Public Domain |
By Jane Feehan
The opening was a big event for the town; Mayors Turbeville of Oakland Park, Haymaker and Schwartz of Hollywood, Bland of Pompano, and Frost of Dania also participated in the celebration. The Fort Lauderdale High School band played and the entire inaugural program was recorded for playback on radio station WFTL. The feature movie was Centennial Summer. Refreshments were delivered at cars upon signal.
The drive-in movie business began with the opening of the first theater June 6, 1933 in Camden, NJ. Tickets were 25 cents per vehicle and 25 cents per person. By 1948, 820 drive-ins were open
throughout the country. According to the United Drive-In Theater Owners Association, the peak year for drive-ins was 1958 when 4063 were showing movies. By that time, they were nicknamed “passion pits” for known back seat activities.
First drive-in theater NJ 1933 Public Domain (Wikipedia) |
throughout the country. According to the United Drive-In Theater Owners Association, the peak year for drive-ins was 1958 when 4063 were showing movies. By that time, they were nicknamed “passion pits” for known back seat activities.
As of October, 2019 UDITOA.org reports 305 open air theaters remain in the U.S. Seven drive-ins with a total of 25 screens, operate in Florida. In Fort Lauderdale, the Thunderbird or Swap Shop Drive-In Theater still packs them in on West Sunrise Boulevard.
Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 14, 1948
Christian Science Monitor, June 6, 2012
United Drive-In Theater Owners Association at www.uditoa.org
Wikipedia
Tags: Fort Lauderdale in the 1940s, Fort Lauderdale history, Drive-in theater Fort Lauderdale, drive-in theater history, film industry researcher