I was delighted to come upon this site and see a reference to my grandfather, Claude Mundo, who indeed, did operate both The Rex (called “Your Family Theater”) in Little Rock and also Liberty Theater in North Little Rock.
I called my mom to get additional details and she shared both her memories of those days as well as a wonderful column about my grandfather and his time in the theater business. The article is dated January 16, 1955 from The Arkansas Gazette. It’s written by Carroll McGaughey who had a column called The Arkansas Angle. This particular piece was entitled, “Enthusiast without Portfolio.”
The column refers to my grandparents, Claude Cunningham Mundo and his wife, the former Thelma Mae McDaniel, also of Little Rock, as not only “man and wife” but also “an inseparable business team.”
His column continues:
“I’m the front man,” says Mundo. “I get the ideas and get enthusiastic about them and she handles the details and makes them show a profit. Matter of fact, it was Thelma’s money (she was on a salaried job) that got us into business for ourselves. She had the $50 we needed.”
That $50 bought a controlling interest in the stock in a tiny Main Street theater — a “last run” house that was going broke. Within a year the Mundos had built up its business sufficiently to finance a move across the street to a new location. The address was 213 Main Street.
Westerns, serials, cartoons and comedies made up the major portion of the entertainment bill of the Mundo family enterprise that became known as “Your Family Theater” and the 10 cent tickets for kids made up the major portion of its admission revenue. The rate of profit from that source was not high but Mundo did not let it drop there. He became a specialist in popcorn. These were the years of WWII. Popcorn was in limited supply. Mundo depended upon its profit and was about to be caught short in supply. He ordered it by the carload well in advance. He recalls getting one carload so green you could have made corn whiskey out of it in three days. Instead of shipping it back, he rigged up a dryer in the warehouse and several times a day stirred the grains in the hopper until it was cured.
Popcorn became an obsession with him. When vegetable oil became too scarce to meet the needs, he experimented with a degree of success by mixing in mineral oil, “probably the healthiest thing you can eat: roughage and laxative at the same time.”
“They started calling me the ‘Popcorn King of Little Rock.’ But it paid off when I decided to build a new theater at 106 Main, now called The Main Theater. I took my financial statement to a banker to negotiate a loan. He took one look at my popcorn operation for the year and said that’s all he wanted to see. ‘Any man who can make $10,000 clear profit from a popcorn concession is a good enough risk for me.’ ”
The Mundos built their new theater and moved their headquarters there. They had meanwhile built North Little Rock’s Liberty Theater (313 Main) with 313 seats, selling it subsequently in 1947 at a comfortable profit. In ’49, Mundo decided the future of the small downtown theater was limited and sold his Little Rock theater with the intention of moving to a small town in Texas to continue the business he knew best—operation of a small family theater. He was on his way to Texas in 1950 when the car radio blared out an announcement that the Korean War had forced a government edict prohibiting new starts on construction of places of entertainment. He turned around.
“Thelma and I decided right then that it would be a good idea to retire while we could enjoy middle age and go back to work if it became necessary,” he said.
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Thanks for letting me share! Would love to hear more stories about those days in the theater business in Little Rock!
I was delighted to come upon this site and see a reference to my grandfather, Claude Mundo, who indeed, did operate both The Rex (called “Your Family Theater”) in Little Rock and also Liberty Theater in North Little Rock.
I called my mom to get additional details and she shared both her memories of those days as well as a wonderful column about my grandfather and his time in the theater business. The article is dated January 16, 1955 from The Arkansas Gazette. It’s written by Carroll McGaughey who had a column called The Arkansas Angle. This particular piece was entitled, “Enthusiast without Portfolio.”
The column refers to my grandparents, Claude Cunningham Mundo and his wife, the former Thelma Mae McDaniel, also of Little Rock, as not only “man and wife” but also “an inseparable business team.”
His column continues:
“I’m the front man,” says Mundo. “I get the ideas and get enthusiastic about them and she handles the details and makes them show a profit. Matter of fact, it was Thelma’s money (she was on a salaried job) that got us into business for ourselves. She had the $50 we needed.”
That $50 bought a controlling interest in the stock in a tiny Main Street theater — a “last run” house that was going broke. Within a year the Mundos had built up its business sufficiently to finance a move across the street to a new location. The address was 213 Main Street.
Westerns, serials, cartoons and comedies made up the major portion of the entertainment bill of the Mundo family enterprise that became known as “Your Family Theater” and the 10 cent tickets for kids made up the major portion of its admission revenue. The rate of profit from that source was not high but Mundo did not let it drop there. He became a specialist in popcorn. These were the years of WWII. Popcorn was in limited supply. Mundo depended upon its profit and was about to be caught short in supply. He ordered it by the carload well in advance. He recalls getting one carload so green you could have made corn whiskey out of it in three days. Instead of shipping it back, he rigged up a dryer in the warehouse and several times a day stirred the grains in the hopper until it was cured.
Popcorn became an obsession with him. When vegetable oil became too scarce to meet the needs, he experimented with a degree of success by mixing in mineral oil, “probably the healthiest thing you can eat: roughage and laxative at the same time.”
“They started calling me the ‘Popcorn King of Little Rock.’ But it paid off when I decided to build a new theater at 106 Main, now called The Main Theater. I took my financial statement to a banker to negotiate a loan. He took one look at my popcorn operation for the year and said that’s all he wanted to see. ‘Any man who can make $10,000 clear profit from a popcorn concession is a good enough risk for me.’ ”
The Mundos built their new theater and moved their headquarters there. They had meanwhile built North Little Rock’s Liberty Theater (313 Main) with 313 seats, selling it subsequently in 1947 at a comfortable profit. In ’49, Mundo decided the future of the small downtown theater was limited and sold his Little Rock theater with the intention of moving to a small town in Texas to continue the business he knew best—operation of a small family theater. He was on his way to Texas in 1950 when the car radio blared out an announcement that the Korean War had forced a government edict prohibiting new starts on construction of places of entertainment. He turned around.
“Thelma and I decided right then that it would be a good idea to retire while we could enjoy middle age and go back to work if it became necessary,” he said.
Thanks for letting me share! Would love to hear more stories about those days in the theater business in Little Rock!
Renée Ittner McManus