Aug. 1: Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Amelia OH

It’s Day 213 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It took just a little over an hour to drive from Hamilton OH northwest of Cincinnati to the Starlite Drive-In Theatre in Amelia OH, southeast of Cincinnati.

According to its Facebook page, the Starlite opened in 1947. World War II veteran Jerry Jackson from Williamburg OH built it and owned it “until about 1968.” In the 1980s, reference works suggest that it was owned by Holiday Amusements, which ran a lot of drive-ins in the Cincinnati area.

The Starlite converted to digital projection in early 2013, and The Clermont Sun interviewed manager Ken Aultz. “The picture is excellent,” Aultz said. “The image is brighter and sharper and the stability is perfect.” The article also noted that Debbie Brooks had owned the Starlite for about 20 years and was its third owner.

In March 2015, Brooks noticed that the previous winter’s moisture had highlighted problems with the original screen tower’s support timbers. (Did that have anything to do with the new screen they mounted on it the year before? I couldn’t find any mention of that.) With sadness, she had the old, doomed screen dismantled and a modern steel screen erected in its place just in time for a Memorial Day Weekend opening.

The YouTube video for this post is a nice change of pace from drone aerial photography. It’s a time lapse view of a busy night at the Starlite, including that gorgeous old screen tower still in the background. The new screen works just as well, but that old one had history!

It was Carload night at the Starlite, but not only did leave off the .com, that modern screen had The Emoji Movie. Entertainment Weekly gives the movie a grade of F, writing, “it looks terrible, but it’s fun to imagine how much more visually experimental your niece’s remake will be, when she borrows her mom’s iPhone and uses her crayons to draws expressions on leftover lemons and doesn’t feel the need to include constant product-placing references.” So it’s not just me. But the Starlite itself is a great place to watch a movie, whenever there’s a movie worth watching.

Miles Today / Total:  57 / 26339 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Emoji Movie / 128

Nearby Restaurant: With a short drive, I had plenty of time for a late breakfast (or breakfast for lunch, however you want to put it), so I stopped at Poochie’s Place. This little place is where the locals go for their down-home cooking. I tried a peanut butter cup pancake with my egg white Western omelette. And lots of coffee. Great stuff!

Where I Virtually Stayed: There don’t seem to be any hotels in Amelia per se, so I went just a few miles up the road to the Best Western Clermont on the fringes of Cincinnati. It’s just across a parking lot from a White Castle, so that’s a plus. My comfy room had the full set of amenities, and breakfast was especially strong. On top of all that, I paid less than for most chain hotels.

Only in Amelia: At the end of the shortest path from Amelia to the Ohio River, you’ll find New Richmond and the Cardboard Boat Museum. You see, New Richmond holds its RiverDays Celebration every third weekend of August, and that includes a cardboard boat regatta. There have been so many interesting entrants that the museum was created to show them off. You’ll see ​the Bat Boat, a Delta Queen paddlewheel replica, a John Deere tractor, a coffee cup, the Miss Mudwiezer HydroPlane, and many more.

Next stop: Melody 49 Drive-In, Brookville OH.

July 31: Holiday Auto Theatre, Hamilton OH

It’s Day 211 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I crossed over to Ohio for the start of a new movie week, taking almost three hours to drive from one Holiday to another, from the Holiday Drive-In Theatre in Mitchell IN to the Holiday Auto Theatre in Hamilton OH.

According to Cinema Treasures, the Holiday opened in September 1948 as the Hamilton Outdoor Theatre. CT says the name was changed in 1951 to Holiday Auto Theatre, but an article in The Miami Student says it changed when National Amusements bought it in late 1948. Cinema Treasures’ timeline seems more likely.

“It changed hands a few times over the years,” wrote the Student, and that fact holds up well. The 1948-49 Theatre Catalog lists Louis Aldt as the owner, and the International Motion Picture Almanac has “L. Olt” owning the place in 1959. I think somebody misspelled that name. Making it more confusing is that in between, Ben Cohen was listed as the owner in 1956.

There’s another ownership snapshot in 1998 when Cincinnati Magazine included then-owner Fred Baum in its discussion of regional drive-ins. “To describe Baum as passionate about his drive-in is to seriously underplay the man’s obsession,” it wrote. The grounds and concession stand were impeccable, and “the much-modified projector, with its 4,500-watt xenon bulb, produces an immaculate image on the huge screen.”

A Cinema Treasures commenter said Baum passed away on Memorial Day 2007 at age 64. “Current co-owner Gregory Reinhold and The Holiday employees continue to operate this venue as Fred would have wished, even though Baum put the Drive -In up for sale in 2006.”

Cincinnati Magazine wrote that Todd Chancey and Mark Althoetmar, a pair of Disney employees (former, in Chancey’s case), bought the Holiday in 2007. They converted it to digital projection before the 2013 season. “The challenge is you have to get a machine strong and large enough to get the light to the screen,” Chancey said.

The YouTube video from this post comes from a viewer of WXIX, Cincinnati’s News Leader, who recorded a live remote at the Holiday for New Years Eve 2009. While it was nice to see Chancey talk about his preparations, for me the video is worth watching just for that great view of the drive-in marquee at night. (The tradition continued; in 2012, USA Today listed the Holiday among its 10 great places for a family-friendly New Year’s Eve.)

