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See complete E-Sheet 67
My Life in the Movies
When
I was a kid growing up in
Brooklyn, I
would go to the movies twice a week. In the
middle of the week when they changed the
features I would go with my mother, who loved
the movies as much as I did. Besides, in those
days they would give away free dishes to lure
people in the middle of the week and her kitchen
cupboard was filled with "movie" dishes.
Parenthetically speaking, my mother was an
inveterate novel reader and moviegoer, which, of
course, explains a lot about the bent of her
progeny. So much for genetics. For my father, the
movies were a soporific and he was usually asleep
before the opening credits ended. His movie going
presence was respectfully declined.
On Saturday afternoons, I went to the movies
with my friends. It was a Saturday ritual and the
theatres were filled exclusively with
rambunctious, screaming kids letting off energy.
During the chase scenes of which there were many,
the howls and cheers were deafening as we rooted
for the good guys, especially during the
westerns. The good guys always won.
During the love scenes, we grew bored and
carried on, throwing candy and spitballs and
driving the harried ushers crazy. Remember ushers?
They all carried flashlights, often brandished as
weapons in those halcyon days before political
correctness.
There were no ratings in those days, and the
sex parts were so deliberately subtle to get past
the censors that unless you were naturally
prurient and sexually precocious, you rarely
understood the "dirty" parts. A good example is in
the closing scene of
The
Thin Man with the elegant
William Powell and the beauteous
Myrna Loy as the immortal Nick and Nora
Charles. They are in a double berth stateroom on a
train, both in pajamas. Nora gets in the lower
berth; Nick bends over to kiss her goodnight,
presumably to climb to the upper berth. Obviously,
the kiss gets Nick's hormones roaring and we cut
to their dog Aster, ever the compliant companion,
who jumps to the upper berth and, paws between his
head, gets comfy for the night. Who doesn't
understand what is going on in the lower berth as
the movie ends?
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| We lived our parallel lives in the
movies with those beautiful stars as our
guides, role models and look a-likes. |
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The movies were all black and white studio
products, and the names of the actors were burned
into our brains, their images ubiquitous in fan
magazines, advertising endorsements and especially
on the inside of
Dixie cup covers, which sealed the cup of ice
cream which were uniformly vanilla and chocolate.
There was no television in those days and we
lived our parallel lives in the movies with those
beautiful stars as our guides, role models and
look a-likes. My mother thought I looked like
Gregory Peck, which did a great deal for my
self-image.
Indeed, I find the stars of today pale
imitations of those of yesteryear, which, I
suppose, is the result of galloping senility and a
certain snobbishness about "the old days." Hell,
twenty thousand people showed up at the funeral of
Rudolph Valentino, a silent film heartthrob.
Ask anyone under sixty. Rudolph who?
My children have always been astonished when I
could name not only the stars in those old movies,
but the bit players. I still can. Show me a black
and white picture, and I can reel off the names of
the complete cast, almost. Of course, in those
days I would have seen four movies a week for
years, two in the middle of the week with my
mother and two on Saturdays with my friends.
The movie program consisted of double features
augmented by
movietone news, a cartoon, a novelty short and
coming attractions. On Saturdays, they might show
two cartoons and, invariably a serial like
Flash Gordon,
Rin
Tin Tin, which was the name of a heroic dog,
Dick Tracy, the detective, and others. All
episodes ended in cliffhangers, and you had to
come back the next Saturday to find out what
happened, even though you always knew that the
hero or heroine would escape danger in the nick of
time. Certain theaters would also show a comedy
race where your ticket stub carried the number of
a winner and you won a prize if the winner came
in.
One theater in my old neighborhood actually
showed three full-length features, two cartoons, a
serial, shorts and, to top it off, they gave away
prizes in a drawing in the middle of a Saturday
afternoon. I once won a pair of roller skates.
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| It was the story, dummy. |
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The showings were continuous and often you
"came in the middle" and would only leave the
theater when the part in the movie in which you
had entered the theater came on again. The candy
concession was a machine that dispensed five-cent
candies. My olfactory memory recalls a pleasant
caramel or chocolaty smell that pervaded the
theater. There was no popcorn or drinks sold.
There were no annoying commercials. They didn't
try to sell you anything in those days and didn't
keep you herded in long lines, except in the big
Broadway movie palaces where you lined up six
across to wait your turn to see a movie and a
stage show, usually a big band and a pop singer
like Frank
Sinatra or
Tony Bennett.
Admission for kids, if I remember was a dime plus
a penny or two tax. It might have been double that
for adults and higher for evening performances.
On days when my mother took me into the city to
the big theaters like the
Roxy, the
Paramount, the
Capitol or
Radio City Musical Hall, we always had to rush
to make it before one in the afternoon when they
raised the prices. In those fancy downtown
theaters, the ushers were dressed in crisp
uniforms with epaulets and brass buttons and stood
around like toy soldiers.
What astonishes me most about these
recollections in a time before rating systems was
that my mother, twenty odd years my senior,
enjoyed the same movies I did or visa versa. We
laughed and cried at the same situations and plot
turns. It is only recently, since I have been
exposed to watching those old movies again on CDs
and
Turner Classic Movies on television that I
have begun to unravel this odd mystery.
It was the story, dummy. Good stories are
universal and defy age and gender. I believe they
told them more skillfully in those days. In my
opinion, they were better written, the dialogue
sharper, the acting more believable, the costuming
more creative. Was the talent pool greater in
gifts and scope? I dare not court the condemnation
of the young.
I am not discounting the power of nostalgia,
sentiment and the golden glow of youth. Yes, it
does cloud one's objectivity. Perhaps the moisture
glazing my eyes as I watch these old films is
really tears of longing and regret for those lost
moments when the blood pounded more powerfully in
my veins.
This is not to say there are some movies around
today that tell stories that are equally as
compelling and well written and performed. But
they seem too few and require much energy and
ingenuity to search out since they are no longer
in the mainstream of popular culture.
Admittedly I am no longer in the demographic
that the movie industry is courting in their
blockbuster offerings, and I am often repelled by
the noisy trailers which telescope the same old
tired cliché ridden stories in their booming noisy
special effect wrappers. This does not mean that
there aren't talented filmmakers around, but the
stories they tell are not as readily available as
those churned out by Hollywood in its
Golden Age.
Nevertheless, the movie going habit persists.
The darkened auditorium beckons although the
disappointments often outweigh the enjoyment. To
me, car chases, gunfire and explosions are like
watching grass grow.
Were there any lessons for living and wisdom
acquired from the surfeit of these old Hollywood
fantasies? You bet. They taught me that America
offered infinite possibilities, that one could
find love and beauty and wonder and enchantment in
every day life, despite the grit and hardship
laying just outside the theater, that striving
could reap rewards and decency and compassion
could win the day, that one could aspire to be as
suave as
Cary
Grant, as stalwart as
Gary
Cooper, as handsome as
Tyrone Power, and as beautiful as
Madeline Carroll, as sexy as
Jean Harlow
and as exotic as
Marlene Dietrich.
Best of all, they taught me that the good guys
always win. I still believe that.
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