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Aluminum Marquee Letters

10/1/2014

12 Comments

 
Picture
I’m sitting in my car directly beneath the marquee of what once was our theater. Despite the fact that around fifteen years ago someone chose to cover the marquee — like a badly iced cake — in beige stucco, Although it’s been forty years, I can blink my eyes and see the steel tracks that used to run around three sides, and the erratically flickering St George Theater in curved neon centered above.

My original intent today was to get a cappuccino. The space to the right of the theater — a failing barbershop when the marquee still had its tracks — is now a coffee bar. I’m waiting in my car beneath a red NO PARKING ANYTIME sign, just long enough for the barista to make my double shot. When it’s ready, she gives me the signal. I dash in, slap a five dollar bill on the counter, grab my drink and run back to the car. I’m late to leave for my next appointment, but sitting beneath the marquee for even a brief time is a kind of transport, like falling down a mine-shaft in time. I sip my coffee and tumble.

It’s 1976. Jim, a senior usher, is teetering on a 15-foot ladder on the uphill side of the marquee. A dangerous wind threatens him, as he tries to keep his balance while hanging that most fragile of items, black-painted aluminum marquee letters. It’s Tuesday night. A new movie starts on Wednesday. It’s Jim’s job to spell out, “The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With the Sea,” for all to see. It’s an impossibly long title. He has to substitute an upside-down m for the W, and two capital i’s for the L’s. We inherited our incomplete set of letters — and not much else — from the previous theater manager, who pulled out in the dead of night. At least he left us the means, more or less, to spell out the names of the movies that would break our hearts, week after week, failing, one title at a time, to fill our cavernous auditorium. A gust of wind causes the ladder to sway, and Jim drops a precious capital G. There is no sound quite like the sound of breaking cast aluminum, a surprisingly brittle material. Almost like glass but not quite. What’s a substitute for G?

I shake myself back to the present, press the button that starts my 2014 Volvo, and pull out from under the marquee’s shadow.


12 Comments
Elizabeth Nott
10/1/2014 03:43:03 am

That was the analogue age, I guess…Marquees are electronic message boards now.

Reply
Paulie
10/4/2014 05:00:20 am

For a moment I was in the car with you in front of the theater, I could see the ladder. The sidewalk in front of the theater was on a hill, making the right side of the marquee a much higher climb than the left. The ladder was on the right, a formidable height. A blonde high school kid was next to the ladder, he was quite energetic and a little nervous, as he steadied the ladder at it's base. The wind was blowing, black cast aluminum letters were being passed up the ladder and others were being passed back down. There were a lot of voices and then a quick yell to watch out, as the G came crashing down, some more yelling and voices, much louder this time, followed by a period of calm, I could hear the wind again. The high school kid was at the base of the ladder, steadying it, but cautiously looking up, there was an unusual movement above, the edge of a white panel popped out, the wind quickly gushed underneath extracting it from the marquee. Flipping erratically, the panel fell towards the ground, the high school kid moved quickly, but the edge of the panel caught him on his nose and mouth. There was a sudden pain in my upper lip, I couldn't help but look in the mirror, everything looked fine, good, I smiled. It was a slightly crooked smile, a smile that that has brought unique character and many
compliments to my life ever since that windy day. I am not sure what a substitute for G is, but after watching Kris Kristofferson and Sarah Miles in that film, I certainly figured out why that sailor fell from race with sea.

Reply
dean Thompson
10/7/2014 04:52:39 pm

Paulie I remember that night--you, the high school kid, racing in from the street and asking me for the keys to the letter room.
"What happened? What broke?" I wondered.
"Jimmy dropped a G..the wind took it right out of his hands."
"There's only one more G, Paulie…"
I passed the keys to you, and you started to race to the end of the lobby. You then abruptly stopped, turned with that sly crooked grin and said, "Well, I guess this means we can never book King Kong, ya know?"

