Ponta DelGada Drive-In

70 Shove Street,
Tiverton, RI 02878

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Ponta DelGada Drive-In

The Ponta DelGada Drive-In opened July 10, 1957 with Tyrone Power in “Abandon Ship!” (aka Seven Waves Away) & Johnny Desmond in “Calypso Heat Wave” (aka Juke Box Jamboree). With a capacity of 900 cars, the drive-in showed films until 1970 when it was shut down until 1979. It closed for good in 1982. The original marquee is used as a club sign while the projection/concession area became a boys' club.

Although generally called the Ponta Drive-In, its full name was “Ponta DelGada” after the capital of the Azores. There are many Portuguese and Azoreans in this area, especially in nearby Fall River, Massachusetts, which borders on North Tiverton. The Ponta DelGada Drive-In may have been the only movie theatre ever in Tiverton, Rhode Island.

Contributed by Gerald A. DeLuca

Recent comments (view all 8 comments)

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on May 9, 2005 at 1:14 pm

I visited the drive-in and took these four photos. The address of the Ponta del Gada is 70 Shove Street, which is at the corner of Walnut Street. It is a block away from the center of North Tiverton, a neighborhood in the town of Tiverton. North Tiverton’s main street is Main Street, which is also Route 138. The drive-in, in its heyday, must have attracted lots of filmgoers from the Tiverton/Fall River area. The screen is no longer there, only the projection/concession building and the entry sign and marquee.
Photo of entrance marquee
Marquee and concession and projection booth
Projection booth exterior
Projection booth interior

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on August 24, 2005 at 10:55 am

Article in The Providence Journal, February 9, 1971:

Tiverton Bars X-Rated Films

The Tiverton Town Council, acting on complaints that X-rated films at a local drive-in theater can be seen from the street by Children, last night passed an ordinance to ban such films in the town.

Councilmen also received petitions signed by 961 residents against the showing of X-rated films. The theatre is the Ponta Del Gada Drive-In on Shove Street, the town’s only movie theater.

After being advised that the ordinance probably would not survive a court test, the council unanimously directed town solicitor William B. Sullivan to draft another ordinance that would require the licensing of films shown in the town.

A mother who attended the meeting, Mrs. David Silvia of 8 Clement Street, said her children could see the films at the drive-in from the kitchen window of the home. “It’s a disgrace,” she said.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on June 9, 2010 at 10:03 pm

Boxoffice of July 27, 1957, said that the Ponta Delgada Drive-In had opened at North Tiverton on July 9. The 900-car situation was owned by Hyman E. Lepes and Norman Zalkin. The first movie shown was “Amazon Ship.”

Ponta Delgada is apparently the proper form for this Portuguese name, by the way, regardless of how The Providence Journal presents it. Delgada is all one word on the marquee, as well.

slopes0213
slopes0213 on February 17, 2012 at 4:06 pm

I grew up directly across the street (71 Shove) from 1973 until long after the screen went dark in 1982. I used to watch movies from my window, or from out in my yard until they planted trees and put up higher fences. Us kids always found a way to enjoy the movies though! It was a predominantly Portuguese neighborhood, close knit. The old Ponta club was across the street where feasts were held every summer. The weekend traffic to the theater back in its heyday would fill Shove St. some evenings.. Great memories…

Kenmore
Kenmore on December 12, 2017 at 10:45 am

The projection booth/concession stand is gone. It appears to have been removed by 2011.

Also, while the Google street view of the marquee taken in 2012 shows it to be intact, the satellite view which was taken more recently shows some substantial changes. So, the marquee may look quite different today, assuming it is still standing.

davidcoppock
davidcoppock on November 8, 2020 at 12:19 am

Opened on 10/7/1957 with “Abandon ship” and “Calypso heatwave”.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on July 30, 2021 at 8:56 am

Google Maps shows that the location now houses the Atlantic Sports Bar and Restaurant and Gillett’s Mixed Martial Arts Academy in a single new building. All signs of the former drive-in seem to have disappeared.

kennerado
kennerado on July 31, 2021 at 9:47 am

The 2019 street view shows the bottom half of the marquee is still being used for the Atlantic Restaurant. The top arrow part with the drive-in name is gone.

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