July 15: Manistique Drive-In, Manistique MI

It’s Day 196 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. For a very special occasion, I drove five hours from Ionia in the middle of Michigan’s mitten all the way up I-75 to the Upper Peninsula and on to the drive-in in Manistique. It’s the Brigadoon of drive-ins, rarely available, but it was open Saturday night.

What’s now referred to as the Manistique Drive-In (there’s no name on the sign) started its life as the US-2 in 1953. The single-screen theater was owned by J.L. LeDuc, who owned the indoor theaters in town, and planned to close one of them in the summer when the US-2 was open. Within a few years, the Delft Theater chain took over operations, and the theater was listed as the Highway 2. At some point, that name evolved further, to the Cinema Two, not because there a second screen, but because the indoor theater in town was called Cinema One.

Whatever it was called, the drive-in dropped off the International Motion Picture Almanac lists in the mid 1970s. Cinema Treasures says the Cinema Two closed in 2001.

Fast forward to July 2016. Even though the Cinema Two had sat idle for over a decade, the Tourism Action Committee of the Schoolcraft County Economic Development Corporation opened it for a free, one-time showing of Back to the Future. Response was overwhelming, with 343 vehicles packing the lot. That led to Eric Sherbinow launching a GoFundMe campaign to raise $2500 for a “professional projector” to improve the experience. That goal was quickly met, and two more free screenings were held in September and October.

The system the Manistique drive-in used reminds me of Connecticut’s Southington Drive-In. There, the town owns the drive-in and local civic organizations take turns selling concessions and reaping the profits.

So this past week, I’ve been zigzagging around Michigan, and I noticed a note in Wednesday’s Escanaba Daily Press. One night only, the “Manistique Drive-Inn theater” would be showing the classic Jurassic Park and and the cheap-to-rent Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet. Concessions benefit St. Francis de Sales School in Manistique. What serendipity! I had to change my plans and drive up for this one.

Part of the original Cinema Two sign is still there on US Highway 2, across from the airport. I don’t care. I’m happy to be a part of the slow return of a drive-in to its community. Check out the YouTube video embedded above to see what it’s like.

Miles Today / Total:  318 / 24885 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Jurassic Park / 112

Nearby Restaurant: It was time to visit another vintage drive-in, but Clyde’s Drive-In is a restaurant. I bellied up to the bar for a Big C burger, 3/4 pound of meat on a bun, with a basket of fries. With a malt on the side, I knew I wouldn’t need a full dinner at the concession stand that night.

Where I Virtually Stayed: What the heck! Jankowski’s Holiday Motel is right next door to the drive-in, and it turned out okay. It’s just a mom and pop motel with decent rooms at a really good price. My room had the full set of amenities, including fridge and solid wifi, and banana bread with coffee at breakfast.

Only in Manistique: Ripley’s Believe It or Not featured the Siphon Bridge over the Manistique River here, because it was lower than the water it crossed. It was actually over a large flume to the local paper mill, and the concrete bridge used the rushing water and atmospheric pressure to help support it. The bridge is still there, but the flume isn’t, so now it’s just a bridge over a river.

Next stop: Field of Dreams Drive-In, Liberty Center OH.

July 14: Danny Boy’s Drive In Movie Theater, Ionia MI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEUZdGvge10

It’s Day 195 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It took less than an hour and a half to drive from Flint MI to the Danny Boy’s Drive In Movie Theater just south of Ionia MI.

Dan Lower and his wife, Gail, decided to invest in a drive-in near the site of a closed drive-in in his home town on the advice of their son who did an internet search that showed 90,000 Michigan residents search for “drive-in movie” every month. The result, which opened in 2013, is a modern single-screen theater.

Lower told the Ionia Sentinel-Standard that his vision for the drive-in is “Chuck E. Cheese meets the movies.” Sure enough, there’s a dancing, big-headed Danny Boy mascot that leads kids in getting their wiggles out before night falls and the show begins.

“If you are going (specifically) for the movie, don’t go to a drive-in,” he advised. “It’s really for kids, and a whole other demographic comes to the drive in.”

From the earliest days of Carload, a recurring question I’d get was, “What do I need to build a drive-in?” My short answer was that you mainly need a local champion, someone politically connected to guide the project through whatever level of NIMBY opposition any drive-in project is bound to face. Dan Lower has a much better, and longer, answer on his blog How To Build A Drive-In Movie Theater. His first focus was finding a location that’s economically viable. “I have a ‘1 McDonald’s rule’,” he writes. “If there is only 1 McDonald’s in your town / county / area….there is probably only room for 1 Drive In Theater in the area.” If you’re interested in starting your own, or just to read between the lines about the birth of Danny Boy’s, you should really go read the whole thing.

