hands<br />

The non-discriminating view-<br />

of power-mad Erno Crisa.<br />

ers will find what transpires very much to their collective<br />

liking. This is in Technicolor and Ultrascope.<br />

Debra Paget, Robert Alda, Ettore Manni, Corrad<br />

Rani, Erno Crisa, Yvette Lebon.<br />

Ratio:<br />

Wild Is My Love<br />

Ratio:<br />

1.85-1<br />

General Films (Mishkin) 74 Minutes Rel.<br />

A modest-budget exploitation feature filmed in and<br />

around an eastern college by Richard Hilliard, who produced<br />

and directed as well as assisted on the story material.<br />

This can be .sold on its striptease sequences to<br />

attract audiences to downtown key city spots. Although<br />

the stage and TV actors have no marquee value, the picture<br />

serves as a showcase for several promising players.<br />

Among them are Geene Courtney as a hard-drinking<br />

burlesque star, and Elizabeth MacCrae, an attractive<br />

blonde who plays a stripper who aspires to higher things.<br />

The screenplay by Otto Lemming has a good basic situation<br />

dealing with three bored college youths, one of whom<br />

persuades a pretty burlesque dancer to stay at the college<br />

while the regular students and faculty are on vacation.<br />

There is one sexy and prolonged bedroom interlude, but<br />

the only suspenseful moments in the film are those dealing<br />

with a game of Russian roulette indulged in by the<br />

three youths. This scene, although having scant relation<br />

to the main plot, is the picture's high spot. Paul Hampton<br />

does a good acting job. The photography by Emil<br />

Knebel and Louis MacMahon is above average. George E.<br />

Wolf is associate producer.<br />

Paul Hampton, Elizabeth MacCrae, Ray Fulmer, Bob<br />

Alexander, Geene Courtney, Carl Low, Ralph Stanley.


!<br />

.<br />

FEATURE REVIEWS Story Synopsis; Exploits; Adiines for Newspapers and Programs<br />

