Photos favorited by Gerald A. DeLuca

  • <p>September 28, 1936. A long-lost film by Max Ophüls.</p>
  • <p>January 3, 1935 in The Guardian. The Curzon ran a now apparently lost film by Max Ophüls.</p>
  • <p>Now being screened here in December 2021.</p>
  • <p>1945</p>
  • <p>November 9, 2021 in the Boston Globe.</p>
  • <p>Top prize winner at Cannes, this was shown here in 1967. An Italian film masterpiece in the “commedia all'italiana” satirical vein. Directed by the great Pietro Germi.  During this period of the 1960s and later the Elmwood showed occasional foreign films in their original language versions with subtitles.</p>
  • <p>Photo of the lobby in the Hartford Courant.</p>
  • <p>Spotlighted in Fox Films trade ad (1933)</p>
  • <p>In 1941.</p>
  • <p>1956 Photo taken by Fred Lyon</p>
  • <p>Opening attraction in both Cinema 1 & 2. Boxoffice photo, October 22, 1962.</p>
  • <p>Johnston Theatre behind men marching, late 1950s or so.</p>
  • <p>Boxoffice Magazine, March 17, 1958.</p>
  • <p>Boxoffice Magazine, March 17, 1958.</p>
  • <p>Not a post of major import by any means, but this WAS the local cinema of my childhood. Boxoffice, January 1, 1962.</p>
  • <p>September 11, 1961. Trade ad in Boxoffice for two versions of “Two Women” with Sophia Loren.</p>
  • <p>Thanksgiving 1950 photo courtesy of Norman Mcintosh‎.</p>
  • <p>February 1, 1960 in Boxoffice. Unfortunately the theatre would be razed about two years later with the construction of the Massachusetts Turnpike stretch into the city. A newer Capri would replace the Strand on Huntington Avenue.</p>
  • <p>Boxoffice, April 28, 1958. Sack theatres: Saxon, Capri, Gary, Beacon Hill. Story in that issue.</p>
  • <p>April 20, 1959 in Boxoffice.</p>
  • <p>January 19, 1957 in Boxoffice.</p>
  • <p>Marquee and entrance in May, 1941</p>
  • <p> The old outside wall of the theater is an interior wall next door for the used clothing store Boomarang. As of Dec, 2017, this huge old pasted poster is protected by glass inside the store.</p>
  • <p>January 13, 1958. In Boxoffice.</p>
  • <p>1950 photo via Stumptown Blogger.</p>
  • <p>1978</p>
  • <p>From CNN online, November 20, 2021. The former Echo Theatre and redneck shop, a hub of the KKK, has become  center for remembrance and reconciliation.</p>