Once again (from my perspective), Despicable Me 3 was the early show. I might have dozed off, because I knew I needed to get up early the next morning. I read just this week that a drive-in which only opened two nights last year was going to have another show, and I was in range if I was willing to make a longer drive than I’d planned.

Miles Today / Total:  84 / 24567 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Despicable Me 3 / 111

Nearby Restaurant: I like good eats, and I like cheap eats, and it’s great when those two come together. At the Lamplight Grill for dinner after hanging around with carnival food at the fair all day (see below), what I really needed was just the soup and salad bar. All in a setting that has the warm, comforting look of the inside of the Cheers bar. Stomach settled, I was ready for Danny Boy’s.

Where I Virtually Stayed: With a small town such as Ionia, I’m grateful to find a Super 8. This one is adjacent to a truck stop, so I always knew where I could get sundries or a late-night snack. My room had the full set of amenities, the free wifi was solid, and I could grab some truck stop biscuits and gravy to supplement the usual Super 8 continental breakfast.

Only in Ionia: For over a century, every mid to late July, Ionia hosts what Wikipedia says could be the world’s largest free-admission fair. This year, the Ionia Free Fair started on July 13, a day before I arrived. Lucky me! I made it in time for the Governor’s Luncheon, then the poultry and waterfowl show. And all the midway rides made me glad for a quiet evening at the drive-in.

Next stop: Manistique Drive-In, Manistique MI.

July 13: US 23 Drive-in Theater, Flint MI

US 23 neon marquee and screen silhouetted at sunset

photo by Ron, from the Carload Flickr pool

It’s Day 194 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was a nice easy drive of about an hour and a half to get from the Hi Way Drive-In Theatre to the US 23 Drive-in Theater in Flint MI.

The US 23 was the third of what would eventually be five large drive-ins in Flint. At their peak, each could accommodate over 1000 cars. The US 23 is the only one that survived. It started in 1950 with a ornate single screen with a built-in 5-room apartment for the manager. They added a second screen in 1986 using parts from a dismantled drive in screen tower.

Tragedy struck in 1997 when an arson fire destroyed the huge main screen. That was replaced that year with the remaining pieces of what had formed the second screen. They had been set aside for a third screen, which as a result didn’t get added until 2009.

Louis Warrington and Lee Stallard opened the US 23, and Warrington and eventually his son owned it until Louis Jr. passed away at the age of 72 in 2009. The family sold the drive-in to Johnny Thomas.

That original neon sign and marquee, which used to point to even more neon along the original screen tower, is one of the finest surviving 1950s drive-in signs, in my opinion. If you want to see it in motion, and how the US 23 looked in 2010, check this short advertisement. If you want a great glimpse of the history of the drive-in, check out MichiganDriveIns’ 1997 YouTube video, with a Lou Warrington Jr. interview and photos of what the great old screen looked like before it burned down. (And some footage of what it looked like as it was burning.) For older photos but less interview, also check Outdoor Moovies’ 1993 video on YouTube.

I settled in for my 42nd (yay!) consecutive movie night with my root beer float and popcorn, I saw three screens, but two of them had Despicable Me 3 as the early show. Thank goodness for Spider-Man: Homecoming, which I saw for just the second time. It’s a good drive-in movie.

Miles Today / Total:  85 / 24483 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Spider-Man: Homecoming / 110

Nearby Restaurant: Well, Mario’s was directly across the street, but I figured I could handle another couple of blocks to the Canton Chinese Restaurant. Like the US 23, it closed after a fire (2014) but reopened as good as new. The family meals looked great, but since I’m alone, I got the special Canton Three Delight of sesame chicken, Mongolian beef, and shrimp broccoli, a tasty mashup of three dishes I already like separately.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Ah, good old Hampton Inn, my go-to hotel for reliable comfort. This one’s less than three miles away, and TripAdvisor says its the best hotel in Flint. No microwave or mini-fridge in my standard king room, but the wifi was good and the standard Hampton breakfast in the morning was better. Staying here was just a no-brainer.

Only in Flint: Aside from that lead in the drinking water thing and being documentarian Michael Moore’s home town and first target, Flint might be best known for its weather ball. It was built in 1956 at the top of what was then the Citizens Bank. Its light tells the weather forecast, according to Michigan Public Radio: When the Weather Ball is red, higher temperatures ahead. When the Weather Ball is blue, lower temperatures are due. Yellow light in the Weather Ball means there will be no change at all. When it blinks in agitation, means there will be precipitation.

Next stop: Danny Boy’s Drive In Movie Theater, Ionia MI.