THE STORY: "Cleopatra's Daughter" (Medallion)<br />

The Sviian nation has been defeated, the king and<br />

queen ciiininated. The daughter of Cleopatra. Shila ^^<br />

iDebra Paget is held prisoner, however, because Queen i ^^1,^^'.,<br />

Mother Tegi desires to combine Egypt with Syria by fore- vcrbv<br />

ing the girl to mari-y her son, Nemorat iCorrad Rani).<br />

Court physician Ettore Manni suggests Debra comply.<br />

Kefren (Erno Crisa>, Nemorat's scheming uncle, poisons<br />

the young king, charging Debra with the deed. Dying,<br />

Rani orders she be buried alive in his tomb, recently<br />

completed by architect Robert Alda. Mamii. certain of<br />

her innocence, has her drink a potion which induces a<br />

coma and .she appears as dead: he plans to rescue her.<br />

of course. The idea backfires, and Debra is buried in<br />

the tomb. Wounded and weak, Manni seeks out some<br />

known tomb robbers. Alerted to the mission. Alda lends<br />

his expert advice. The robbers are entombed themselves<br />

via greedy moves, and the queen later pardons Debra and<br />

punishes Crisa. Debra escapes to the desert with Manni<br />

for a new life.<br />

EXPLOITIPS:<br />

Ask for cooperation from museums, libraries and the<br />

like in your communit.v—ideal promotion would be displays<br />

in both theatre and museum of ancient relics, et al.<br />

CATCHLINKS:<br />

For the First Time on Any Screen ! . . . The Spectacular,<br />

Colorful and Fiery Love Story of Cleopatra's Daughter<br />

. . . More Beautiful and Desirable Than Cleopatra Herself!<br />

THE STORY: "A Bomb for a Dictator" (Medallion)<br />

Pierre Fresnay and Michel Auclair are charged with<br />

responsibility of assassinating their political enemy, dictator<br />

Gregoire Asian, The death, however, must appear<br />

accidental in order to protect thousands held as hostages.<br />

They hide a time bomb sealed in a portable typewriter<br />

aboard Asian's plane, but he shifts crafts at the last<br />

moment. Fresnay shoots Auclaii' when latter protests<br />

killing of innocent people aboard the second plane. During<br />

the flight, Asian, recognizing Fi-esnay, has a heart<br />

attack and dies. Fresnay, now faced with the problem of<br />

ridding the plane of the bomb, locks himself in a washroom<br />

and with a fire-axe smashes a window. The sub- . .<br />

sequent loss of pressure blanks him out. Back at thef"' C<br />

terminal. Auclair, wounded, reaches the authorities and'".''<br />

radio contact tries to reach the pilot. The plane manages<br />

to land on a beach of barren island. Fresnay, revived,<br />

works the hatch door open, crawls out with the bomb and<br />

runs far enough away with it from the plane as it<br />

explodes.<br />

EXPLOITIPS:<br />

Get bomb-handling experts on local and state police<br />

staffs to discuss their most delicate stints on radio /TVpress.<br />

CATCHLINES:<br />

A Macabre Method for Murder! . . . Spine-Tingling<br />

Suspense ! . . . The Step by Step Assassination Plot That<br />

WUl Hold You Spellbound<br />

THE STORY: "Papa's Delicate Condition" (Para)<br />

Before World War I, Papa (Jackie Gleason) is a traveling<br />

railroad supervisor who likes to drink, but loves his<br />

,:"" wife (Glynis Johns) and two daughters, teenage Laurel<br />

(7)' Goodwin and six-year-old Linda Bruhl, his favonte.<br />

• '<br />

Glynis'<br />

father. Charlie Ruggles, is mayor of Texarkana<br />

and when Papa buys a drug store just so he and his pals<br />

can get a nip on Sunday and then takes over a bankrupt<br />

circus so Linda can get the pony and cart she longs for,<br />

Glynis takes the girls home to her father. Papa gets back<br />

in Ruggles' good graces by bringing the circus to 'Texarkana<br />

and cinching his re-election for mayor. Glynis<br />

still holds off, but Linda finally is instramental in brmging<br />

about a happy family reunion.<br />

F'XPI OIXIPS*<br />

Jackie Gleason, a top TV comic and star of "Gigot" and<br />

"Requiem for a Heavyweight" and a likely Academy<br />

Award contender, is the chief selling point, Glynis Johns<br />

recently scored for her comedy role in "The Chapman<br />

Report," Bookshops will cooperate with window displays<br />

of Corinne Griffith's book, on which the fUm is based.<br />

CATCHLINES:<br />

, ^^<br />

Jackie Gleason as the Most Lovable, Most Maddening<br />

Papa of Them All ... A Warm, Humorous and Poignant<br />

Comedy About the Griffith Family in the Texas of Pre-<br />

World'War I . . . Papa Was a Blot on the Family<br />

Escutcheon But His Little Daughter Thought He Was the<br />

Best Daddy of Them All.<br />

THE STORY: "The Passionate Demons" (Manson)<br />

