El Rancho Drive-In
397 E. Evan Hewes Highway,
El Centro,
CA
92243
397 E. Evan Hewes Highway,
El Centro,
CA
92243
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Additional Info
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Opened 1950, closed 1964. Now the Movies Imperial multiplex.
Contributed by
James Monroe
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Recent comments (view all 2 comments)
The 1948-49 Theatre Catalog listed the El Rancho with a capacity of 350, owner John Armm, status “CLOSED”. But the inaugural Motion Picture Almanac list in 1950-51 had the owner as R. C. Jones, capacity 400, and by implication, open again. That’s the way the MPA listed it until 1966, when it fell off the list.
A local historian was quoted in El Centro’s Imperial Valley Press on Feb. 27, 2002 that the drive-in “was on Highway 111 south of old Highway 80, about where the Texaco truck stop is now.”
There’s a 1953 aerial of the drive-in at that location that shows someone’s tiny farm slicing through the back of the ramp arcs all the way to the projection booth, splitting the back half into west and north fields though the rest of the ramps and the screen are intact. Did it really operate that way for over a decade? Weird!
I think that the El Rancho really ought to listed under El Centro, since it was just one mile east of the city limits with an approximate address of 397 E Evan Hewes Hwy, El Centro, CA 92243.
Boxoffice, Feb. 18, 1950: “PALM SPRINGS, CALIF. – The El Rancho Drive-In has been reopened by lessee Reg C. Jones after completion of a five-week remodeling program. Jones, a Palm Springs contractor, has rehabilitated the airer, erecting a new snack bar building, paving the ramps, painting the screen and numerous other improvements. The drive-in, located on Highway 111 on the corner of Highway 80, will be managed by Frank Millan, with Reba Perry assisting him.”
All that work for nothing? The June 10, 1950 issue of BoxOffice had a note of California closings including “Redge Joneses' El Rancho Drive-In, a 500-car operation in El Centro. Poor business was given as reason for the shutterings.”