Apr. 18: Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Wichita KS

Starlite drive-in at sunset

photo from the Starlite Drive-In Facebook page

It’s Day 108 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. After leaving the Midway Drive-In Theatre near Osawatomie, I soon picked up the Kansas Turnpike and finished my two-hour drive to the Starlite Drive-In Theatre in Wichita.

The Starlite began its life as the single-screen Rainbow in 1953. The drive-in underwent extensive renovation in 1974, including a large new projection and concession building and a second screen, and became the Landmark Twin. In the intervening years, the name morphed into the Landmark Starlite and then to just the Starlite that it is today.

As Wichita On The Cheap pointed out, the Starlite has changed to Carload pricing during this spring. Wouldn’t it be nice that every drive-in that mentioned a carload would point back to this site? By all accounts, they run a first-class concession stand, so I’m a little sad that I’m not able to sample it this trip.

The Starlite is only open weekends this time of year, leaving me with a Tuesday night watching TV in my room. At least I was able to get an early start for the next morning’s drive.

Miles Today / Total:  159 / 11661 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 51

Nearby Restaurant: It’s got buffet in its name and it’s close to the Starlite, so the New China Buffet was my natural choice. As promised, it provided all the Chinese standards that I’d expect in America, plus a nice salad bar and a few surprises. And best of all, it’s a buffet!

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotel was the Holiday Inn Express South, and I was glad to be back with that chain again. It’s right by the Kansas Turnpike, so there were plenty of other weary travelers there. I loved the Keurig coffee maker in my room and the biscuits and gravy at breakfast. Sometimes it’s nice to be somewhere that feels familiar.

Only in Wichita: Wichita was home to the world’s first Pizza Hut, and Wichita State University has moved the original building to its campus. It doesn’t look like a hut and it doesn’t look like the classic Pizza Hut restaurant shape – it’s just a small brick building. The founders named it Pizza Hut because their sign only had room for nine characters.

Next stop: Kanopolis Drive In Theatre, Kanopolis KS.

Apr. 17: Midway Drive-In Theatre, Paola KS

It’s Day 107 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I left the I-70 Drive-In in Kansas City MO and drove just less than an hour southwest of the metro area to the Midway Drive-In Theatre, which is midway between Paola and Osawatomie KS.

The years have been rough on a lot of the Midway drive-ins. It was a common name (at least a half dozen just in North Carolina, for example) for a common situation. Drive-ins needed to be outside of town, so why not build one where it could draw from two potential audiences? That land in the middle of nowhere was typically the cheapest was just a bonus. Of the dozens of Midways that were ever built, only seven are still in operation today.

The Kansas Midway was built in 1952 or 1953 and holds fewer than 300 cars. It’s maybe a mile closer to Osawatomie, which is where all of my old reference books place it, but it claims a Paola address.

KCTV, Kansas City’s News Leader, ran an story about the Midway in 2013. At the time, farmer/owner Paul Dimoush was trying to find the money to buy a digital projector. He blamed his wife for getting into the drive-in business. “She said she got tired of watching corn grow and looking at cows so here we are,” he said with a laugh. Government leaders all over Miami County were working on the Midway fundraiser.

Somehow, it worked. The Midway upgraded to digital projection in 2014, so I’m confident that it’ll continue for the years that it’ll take to pay off that new equipment. But it’s definitely closed for the season now. It was pretty rainy outside anyway.

Miles Today / Total:  55 / 11502 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 51

Nearby Restaurant: I’m in love with the El Potro Mexican Cafe in Paola. I think it’s the margaritas, or maybe the chips and cheese. Great service, authentic Mexican food, and for me, a hot plate of pork carnitas tamales. Add the churros with chocolate and honey for dessert, and I didn’t think I would ever eat again. But there’s always room for another margarita.

Where I Virtually Stayed: If you’re going to stay the night in Paola, you’ll probably spend it at the Paola Inn. My room was clean, had a refrigerator, and the wifi was great. A nice hot breakfast in the morning had me ready to continue through Kansas.

Only in Paola Osawatomie: At the John Brown Museum, a large stone building contains the log cabin of Reverend Samuel Adair and his wife, Florella, who was the half-sister of the militant abolitionist. That cabin, which survived an earlier attack by a proslavery mob, is where Brown stayed while fighting the unofficial Bleeding Kansas war of the late 1850s. The cabin was dismantled and reassembled in 1912, and its surrounding stone pavilion was built in 1928.

Next stop: Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Wichita KS.

Apr. 16: I-70 Drive-In, Kansas City MO

I-70 Drive-in marquee at night

photo by John, from the Carload Flickr pool

It’s Day 106 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I doubled back from the Boulevard Drive-In Theatre in Kansas City KS so I could watch a Sunday evening movie for the first time in four weeks. It only took 20 minutes to drive back to the Missouri side to the I-70 Drive-In in Kansas City MO.

Of the hundreds of active drive-ins in the United States, there are plenty that are named for US highways and even a few for state highways, but the I-70 is the only one named for an interstate highway. Some closed drive-ins had been named after interstates; just in Missouri there was another I-70 in St. Peters and the I-44 in Valley Park. Kansas City’s I-70 is the last of its kind.

The I-70 opened in July 1964 with a single screen, then split into four screens in the late 1980s. According to an article in the Kansas City Star, Darryl Smith bought the I-70 in 1999. When the digital projection changeover swept through in 2014, he sold it to B&B Theatres, along with the Twin in Independence.

Four screens mean four choices, and I hadn’t seen two of the early movies. One was the latest Smurfs installment, a phrase that I was a little sad to type just now, and the other was Ghost in the Shell, which makes a fine drive-in movie.

Miles Today / Total:  12 / 11447 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Ghost in the Shell / 51

Nearby Restaurant: Just across the border in Independence, Dixon’s Famous Chili is the closest excellent place to eat, but I couldn’t leave KC before getting some famous barbecue. Arthur Bryant’s BBQ is as legendary as barbecue gets. The wall of celebrities who have enjoyed this tradition help provide the mood, but the heaps of tender meat and singular sauce are the reason this place is truly famous.

Where I Virtually Stayed: It’s not in too many small towns, but the Drury Inn is one of the places I search out. The one across I-70 from Kauffman Stadium is just five minutes away from the drive-in. Happy hour every evening, a really solid breakfast buffet in the morning, and lots of little touches keep the Drurys among the top hotels in its class.

Only in Kansas City: Continuing the I-70 theme, the first section of any interstate was an eight-mile stretch that opened as I-70 just west of Topeka on November 14, 1956. (The last section of the originally planned interstate to be completed was also part of I-70, through Glenwood Canyon CO in 1992.)

Next stop: Mid-Way Drive-In Theatre, Paola KS.