Returning to Stockholm to vi.sit his sick father and<br />

sister, seaman Toralv Maurstad realizes that his dad<br />

was never particularly concerned with his children's fate.<br />

Lonelv, Maurstad visits an outdoor cafe, meeting childhood<br />

friend Margrete Robsahm, now a desirable blonde<br />

beauty, who introduces him to her pals, an aristocratic,<br />

free-loving, sex-impassioned crowd. Margrete realizes<br />

she's fallen in love with Toralv. The two decide to live<br />

together, experiencing happy, carefree times. On a<br />

yachting trip with friends, Maurstad is jealous over her<br />

attentions to other people and nearly kills her. He is<br />

now aware that he's no better than his cold, aloof father,<br />

and decides to go abroad again, this time to find himself.<br />

He indicates to Margrete he may return to her.<br />

EXPLOITIPS:<br />

Ask for librai-y and book-store tieups on Axel Jensen's<br />

best seller, "Lina." Push "new wave" aspects. Ti-y for<br />

beauty shop co-op ads on basis of Miss Robsahm's alluring<br />

scene stills.<br />

CATCHLINES:<br />

From Scandinavia the First "New Wave" Drama—of<br />

Promiscuous Youth Caught Up in Today's Tuimoil of<br />

Passionate Love! . . . Stark Realism! ... A Daring But<br />

Honest Look at Today's Youth!<br />

THE STORY: "Friends and Neighbors" (Schoenfeld)<br />

Bus driver Arthur Askey's wife, Megs Jeiikins, as first<br />

prize in a lottery, "wins" two Russian social workers, to<br />

be hosted in the Askey home, Askey is happy to know<br />

that he'll get paid leave from his job to entertain the duo,<br />

Peter Illing and shapely blonde Tilda Thamar. Trouble<br />

looms when the Askeys' daughter. Catherine Feller, drops<br />

rock 'n roll boy friend, Jess Conrad, to concentrate on<br />

salesman Danny Ross, whose only joy in life seems to be<br />

eating. Askey and neighbor Reginald Beckwith ti-y unsuccessfully<br />

to produce a cozy atmosphere by introducing<br />

the Soviets to a potent local brew. In a return match,<br />

the Ru.ssians toast their hosts with vodka, upshot of this<br />

sequence finding Tilda on the romantic ran after Askey.<br />

At departure time, the Askey couple leans back exhausted.<br />

Catherine has gone back to Conrad. New-found<br />

household peace is shattered as Illing and Tilda return,<br />

this time with the rest of the Russian visitors, announcing<br />

the group will spend the rest of the visit time<br />

with Askey. He collapses.<br />

EXPLOITIPS:<br />

Get local disc jockeys to host area rock 'n roll headliners<br />

in a community-acro-ss-the-seas salute to Britain. •.<br />

Run teaser ads run-of -paper in the area press. ^^ g<br />

CATCHLINES:<br />

When East Meets West . . . It's an International Laff<br />

Riot! ... He Won a Raffle—But He Didn't Expect the<br />

Prize to Be a Russian Bombshell of Blonde Proportions!<br />

fhum,<br />

THE STORY: "Wild Is »Iy Love' (Mishkin)<br />

While the students and faculty of an eastern college are<br />

on vacation, Paul Hampton and two of liis classmates,<br />

Ray Fulmer and Bob Alexander, arrive to do some studying<br />

for a forthcoming examination. Hampton, who has<br />

been warned bv his wealthy father to pass the exam, is<br />

lazv and indolent and decides to go to a local burlesque<br />

house. Seeing blonde Elizabeth MacCrae do her number,<br />

he goes backstage and asks her for a date. Reluctant at<br />

first, she later decides to accept his invitation to share a<br />

college weekend with him. Meanwhile. Paul's two pals<br />

dare him to play a game of Russian roulette with them.<br />

After a tussle. Elizabeth is drawn into the game and<br />

she becomes frightened for Paul's safety. After a brief<br />

romantic interlude, Elizabeth, who aspires to higher<br />

things, goes back to her burlesque job, and Paul and his<br />

pals discard the gun and go back to their studies,<br />

EXPLOITIPS:<br />

With no marquee names to sell, the exhibitor can only<br />

play up the burlesque routine and the one bedroom scene<br />

to attract male passersby in downtown houses in the<br />

bigger cities. The Russian roulette scene may lure fans,<br />

CATCHLINES:<br />

Burlesque Queen Spends a Wild Weekend in a College<br />

Dormitory . . . What Happens When a Burlesque Stripper<br />

Goes to College—to Spend the Night With a Student<br />

. . . Three American College Students Flirt With Danger<br />

by Playing Russian Roulette.<br />

BOXOFFICE BookinGuide Feb. 18. 1963


. . Pre-show<br />

RATES: 20c: per word, minimum $2.00, cash with copy. Four zonsecutive insertions for price<br />

of three. CLOSING DATE: Monday noon preceding publication date. Send copy and<br />

