Bengies Drive-In
3417 Eastern Boulevard,
Middle River,
MD
21220
6 people favorited this theater
Related Websites
Bengies Drive-In Theatre (Official)
Additional Info
Architects: Jack K. Vogel
Functions: Movies (First Run)
Phone Numbers:
Box Office:
410.687.5627
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News About This Theater
- Oct 12, 2009 — In Baltimore, Bengie's Drive-In keeps its reels turning
Bengies Drive-In opened on June 6, 1956. The screen is 120 feet by 52 feet and is the biggest theatre screen remaining in the USA or North America. At opening it had a capacity for 1,000 cars. There was also an enclosed seating area for 60 walk-ins. The current capacity is for 750 cars.
Designed by architectural engineer Jack K. Vogal for the Vogal Theatre chain. He designed and built many drive-in’s in the North-east US and also built the first drive-in theatre in South America, the Auto-Cine Drive-In in Lima, Peru in around 1954.
He designed and built all three drive-in’s in the Vogal Circuit, the other two being:
The Dublin Drive-In in Dublin (Columbus) OH
Salem Drive-In, Salem, OH
He was the architect for:
Winter Drive-In, Wintersville, OH (still existing)
and the following which have been demolished:
Atlantic Drive-In, Atlantic City, NJ
Edmonson Drive-In, Baltimore, MD
Frontier Drive-In, Annapolis, MD
Beltsville Drive-In, Beltsville, MD
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Recent comments (view all 19 comments)
Picture of the screen:
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Looks like a stiff wind could knock this thing down…..
The owner of the BIG-MO Drive-in does the same thing at intermission,gets on and yaks and yaks and yaks.Give me a break,but the BIG-MO; it is a mom and pop operation.
How dare some one talk over a 3 Stooges short. Unless it had Joe in the short.
I have some current photos of the outside of the theater on my blog, as well as some information! I agree with some of the posts though, I was not a fan of the commentary over the credits and film shorts.
http://driveinadventures.wordpress.com/2014/01/21/bengies-drive-in-theatre/
The Bengies has made the conversion to digital projection.
It’s strange that the summary here, at least partially written by “D. Edward Vogal”, spells that last name consistently with an A. Every other reference I can find, including CNN, the Baltimore Sun, his signature at the end of a lengthy complaint about the Baltimore Sun, and even the Whois record for Bengies.com – they all spell that name Vogel with an E.
FWIW, its first appearance in the International Motion Picture Almanac was the 1957 edition, in which it was listed in Middle River, spelled as Bengie’s, capacity 585, owner Frog Mortar Corp. That listing stayed the same through 1966.
During the period (at least 1969-76) when the IMPA didn’t include owners, it became Bengies (no apostrophe) in Baltimore, capacity 750. In 1978-88, the listing returned to Middle River, owner Vogel, capacity 600.
This Drive-In Is One Of The Survivors That Still Has The “Welcome To The Bengies Drive-In” Snipe From The 1950s Today.
@archie1959 true joe was the worst of the three stooges.
The opening date seems a bit iffy, however if that was correct then the opening films were “White Feather” and “The Warriors” (Errol Flynn).
The April 6, 1957 issue of Boxoffice ran a three-page article on Bengies. It focused on architectural engineer Jack K. Vogel’s design, “a unique contribution to outdoor movies”, especially of the concession stand. It included plenty of diagrams and photos, including small photos of the box office and the then-humble marquee.