Reply
Paulie
10/9/2014 02:46:30 pm

Dean, so good to hear from you. It is amazing how these recollections can come together. In addition to the letter room, I
can now actually remember making a brief fearful ascent up the ladder myself.
Racing was what it was all about. When I first signed on we had one week to get the theater ready. There was so much cleaning, repairing and organizing, it seemed unachievable, but we did it ... a great life lesson. At one point, I remember somebody saying they bought a hundred light bulbs to light the theater, but when reality kicked in, it turned out to be an effort to strategically place the bulbs so the patrons could see where they were going, rather than an effort to light the theater. The preparation seemed eternal, but in the days we had, we overcame the challenge. The film cans arrived, Mel Brooks and his Blazing Saddles, then the projectionist made his debut (another blog topic). The carbon-arc projectors were fired up, and after melting a few frames of film and a little splicing repair we were ready to run, that was Tuesday ... we were ready to start Wednesday !!!

Reply
vicki
10/16/2014 03:12:02 am

Wow! I had forgotten the melted frames….!

Reply
Paulie
10/18/2014 05:17:35 pm

I had no idea what a carbon-arc projector was, the melted frames were awesome. A few of us heard they were going to test the projectors. We took a short break and settled in the balcony. The silver screen lit up, a huge adrenalin rush,our efforts coming to fruition, a couple minutes of pure excitement, and then the Camp Town Lady Scene turned into molten Swiss cheese and settled to the bottom of the screen. The lights went dim. Wow!!!

Diane Levenson
11/28/2014 02:16:08 pm

What memories these comments bring back! I am smiling reading all the way through them. I wish I was on board at the very beginning. I am sooooo looking forward to this read.

Reply
vicki
12/1/2014 11:40:12 am

You've always been on board!

Reply
Paulie
12/1/2014 02:17:57 pm

Ha! Diane .... Soon good to hear from you! Hope all is well. This site has really brought back some old memories ... It's hard to believe it has been 20 years ... Oops I mean 20 years since it has been 20 years.

Reply
Paulie
12/1/2014 02:47:35 pm

OK, so Diane, I remember working a lot in the ticket booth with you ... That was after I was reinvented as a concession person after my short career as an usher. Anyway, one of my favorite ticket booth memories was when I was working the booth and this rather randy post pubescent teen came in and wanted a kiddie ticket. I asked him I how old he was and he said 11. I told him there is no way you are 11,
And he said, well I am big for my age, but I am 11. I then asked him if he was sure he was 11, and he went on swearing on a bunch of people that he was 11 and he wanted a kiddie ticket. So I asked a final time, do you in fact swear you are 11 years old? And he said, man I swear I am 11 years old. So then I told him that I was sorry but I couldn't sell him a ticket because the movie was rated R and he had to be 17 to get in! Ha! I can still see the look on his face as he handed the money over for an adult ticket ... And then his next painful look as I told him I couldn't sell him the ticket because although he was big for his age, I knew in fact that he was only 11. Eventually, I did wind up selling him an adult ticket ... Hey a $1.50 was a $1.50.
,

Reply
Paulie
12/1/2014 02:49:53 pm

Oh yeah, and I agree with Vicki ... You have always been on board!!!

Reply
Diane
5/12/2015 06:46:17 pm

a little off the wall.....but always on board!
I'm so glad I checked back this far to see these added comments. Paulie your comments are great! I get transported everytime. I could read this stuff over and over. Once again.....I am so looking forward to the book...and a reunion for the survivors.

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    Victoria Hallerman

    Author

    Victoria Hallerman is a poet and writer, the author of the upcoming memoir, Starts Wednesday: A Day in the Life of a Movie Palace, based on her experience as a movie palace manager of the St. George Theatre, Staten Island, 1976. As she prepares her book manuscript for publication, she shares early aspects of theater management, including the pleasures and pain of entrepreneurship. This blog is for anyone who enjoys old movie theaters, especially for those who love the palaces as they once were. And a salute to those passionate activists who continue to save and revive the old houses, including the St. George Theatre itself. This blog is updated every Wednesday, the day film always arrived to start the movie theater week.

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