• answers to Box Numbers to BOXOFFICE, 825 Van Brunt Blvd., Kansas City 24, Mo. •<br />

HELP WANTED<br />

SALESMAN wanted to represent firm<br />

selling ouidoor advertising in conjunction<br />

with theatre display Irame service. Opportunity<br />

to build ior future. Exclusive territory<br />

available. Contact Romar-Vide Co.,<br />

Chetek, Wisconsin.<br />

AHT HOUSE MANAGER: Experienced.<br />

Chicago area. Stole all in First Letter. Replies<br />

Confidential. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9626.<br />

WANTED: Top showman to sell established<br />

drive-in, (personal appearance,) attraction.<br />

Unmarried, free travel, good car,<br />

appearance, salesman. Draw $100.00<br />

against percentage. Rush qualifications,<br />

KIRMA, BOX 77, TICE, FLORIDA.<br />

Projectionist wanted in Oklahoma. Must<br />

know machine and sound repair, capable<br />

helping clean theatre. Permanent place for<br />

honest, sober man that wants to work.<br />

<strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9630.<br />

POSITIONS WANTED<br />

Available, conventional or drive-in theatre<br />

manager. Experienced advertising,<br />

exploitation, public relations, concession,<br />

booking, buying. Neat appearance. Re-<br />

Uable. Relocate Midwest. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 962 1<br />

Available, best references, etc. Chief<br />

Projectionist. 20 years experience. All<br />

phases projection and sound maintenance.<br />

Well acquainted with 70mm equipment,<br />

with some Cinerama experience. Will<br />

travel if price is right. Available March<br />

1st. Now employed by one of Midwest's<br />

most progressive circuits. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9527.<br />

Projectionist, oil phases, IB years experience,<br />

California only. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9628.<br />

City manager will relocate. 17 years two<br />

situations. Experienced all phases, including<br />

stage, screen and concert. Interested<br />

in art cinema. Contacts wanted.<br />

Excellent references. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9533.<br />

