Hi Al, it has been a while, it’s Ron, I hope all is well. Marvin and I were trying to remember his name, the first name was Raul. He was the one that everyone would ask you to translate what he was saying and you replied he speaks the same way in spanish.
It is amazing how time can eventually bring people back to where they began. I ushered at the Bay Harbor theatre back in 1974 and worked with both Scott and Jeff. I have also remained friends with Al Alvarez who has posted on this site. The Bay Harbor was the most elegant theatre in it’s day. It was great having the upstairs balcony all to yourself when the movie was running. It was also the day when some theatres had soda machines as well as a concession stand, but the coins in the soda machine always got stuck, memories. I did go back once when the theatre was converted to a fourplex, that was the end of an era.
Raul Trellis, go figure, Marvin Got it.
Al, while you are at it, what was the old doorman’s name at the shores that also typed up the reports?
Hi Al, it has been a while, it’s Ron, I hope all is well. Marvin and I were trying to remember his name, the first name was Raul. He was the one that everyone would ask you to translate what he was saying and you replied he speaks the same way in spanish.
How are things going for you, still in New York?
Does anyone remember the name of the manager of the Ultravision theatre around the late 1970s?
It is amazing how time can eventually bring people back to where they began. I ushered at the Bay Harbor theatre back in 1974 and worked with both Scott and Jeff. I have also remained friends with Al Alvarez who has posted on this site. The Bay Harbor was the most elegant theatre in it’s day. It was great having the upstairs balcony all to yourself when the movie was running. It was also the day when some theatres had soda machines as well as a concession stand, but the coins in the soda machine always got stuck, memories. I did go back once when the theatre was converted to a fourplex, that was the end of an era.