Nor'West Drive-In
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Taken on: April 20, 2016
Uploaded on: May 22, 2016
Exposure: 1/860 sec, f/2.2, ISO 32
Camera: Apple iPhone 6
Software: 9.3.1
GPS: 39° 54' 57" N, -105° 2' 13" W
Size: 1.3 MB
Views: 685
Full EXIF: View all
Digital zoom ratio: 1224/329
F number: 11/5
Aperture value: 7983/3509
GPS speed: 0
GPS latitude: 3954577/10
Pixel Y dimension: 2448
Date time original: Wed Apr 20 18:57:41 +0000 2016
Resolution unit: 2
Y resolution: 72
Focal length in 35mm film: 107
Flash: 16
Exposure program: 2
Brightness value: 24652/2537
Subsec time orginal: 869
YCbCr positioning: 1
GPS longitude ref: W
Focal length: 83/20
Date time digitized: Wed Apr 20 18:57:41 +0000 2016
Subsec time digitized: 869
Exposure bias value: 0
Scene capture type: 0
GPS longitude: 10521299/100
Subject area: 1625121717961071
Software: 9.3.1
ISO speed ratings: 32
GPS altitude ref:
Nor-West as it existed on April 20th, 2016: Snackbar/booth building
As an interesting side note, I was accompanied on this trip to take these photos by my personal friend/“surrogate grandma” who happens to be the last operator of the Nor-West as an operating theatre, the 87 year-old Mrs. Margaret “Margie” Holshue. We had spent an enjoyable afternoon over lunch & cruising around the city and on our way home for a quiet evening in, we decided to stop at the Nor-West for a trip down memory lane as well as an opportunity for me to snap some present day photos for CT as I had intended to do for a while. Her and her husband, the late William “Bill” Holshue were iconic and successful figures in Colorado’s movie theatre history, owning and operating several drive-in theatres in the Denver Metro Area from the 1950s to the present day. Although Mrs. Holshue largely entered the movie business through her marriage to her husband (who’s drive-in legacy dates back to his teen years in Ohio), she was always an avid movie fan who attended all of the theatres operating in her time as a little girl in Sterling, Colorado (with vivid memories of the grand opening gala of the currently operating Fox Theare out there) and one of her first jobs was as an usherette while she was a teenager/young lady at Downtown Denver’s historic Paramount Theatre. The Holshues owned/operated the Nor-West from approximately 1985-approximately 1995. While they found it to be successful, well planned/built and enjoyable to operate, the one caveat was that they owned only the business and some equipment; the land and structures were all owned by a separate entity located in South Dakota. They were unable to come to an amicable agreement at the time of their final lease renewal and therefore, closed. This is especially painful to think about as it is certain that the Nor-West would be alive and well to this day if things were different.
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