SOUND-PROIECTION<br />

MAINTENANCE MANUAL &<br />

MONTHLY SERVICE BULLETINS<br />

PROIECTIONISTS, EXHIBITORS, MAN-<br />

AGERS AND HEPAIHMEN: Do you want<br />

expert advice on Sound & Projection Maintenance<br />

on projectors, arc lamps, screens,<br />

oroiection lenses: audio amplifiers, soundheads,<br />

speakers, power supplies, etc.? 16-<br />

35-70mm equipment fully covered in our<br />

Maintenance and Monthly Service Bulletins.<br />

Easy-to-understond and written so<br />

you con keep your equipment in AI condition<br />

and SAVE MONEY in projection<br />

room operation. Used by men operating<br />

equipment in Air Force, Army and Navy.<br />

Data on new theatre transistor sound<br />

systems- Pictures, drawings and schematics.<br />

Edited by the writer with over<br />

20 years experience: technical editor<br />

Modern Theatre. YOU NEED THIS SER-<br />

VICE. Loose-leaf Manual and monthly<br />

Service Bulletins one Year $7 50- if you<br />

want Monthly Bulletins Only, 1-year $6.50:<br />

Cash or Check, no CODs. Send Todayl<br />

Wesley Trout, Publisher, Box 575, Enid,<br />

Oklahoma.<br />

EQUIPMENT WANTED<br />

Can use 500 or more good 20"-21"<br />

push-back seats. Will remove if necessary.<br />

Quote lowest price first. Coral Theatre<br />

4720 W. 95th Street, Oaklawn, Illinois.<br />

DRIVE-IN THEATRE EQUIPMENT<br />

950 Eleclromode in-cor heaters, 500<br />

watt. 208 V, good condition. Sell all or<br />

part—$6 00 each. Sherwood Theatres, 5327<br />

W. 3rd St., Dayton 27. Ohio.<br />

Drive-In Theatre Ticketsl 100,000 1x2"<br />

special printed roll tickets, $40 75. Send<br />

for samples of our special printed stub rod<br />

tickets for drive-ins. Safe, distinctive, private,<br />

easy to check Kansas City Ticket<br />

Co., Dept 10, 109 W. 18th St. (Filmrow),<br />

Kansas City 8, Mo.<br />

PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT<br />

Playground Equipmanl—Theatre chairs<br />

New-Used. Lone Star Seating, Box 1734<br />

Dallas<br />

BOXOFFICE February 18. 1963<br />

GENERAL EQUIPMENT—NEW<br />

WINTERIZED Masonite replacement marquee<br />

ieilers, block or red. Interchangeable<br />

M mokes, 4 -SOc: 6-'-65c; 6'-75c: lO'-<br />

90c: 12"-$1.05: 16"-$1.75; 17"-$2,00, 24"-<br />

$3.00. Non sliding spring 10c additional<br />

(10% discount 100 letters or over $60.00<br />

list). S.O.S., 602 W. 52nd, N.Y. 19.<br />

CINEMASCOPE images fuzzy? $195.00<br />

buys pair brand new Variable Superscope<br />

Anomorphics. V4 original cost. Bargains<br />

in backup lenses. Limited quantity, S.O.S.,<br />

602 W. Mnd, New York 19.<br />

GENERAL EQUIPMENT—USED<br />

GOVERNMENT surplus theatre outfits<br />

cheap. Amplifiers, soundheads, projectors,<br />

arclamps, generators. S.O.S., 602 W. 52nd,<br />

NY. 19.<br />

One pair supports (NEW) tor Simplex<br />

5 point bases, cost $120, take $25. One<br />

Altec outdoor horn, good condition, $25.<br />

One pair Strong utility lamps, 45 amp.,<br />

used, $125. One pair Brenkert BX 60<br />

mechanisms, good condition. Write for<br />

prices. Also Simplex E-7 and Standard<br />

movements. Save money on parts and<br />

repairs (all makes). Lou Walters Sales &<br />

Service Co., 4207 Lawnview Ave., Dallas<br />

27, Texas.<br />

RCA 400 SR. 16mm Projectors factory reconditioned.<br />

1st class operating condition.<br />

Guaranteed. Extra bonus—with purchase<br />

