Photos favorited by Gerald A. DeLuca

  • <p>May 20, 1956</p>
  • <p>September 30, 1950. Boxoffice Magazine.</p>
  • <p>Display for Chaplin’s “City Lights” revival. Boxoffice Magazine, July 22, 1950.</p>
  • <p>June 28, 1956. New York Daily News. (BEGINNING of review of a forgotten, if ever remembered, Italian film gem, “Alone in the Streets.”</p>
  • <p>January 29, 1949 in Boxoffice.</p>
  • <p>June 27, 1951. Joseph Losey’s “M”.</p>
  • <p>May 2, 1965 notice and photo. Acclaimed film “Cielo sulla palude” by Augusto Genina.</p>
  • <p>February 11, 1948.</p>
  • <p>Majestic Theatre in Providence has “A Yank in the RAF” in 1941 with the Army’s 79th Pursuit Squadron</p>
  • <p>December 21, 1979. S.F. Examiner.</p>
  • <p>April 19, 2010. Journal News, Hamilton, OH.</p>
  • <p>September 10, 1951. Losey’s “M”, a remake of the Fritz Lang German film, was not that widely shown, and the director was blacklisted.</p>
  • <p>March 5, 1965</p>
  • <p>April 14, 1964. N.Y. Daily News.</p>
  • <p>Honesty in advertising? Berkshire Evening Eagle. August 15, 1946.</p>
  • <p>July 19, 1937. Photo in the Charleston Daily Mail. Accompanied by story I also posted in the photo section.</p>
  • <p>A portion of a 1922 poster advertising “Silver Wings” starring Mary Carr, found as backing to a 1919 photograph.  A framer must have obtained it and used it as a backing card.  Courtesy OldfilmsPaul.</p>
  • <p>10-20-21 orchestra, facing balcony & projection booth. Netflix replaced the chairs & carpet. A few seats were lost from left rear of orchestra, for handicapped accessible restroom.</p>
  • <p>May 2, 1964</p>
  • <p>From a 1947 16mm movie posted on YouTube. This looks like it MIGHT be the Park Theatre in Everett.</p>
  • <p>1941 view.</p>
  • <p>December 21, 1912 as the Mozart Theatre.</p>
  • <p>The current interior looks NOTHING like it did back in the ‘20’s!</p>
  • <p>ABOVE: As the Royal appears in Peter Bogdanovich’s “The Last Picture Show” (1971)
              BELOW: The cinema frontage as it appears in the poster art by Richard Amsel (1947-1985) for the Columbia film.</p>
  • <p>Stage, 1890.</p>
  • <p>Opening day ad 2-15-1938.</p>