MOVIES
IN THE PARK- NEW YORK CITY
A portable,
collapsable, outdoor movie theatre "environment" was designed
and built for the New York City Department Cultural Affairs and The
Film Society of Lincoln Center, in association with Signet Productions,
Inc. Sponsored by Miller High Life Beer.
This portable
movie theater environment was designed to be transported and set up in seven
parks in the five boroughs of New York City. The various collapsible
structures were built using aluminum pipes and sheet vinyl for the air
supported structures. The air structures, some shaped like sausages
and others forming kiosks were lit on the inside with fluorescent lights
to produce a giant lightbulb effect. These glowing air structures served
to create the space of a theater environment while also acting as beacons
to attract theatergoers. The seating was generally for about 5,000-7,000
people. This entire theater environment was stored and transported in an
18 foot truck which was also the base for the 18’x24’ screen. It
could be set up by a crew of four in sixty minutes. The programs for
this series of free screenings consisted of various short films made
by young, experimental filmmakers. Interestingly, the film selections
during the inaugural year of the "Movies in the Park" program
were made by a young film student from NYU, Martin Scorsese.
"Our original idea was just to use Central Park, but the city people felt that all boroughs should have representation. We hired John Fulop, an architect and asked him to design a screen for us that’s sort of a moveable drive-in. It should be set up so it can be broken down, disassebled and reassembled all in one day. The whole thing was prefabricated and transported in a rather large truck". Richard Slote; President, Signet Productions
"By
the time we got to the hillside, not far from Fifth Avenue and Seventy
Ninth Street, a big, quiet crowd had gathered, mostly young and mostly
reclining on jackets and newspapers. There was a screen at the bottom
of the hill, with large inflated plastic sausages extending forward
from both sides, like a pair of comforting arms. Silhouettes of trees
surrounding the crowd added to the general feeling of coziness....all
this made us happy, and when the projector started to roll we grew happier
still". THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE
This six
week outdoor summer film program was very popular in New York City for
several years and the idea spawned a series of similar outdoor movie
setups and programs which were designed for other cities in New York
State. For many subsequent years, Buffalo and Albany enjoyed similar
summer screenings in their parks via the "Free Movies, Inc."
program sponsored by the New York State Council on the Arts.
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