of projector will include used portable<br />

roll up screen 4'xir. Price, $225<br />

lob. factory. Reconditioned Bausch &<br />

Lomb 16mm anamorphic lenses with<br />

adoDters, $60. Send check or money order.'<br />

EDW. H. WOLK, INC., 1241 S. Wabash<br />

Avenue, Chicago 5, Illinois.<br />

FOR SALE: Complete Booth:<br />

jectors: Heavy Duty Bases:<br />

E-7 Pro-<br />

Mognarc<br />

Lamps; Hertner 65-130 Generator: Simplex<br />

Sound; Super Panator Lens; Reels<br />

and Cabinets. All good condition. Contact<br />

Ralph Shaffer, Box 321, Mansfield,<br />

Ohio. Phone 5244071.<br />

WHY REBUILD? Government surplus<br />

E7<br />

mechanisms, beautiful condition, guaranteed,<br />

$349.50 pair; changeovers, $22.50<br />

pair. Limited quantities. STAR CINEMA<br />

SUPPLY, 621 WEST 55th STREET, NEW<br />

YORK 19,<br />

Monley Popcorn Machine, $350.00; complete<br />

booth equipment, $850.00. RCA sound<br />

Simplex heads; heavy duty bases, rectifiers<br />

and lamps; International cushion<br />

chairs, BILLS THEATRES, SAUSBURY, MO.<br />

Pair of Magnorc lamps, model F; 1 Altec<br />

A7 speaker; 2 50 amp., four bulb rectifiers.<br />

Write for price. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9629.<br />

SACRIFICE—Complete indoor equipment<br />

230 upholstered seats. Simplex projectors,<br />

RCA sound, Strong lamps and<br />

rectifiers. Curtain and control, screen,<br />

Cinemascope lenses. Make offer. ROSE<br />

THEATRE, MILTON-FREEWATER, ORE-<br />

GON.<br />

For Sale— -Theatre curtains, 14x30, $140 00<br />

and 12x24, $75.00; coin changer, $50,00:<br />

3-bank ticket machine, electric, $100 00:<br />

2 stainless steel one-sheet boxes, like new,<br />

$25.00 each; generator. Century 70-140<br />

$300.00: Hertner upright 40-80, $75.00: Delux<br />

boxoffice chairs, $10.00 each Heavy<br />

duty reostot, $50,00; screens from 10 to 20<br />

up to 16x30, $25 00 each; switch boxes, all<br />

sizes; marquee face with 9-inch metal letters,<br />

$100,00. PALACE THEATRE, ANTIGO<br />

WISCONSIN.<br />

DRIVE-IN EQUIPMENT WANTED<br />

Equipment Wanted: 101 used speakers<br />

for dnve-in theatre. Quote price, 3150 W.<br />

Buckeye Rd., Phoenix, Arizona.<br />

DRIVE-IN THEATRE<br />

CONSTRUCTION<br />

75 Theatres Since 1951. Planning, design<br />

and construction. Turn-Key or part.<br />

Timber, screen tower, perfectionist. Certified<br />

Engineer certificate furnished, enabling<br />

low rate insurance. Oscar May<br />

Outdoor Display, 518 Tierney Rd., Fort<br />

Worth, Texas.<br />

CUflRinG HOUSE<br />

THEATRES FOR SALE<br />

West Coast theatres for sole. Write lor<br />

iisi. Theatre Exchange Company, 260<br />

Kearney Street, San Francisco 8, Caliiornia.<br />

For Sale: 300-car drive-in and downtov/n<br />

theaiie in county seat town of 3,000 m<br />

Nebraska. <strong>Boxoffice</strong> 9619.<br />

For Sale: Modern equipment, 400 seats,<br />

in Nebraska town 3,5uO population. Boxoftice<br />

9620.<br />

Drive-In Theatre. Gainesville, Florida.<br />

450 Spkrs, 15 acres. Write P.O. Box 52.<br />

Gainesville, Florida.<br />

FOR SALE: Indoor and Drive-In Theatre<br />

in Southern Colorado, For information<br />

write Box 169, La Jara, Colorado.<br />

For Sale—Only theatre in south Kansas<br />

town of 9,000. Best equipment. Long<br />

lease. Good business. Bargain. <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

