Comments from MissAmanda

Showing 26 - 35 of 35 comments

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Whitestone Multiplex Cinemas on Feb 28, 2013 at 4:29 pm

Still open as of February 28, 2013, showing first run movies, so where there’s life there’s hope. I like this theater because I don’t like stadium seating, and this is one of the last orchestra-style seating venues. What I don’t like is that the restrooms are located outside the ropes, so you have to show your ticket stub to get back in after doing your business. Makes sneaking from theater to theater hard, but not impossible.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Tucson's Century Park 16 to close in January on Dec 16, 2010 at 8:14 pm

Pity. Another old auditorium-style multiplex bites the dust. When I first went there about three years ago, the crowds were healthy. Over time, they dwindled, as new stadium-style multiplexes opened in the area. The last time I was there was to see the A-Team, I believe. Hardly anyone there. I weep. I truly do.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Rave to operate former Magic Johnson Theater in Baldwin Hills after renovations on Nov 16, 2010 at 11:05 am

>> Chris Utley posted: “Stadium seating is "sad” to somebody? YIKES!“ <<

Yes. Consider: Stadium seats are in steeply pitched rows. Maybe a young buck can spring up and down the stairs, but us older folk struggle, especially coming down. And the rows are too long, without a center aisle to break them up. Climbing in and out of a full row is difficult.

The few floor-level seats that are provided are too close to the screen for comfort.

And there’s something lacking about entering a theater through a narrow door that opens into a long, dark, narrow side aisle, groping your way along the walls, as compared to entering via double doors that open onto a wide center aisle.

Where is the charm of these stadium-style auditoriums?

Finally, it may have been bad for the seats, but part of the charm of the old style auditoriums was stretching out with your feet on the seat in front of you. Or at the very least, propping your knees up on the back rest (at least the back rest of those seats that didn’t have built-in cup holders to get in the way of your knees). But there is too much space between the rows now for that.

I know the movie palaces of yesteryear are gone forever. But these modern sterile stadium boxes are nothing compared to them.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Rave to operate former Magic Johnson Theater in Baldwin Hills after renovations on Nov 12, 2010 at 8:11 pm

Sadly, it will be stadium seating. The old Magic Johnson Theater was one of the last of the auditorium-style venues except for two rooms at the end of the east corridor.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Pontiac Theatre on Jun 24, 2010 at 1:26 pm

Around 1970 or so the Pontiac set aside every Wednesday night as “buck night” — all seats $1.00. They attracted a large crowd from nearby Paul Smiths College, a culinary school that managed the dining room of the Hotel Saranac, next door to the Pontiac Theater.

Trivia fact: The village of Paul Smiths was the last place in the United States to have old crank-style telephones where you turned the crank to get the operator on the line and gave her the number you wanted to call. That was also as late as 1970, I believe.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Harbor Theater on Jun 24, 2010 at 1:20 pm

Bear with me — it’s been a long, long time since I’ve been to Lake Placid. As you travel through town on Main Street, the road turns sharply to the left to continue on to Saranac Lake. If you go straight instead, that’s Mirror Lake Drive. The Holiday Harbor complex was a short way back on Mirror Lake Drive, as I recall.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Regency Commerce on Jun 24, 2010 at 1:14 pm

The newer screens are “sort of” stadium seating — not banked quite as steeply as your run-of-the-mill stadium seating. I prefer the older auditoriums myself; they have not been retrofitted.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Palace Theater on Jun 24, 2010 at 9:36 am

I worked with Ray Durkee to restore the organ in 1970, although Ray did the brunt of the work. He and I took turns playing it before shows. The theatre had a huge old American flag with 48 stars, almost as large as the screen. I forget if it was suspended in front of or behind the screen. We would always culminate our pre-show organ recital with the National Anthem as a spotlight illuminated the flag. Such fun!

I remember seeing “Harold and Maude” at the Palace before it opened widely. It may have been a sneak preview. Also “Myra Breckenridge” while sitting in the balcony in front of a row of teenage boys from the Northwood School who seemed rather enamored of Racquel Welsh.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Harbor Theater on Jun 24, 2010 at 9:26 am

Bob Jensen wrote:

>> Remember that woman who sang “God Bless America”? That was Kate Smith. She had a summer home in Lake Placid for 45 years. Wonder if she ever went to the Harbor Theater? <<

Kate Smith was a communicant at St. Agnes Church in Lake Placid. I played the organ there from 1969 to 1971 and often had the pleasure of hearing Miss Smith sing from the congregation. I never met her, though — she never came up into the choir loft.

I have fond memories of the Harbor Theater — saw “Woodstock” there.

MissAmanda
MissAmanda commented about Cinemark Baldwin Hills Crenshaw and XD on Jun 22, 2010 at 10:00 pm

A sad, sad loss not only for the Crenshaw district but also for the LA theater scene in general. Truly the passing of an age. Magic Johnson Crenshaw was one of the last non-stadium theaters, with several large auditoriums (and several small ones too), comfortable seats, good quality projectors, and reasonably clean rest rooms. They also had two stadium theaters at the end of the corridor, but who cares? I HATE STADIUM SEATING! And they always attracted an interesting crowd.