This was the third time I’ve seen the latest Planet of the Apes installment, but the loud action makes it a pretty good drive-in movie. Anything’s better than The Emoji Movie.

Miles Today / Total:  132 / 26282 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: War for the Planet of the Apes / 127

Nearby Restaurant: At Lindenwald Station, they serve breakfast all day, which made me happy after a drive that took practically all morning. I heard the biscuits and gravy were worth it, and of course they were. At lunch, I had a half order plus a “Cattle Car” omelette (the station has a neat locomotive theme) packed with ham, bacon, sausage, and cheese, then topped with more gravy. Which is why I wasn’t hungry for dinner.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Even though Hamilton is a much larger town than many I’ve seen lately (population 62,000 or so) and is close to Cincinnati, there’s only one hotel in town. Good thing it’s a Courtyard, and an especially good one at that. I haven’t written about Courtyards much, because they’re usually found where business travelers want to be, but they’re pretty reliable. My freshly renovated king room had a mini-fridge and a coffee maker, and breakfast was available for purchase.

Only in Hamilton: Roadside America has the whole story of the Hollow Earth Monument. It marks the gravesite of John Cleves Symmes Jr., hero of the War of 1812, who later announced that the Earth was hollow with giant holes at the North and South Poles. He died in 1829 and was buried in his family’s cemetery. When that was turned into a park in the 1840s, all of its bodies were dug up and moved to a new cemetery — except for John Cleves Symmes Jr. It was around this time that Symmes’ son erected the Hollow Earth Monument, topped by a globe with hole through its middle, inscribed with Symmes’ belief that “the Earth is hollow and habitable within.”

Next stop: Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Amelia OH.

July 30: Holiday Drive-In Theatre, Mitchell IN

It’s Day 211 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It took just a half hour to drive from the Starlite Drive-In Theatre south of Bloomington IN to the Holiday Drive-In Theatre south of Mitchell IN.

Actually, the Holiday is about halfway between Mitchell and Orleans IN. It opened in 1962, owned by George Webb and Theodore Stigall. In 1983, Robert Limeberry bought the Holiday and kept it running until he passed away. The current owner, Steve Wilson, bought the Holiday from Limeberry’s estate in the winter of 2005.

Wilson went one important step further, purchasing the Holiday’s land in January 2008. We’ve seen plenty of examples where drive-ins were forced to close because the landowner decided to sell. That didn’t happen in this dot on the highway surrounded by farm land. “We’re kind of lucky from the standpoint it sits in a corn field,” Wilson told the Electric Consumer in September 2008. “If it sat anywhere else, somebody would have had it torn down.”

The Holiday dodged another problem common to drive-ins this decade. Wilson launched a GoFundMe campaign in 2015 to raise the money for a digital projector. “We have started this Go fund Me page, to bring awareness to the high possibility of losing this theater,” it said. The campaign raised only a little more than $10,000, but before the start of the 2016 season, Wilson found an older digital projector from a defunct Hazard KY indoor theater, thanks in part to Jim Boyd, owner of the Van-Del Drive-In in Middle Point OH.

According to the Bedford Times-Mail (subscription required), the result was a huge success.  “Last year, we had probably the biggest April we’ve ever had,” Wilson said. And this year he opened earlier than usual, in mid-March, to take advantage of the buzz around the live-action Beauty and the Beast.

Speaking of buzz, I’ve embedded another drone video, again from last year. On this one, instead of hearing the whirring blades, the videographer added old-time movie scratch effects because, uh, 1962 movie theater setting, uh … okay, I don’t get it. But the views make the video definitely worth watching.

This was the fourth time I’ve seen the latest Transformers installment, but the loud action makes it a pretty good drive-in movie. I couldn’t recall another drive-in that rents lawn chairs, but that might have been because of all the cinnamon sugar mini-donuts I ate there.

Miles Today / Total:  27 / 26150 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Transformers: The Last Knight / 126

Nearby Restaurant: The Millstone Dining Room in the Spring Mill Inn in Spring Mill State Park has a well-deserved reputation for some really great fried chicken. Add that it’s served in a buffet setting, and you’ve got two ingredients for a great experience, at least the way I rank these things. The dessert bar featured cornmeal pie and persimmon pudding. You can’t find food like this just anywhere.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The only real place to stay in Mitchell is the Spring Mill Inn inside Spring Mill State Park just east of town. My room was a lot different than what I’d find at a chain hotel, with a wooden rocker, a DVD player, a real quilt on the bed, and that’s about it. Good thing there was wifi, because cell reception was pretty spotty this far out in such a peaceful setting.

Only in Mitchell: The Mitchell Opera House opened in 1906 as the County Hall. In 1908, Menlo E. Moore took over its operation, renaming it the Opera House. For over 20 years, it hosted live shows, silent movies, and political rallies. The building had several other uses (storage, teen center, city hall) from 1930 to 1981, when it was reopened for occasional shows. After a full renovation, it reopened permanently in July 2015.

Next stop: Holiday Auto Theatre, Hamilton OH.