9631.<br />

For Sale: 200-car drive-in with room for<br />

150 more- Only drive-in in county. Lake<br />

and resort region. Building and equipment<br />

less than four years old. Will sell cheap<br />

and give terms to liquidate. Will give<br />

good deal on equipment separately. Write<br />

Mr. Francis Vord-erbruggen, Starlite Drivein,<br />

Box 576, Bagley, Minnesota.<br />

THEATRES FOR SALE OR LEASE<br />

Sale or Lease with option: New Mexico<br />

health tov^rn of 5,000; 300 cars, excellent<br />

equipment and improvements. Ideal family<br />

operation, if projectionist. Illness and<br />

absentee ownership forces disposal. State<br />

capital available, and experience. Consider<br />

active operating partner. <strong>Boxoffice</strong><br />

9624.<br />

THEATRES FOR LEASE<br />

University Theatre. 105 Euclid. Fully<br />

equipped, busy thoroughfare. Contact.<br />

William Berger, 816 Vine Street, Cincinnali<br />

2, Ohio. Phone RA 1-0700.<br />

THEATRES WANTED<br />

Wanted to Buy or Lease: Indoor theatre<br />

in metropolitan crreas, population at least<br />

75,000, Contact Wilham Berger, Metropolitan<br />

Hotel, Cincinnati, Ohio<br />

Wonted to Buy or Lease: Indoor theatre<br />

in Metropolitan area. Population at least<br />

200,000. Contact Harry Wald, 506 St<br />

Charles St., St. Louis, Mo.<br />

WANTED TO LEASE: Indoor Theatres or<br />

Drive-Ins Population 5,000 and up, preferably<br />

Southwest. Haynie and HcTrrington,<br />

Associates. 11512 Flamingo Lone, Dallas<br />

18, Texas<br />

Wanted to lease indoor theatre in North<br />

or South Carolina or southern Virginia. I.<br />

Davis, 1003 Kimball Drive, Ocoee, Fla.<br />

BUSINESS STIMULATORS<br />

Bingo, more action! $4.50 M cards Other<br />

games available, on, oli screen. Novelty<br />

Games Co., 106 Rogers Ave., Brooklyn<br />

NY.<br />

Build attendance with real Hawaiian<br />

orchids. Few cents each. Write Flowers of<br />

Hawaii, 670 S. Lafayette Place, Los Angeles<br />

5, Calif.<br />

Bingo Cards. 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 />

Burleak or Exploitation features (35mm]<br />

available. Mack Enterprises, Centralia,<br />

Illinois<br />

BALLOONS—Kiddie shows, anniversaries,<br />

special events. Southern Balloon, Box<br />

246, Atlanta 1, Georgia.<br />

INTERMISSION TAPES<br />

Drive-in's: Increase your snack bar receipts<br />

.<br />

that sparkle<br />

and intermission topes<br />

. . Guaranteed to sell . . .<br />

.<br />

Personalized . .<br />

Sound Service,<br />

Wyoming.<br />

Free<br />

P O.<br />

sample.<br />

Box 199,<br />

Commercial<br />

Cheyenne,<br />

.<br />

Dr>T».I]U. Incraas* Your Alt«Ddanc«l<br />

Speciol disc-jockey intermission topes,<br />

latest hits, tree concession plugs, recorders<br />

supplied, first copy free Proven successful.<br />

Hi-Fi House-37, 2410 Ave. A. North,<br />

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.<br />

THEATRE SEATING<br />

We specialize m 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 />

-mywhere. Chicago Used Chair Mart, 829<br />

So. Stote St., Chicago 5, Illinois. Phone<br />

WEbster 9-4519.<br />

SEAT RENOVATING: Neat, fast, reasonable,<br />

anywhere. Sewed combination seat<br />

jovers- Service Seating Co., 1525 West<br />

tldsel Ford, Detroit 8, Michigan. Tyler<br />

i-9481, Texas 4-2738.<br />

Chairs rebuilt anywhere, 27 years expert<br />

workmanship, sewed covers. Arthur<br />

judge, 2100 E, Newton Avenue, Milwaukee,<br />

Wisconsin.<br />

650 used Ideal cboirs. Good condition.<br />

Art Theatre Enterprises, 137 N.E. 79th St.,<br />

Miami, Fla, PL 7-1211,<br />

700 USED IDEAL CHAraS, excellent condition.<br />

H. Schoenstadt Theatres, 1118 So,<br />

Michigan Ave., Chicago 5, 111. Phone;<br />

HA. 7-3034.<br />

Handy Subscription<br />

BOXOFHCE:<br />

Order Form<br />

825 Van Brunt Blvd.,<br />

Kansas City 24, Mo.<br />

Please enter my subscription to<br />

BOXOFFICE, 52 issues per yeci<br />

(13 of which contain The MODERN<br />

THEATRE Section).<br />

n $3.00 FOR 1 YEAR<br />

n SS.OO FOR 2 YEARS<br />

n S7.00 FOR 3 YEARS<br />

n Remittance Encloaed<br />

THEATRE<br />

STREET<br />

TOWN<br />

NAME<br />

POSITION<br />

Send Invoice<br />

STATE<br />

29


will YOUBRAGOR ORAe<br />

m63?<br />

FRED SOUTTAR<br />

Preiident<br />

UTO of rtc Heart of America<br />

for Reservot,ons Wr/fe or W,>e; UNITED THEATRE OWNERS OF THE HEART OF AMERICA<br />

NORRIS CRESSWELL, Executive Secretary 114 West 18th St., Kansas City 8. Missouri Telephone: HArrison 1-5981

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