Oct. 28: Warwick Drive-In Theatre, Warwick NY

It’s Day 301 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was time to get back on the  Pennsylvania Turnpike for part of the 2½-hour drive from the Mahoning Drive-In Theater a few miles west of Lehighton PA to the Warwick Drive-In Theatre, just across the border and a couple of miles west of Warwick NY.

The Warwick has a great history, kept up to date, on the About Us page of its web site. The drive-in was built in 1950 by Charles and Mary Finger in partnership with George and Adeline Miller on land owned by Paul and Emma Miller. George and Adeline sold out to Russ and Gloria Eurich. It had one 70-by-40-foot screen and parking for 350 cars. Soon, the Fingers bought out the business from the Eurichs. It was run successfully by the Finger family for 25 years.

The Fingers retired and sold the drive-in to Frank Seeber in 1977. Seeber also bought the property from Miller’s widow, then bought more acreage from her in 1982. Seeber and his wife Ann expanded the drive-in to two screens with two projection rooms. Before 1995, they added a third screen and more ticket selling stations to comply “with the town’s insistence on controlling the traffic and parking situations.”

In 1995, the Seebers retired from the drive-in business and sold the theater and land to Beth and Ernest Wilson as Casey Family Theaters, Inc. “We named the company after our nickname for Cassandra, the youngest of our four children,” Beth told the Warwick Valley Chamber. “She was born on the day we purchased the business.”

Beth’s sister, Laurey Keller, assists with daily operations, and Beth and Laurey’s children have worked at the Warwick throughout the years. Concession manager Joan Damon has been with the theater since the 1970s, before the Seebers bought it. The drive-in converted to digital projection in 2014.

The Warwick is the closest drive-in to Manhattan, about 90 minutes away, and for years was the closest drive-in to New Jersey. I was fortunate enough to catch it on the very last night of its 2017 season. Although it was the Saturday before Halloween, there were plenty of “regular” choices available to watch.

The YouTube video of the day comes from the time of digital conversion. It’s a nice little slice of life at the drive-in.

Miles Today / Total: 105 / 34131 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: American Made / 184

Nearby Restaurant: Some of the best ice cream anywhere can be found at the Bellvale Farms Creamery in Warwick. For the season, I tried their pumpkin flavor, then I added some Black Dirt Blast on a homemade waffle cone. Did you know that with enough ice cream, you don’t need anything else for dinner?

Where I Virtually Stayed: The nicest place to stay in Warwick is probably the Inn at Stony Creek, a restored colonial farmhouse bed and breakfast built in 1840. My room had its own bathroom and good wifi. Breakfast was an amazing homemade experience, so different from the cookie-cutter hotel breakfast buffets. Good stuff!

Only in Warwick: Zen spirituality author and artist Frederick Franck created the Pacem in Terris sculpture garden around a rebuilt old windmill along the Wawayanda River in Warwick. It holds occasional poetry readings and concerts, but it’s nice and peaceful as it is.

Next stop: Circle Drive In Theatre, Dickson City PA.

Oct. 25: Elmira Drive-In Theatre, Elmira NY

It’s Day 298 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. Taking the forested short route took a little longer than swinging north to the interstate would have been, but it took less than three hours for me to drive from the Family Drive In Theatre east of Kane PA, just across the border to the Elmira Drive-In Theatre, just west of Elmira NY.

This drive-in, almost halfway between the center of Elmira and the much smaller Big Flats, has an amazing, complicated history. It was built in 1948 and opened on April 16, 1949, owned by the Elmira Drive-In Theater Co., which was mainly Harry and Benjamin Berinstein.

The single-screen Elmira had 13 ramps for 800 cars with in-car speakers. The name on its screen tower was just “Drive-In Theatre”, so some references called it the Elmira and others the Big Flats. In advertisements in the Elmira Star-Gazette, it was listed as simply “Drive-In Theater” (April 1949) or “Drive-In Theatre” (May 1949). Its concession stand may have been outsourced; a want ad for concession manager replied to Theater Confections in Rochester NY.

On May 1, 1963, The 153 Corp. took over the drive-in from the Elmira Drive-In Co. with a “long-term lease”. That put it under the control of the Dipson Circuit, which owned or ran Elmira’s indoor theaters and a couple dozen others in the region. Harry Berinstein’s 1973 obituary said that when he passed away, he was president of Cornell Theaters and “still owned the land on which the Elmira Drive-In Theater stands”, although he hadn’t lived in Elmira since 1941.

In August 1976, the Elmira’s lease, held by Cornell Theaters, was transferred to Galaxy Theaters of Rochester. The manager at the time, Shirley Owens, said that Cornell had been operating the drive-in for a year and a half. In August 1980, Samuel J. Mitchell moved into the ownership group, and his S.J.M. Entertainment Co. ran the Elmira for at least a couple of years.

The International Motion Picture Almanac listed S. Freeman as the owner in its 1984 edition. I’ve got no clue who that was. In the 1986-88 editions, the owner was G. Howell. There was a George Howell in Elmira who was a civic-minded man and the top guy at F.M. Howell & Company, a huge employer in town, but that doesn’t match the next information nugget.

In 1988, the Star-Gazette said that Conrad and Linda Zurich (misspelled Zurick) had bought the drive-in in January 1985. That year it was renamed, at least in newspaper ads, as the Elmira Bargain Drive-In. It had to end its 1986 season early after an autumn fire damaged the building. Fire hit again just after the 1987 season, this time deliberately set a week after vandals smashed the drive-in’s electrical meters.

An August 1998 Star-Gazette article subtitled “Despite rundown appearance, Big Flats facility still draws the crowds” said the drive-in suffered from “badly peeling paint, broken neon lights, (and) overgrown vegetation”. Could that article have prompted the Zurichs to change managers? Dale and Karen Chapman took over the following season, starting by adding a second screen, dropping the “Bargain” from the name, and generally working to spruce up the place.

By 2008, Zurich Cinema was operating the drive-in, and they still do that today. The Elmira closed for the season after Columbus Day weekend, but it promises to reopen next spring.

The YouTube video of the day is a very short piece with a great look at the Elmira’s distinct roofed and pillared front, which looks about the same as when it opened. There’s also a bit of video from WETM, Elmira’s News Leader, about the drive-in’s digital projection system.

Miles Today / Total: 130 / 33870 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 182

Nearby Restaurant: Some folks like the Chicago-style deep dish pizza, others like the thin crust of the New York style. I like both, but while in NY state, I went with the closer inspiration served up at Vincenzo’s Pizzeria. I ordered a 16-inch Leonardo D’Vinci and a side salad to go so I could bring it up to my room, grab something to drink and chill out with a movie on TV.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Probably the nicest hotel in Elmira is the venerable Holiday Inn. My room overlooking the Chemung River was comfortable and had the full set of modern amenities. There’s a full restaurant and lounge on the property, and I got a voucher to use on breakfast. It was a nice experience, and the price was nice too.

Only in Elmira: The local newspaper, the Star-Gazette, has decades of issues available online (for a fee), providing a mountain of details for this post. What makes it more notable is that Frank Gannett bought a half-interest in the Star in 1906 and merged it the next year with the Gazette. The resulting Star-Gazette was the first newspaper of what would become the Gannett Company, publisher of USA Today.

Next stop: Garden Drive In, Hunlock Creek PA.

Oct. 22: Sunset Drive-In, Middleport NY

It’s Day 295 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I had a nice short virtual drive this day, less than a half hour from the Transit Drive In south of Lockport NY. Sunset Drive-In in  Middleport NY.

The Sunset was opened as a single-screen drive-in in August 1950 by Alex and Mary Stornelli. The book Royalton, Middleport, and Hartland said that the Sunset “was an immediate hit.” In the 1950s and 1960s, drive-in guests were greeted by Alex’s pet monkey “Chi Chi,” the Sunset fire truck provided guest with rides, and it even hosted go-cart racing.

In 1994, the drive-in was passed down to the founders’ son and daughter-in-law, Mario and Denise Stornelli. The next year, the new owners added two more screens, according to NewYorkDriveIns.com. Mario and Denise have operated the Sunset ever since. In 2007, their son Kris opened an ice cream shop in front.

The Rayva Roundtable just ran a great two-part interview with the Sornellis. Part Two appeared just this past Thursday.) Business was down about a quarter this summer, mainly due to weak movies, and Denise said, “The business has been here 67 years, the same family. Second generation. But it’s a business that depends on variables we have no control over. You’re against weather, and you’re against product. The thing you have to remember is, it’s not new. You have good years, you have bad years. And you just take what comes.”

That interview includes a lot of insights into the Sornelli’s expanded restaurant, the conversion to digital projection, and memories of how the Sunset didn’t resort to adult movies in the 1970s. Add in several photos, and you really should go read it.

I just missed the Sunset’s final weekend of the season last weekend. It’s getting harder to schedule my trips to catch the last active drive-in nights of the season. I may have to try a different approach; this is a virtual odyssey after all.

Miles Today / Total: 18 / 33523 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 182

Nearby Restaurant: Since the drive was short, it was easy to get here for Sunday brunch at The Basket Factory. They had all I could eat of scrambled eggs, bacon, chicken & biscuits, pasta, fruit, pastries, quiche, pancakes, waffles, and coffee, all with the Erie Canal in their back yard.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotels to the Sunset are five miles east in Medina, and the oldest of them is the Hart House Hotel, which first opened in 1876. My classically small room had a mini-fridge, and wifi. There was coffee available, and a breakfast voucher for the Shirt Factory Cafe downstairs.

Only in Middleport: Just east of Medina is Culvert Road, which includes the only tunnel that goes under the Erie Canal. It’s only one lane, and the clearance is just 7½ feet, but there it is, under the historic waterway.

Next stop: Sunset Drive In, Waterford PA.