THE CURTAIN RISES; LEGENDARY SILENT MOVIE THEATER REBORN.Byline: Bob Strauss Film Writer The Silent Movie Theatre refuses to, well, go silently into that good night. The movie house, at 611 N. Fairfax Ave. in Hollywood, is about to come back to life, reopening Reopening Treasury offerings of additional amounts of outstanding issues, rather than an entirely new issue. A reopened issue will always have the same maturity date, CUSIP number, and interest rate as the original issue. Friday with an invitation-only screening of Charlie Chaplin's classic ``Modern Times'' and, on Sunday, beginning its regular public schedule with matinee mat·i·nee or mat·i·née n. An entertainment, such as a dramatic performance or movie, presented in the daytime, usually in the afternoon. and evening shows of the film. This will be the third incarnation incarnation, the assumption of human form by a god, an idea common in religion. In early times the idea was expressed in the belief that certain living men, often kings or priests, were divine incarnations. of the only theater in the country dedicated to our silent movie heritage. The original operation was run by husband-and-wife team John and Dorothy Hampton from 1942 through 1979. In 1991, following John's death from cancer, thought to be caused by the chemicals he used to preserve his vast collection of classic films, the theater was reopened by family friend Laurence Austin. Austin was murdered at the theater on January 17, 1997, by a man hired by his longtime companion, James Van Sickle sick·le v. 1. To cut with a sickle. 2. To deform a red blood cell into an abnormal crescent shape. 3. To assume an abnormal crescent shape. Used of red blood cells. . The venue was immediately shuttered shut·ter n. 1. One that shuts, as: a. A hinged cover or screen for a window, usually fitted with louvers. b. , and the 1,500-film collection it thrived on was auctioned off in May of this year. That sale seemed to seal the institution's fate for good. And that's probably what would have happened, except for the enthusiasm of Charlie Lustman. A 34-year-old L.A. native who's spent most of his adult life composing music in such far-flung locales as Costa Rica Costa Rica (kŏs`tə rē`kə), officially Republic of Costa Rica, republic (2005 est. pop. 4,016,000), 19,575 sq mi (50,700 sq km), Central America. and Copenhagen, he was on a visit back home - and on his way to get a falafel fa·la·fel or fe·la·fel n. 1. Ground spiced chickpeas shaped into balls and fried. 2. A sandwich filled with such a mixture. , actually - when he noticed the dark theater's weathered facade (which has since been replaced by a very snazzy snaz·zy adj. snaz·zi·er, snaz·zi·est Slang Fashionable or flashy. [Origin unknown.] snaz , neon-and-bulb art-deco marquee). ``I was heading down Fairfax and I saw this For Sale sign outside,'' Lustman recalls. ``I thought, `Silent Movie - that's kind of interesting.' I walked through the doorway and saw all of the pictures that were still on the walls, and immediately I was taken. This was like a shrine for silent film. Now, I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. silent film, but of course I know the stars. Then it hit me that this art form was this century's art form, and these people on the walls were its pioneers. ``I just thought this would be so cool, to get involved in something that was part of this early culture, and of the city of L.A. So I called a few people who I knew had money and asked them how they felt about investing in a silent movie theater. They'd go, `You've got to be kidding me. How are you going to get people to go see old silent movies?' ``I convinced them that this had a lot of versatility - don't ask me how, but I did - and then started the renovation process to bring it back to life.'' Much has been done to make the 222-seat theater a haven for film lovers. A new screen and two lovingly restored, 500-watt Super Simplex xenon xenon (zē`nŏn) [Gr.,=strange], gaseous chemical element; symbol Xe; at. no. 54; at. wt. 131.29; m.p. −111.9°C;; b.p. −107.1°C;; density 5.86 grams per liter at STP; valence usually 0. projectors have been installed, as has a 20-by-6-foot stage for live performances that can be removed to accommodate an eight-piece music ensemble. There's now an upstairs cappucino bar and a back patio, where fans will be able to meet and discuss the evening's show, starting at 6 p.m. and going until midnight. But where will those 8 p.m. shows come from? When Butterfield's auctioned off the Hampton collection in May, Lustman was able to buy the Douglas Fairbanks action features, but little else. Fortunately, major studios and such organizations as Ted Turner's massive film library have been restoring prints for video and broadcast in recent years; between those sources and supportive private collectors, Lustman expects to be able to program an ambitious series of retrospectives. Initially, he's sticking with the tried and true: Chaplin features for the next couple of weekends, Fairbanks and Mary Pickford on weekdays, a week of Buster Keaton Noun 1. Buster Keaton - United States comedian and actor in silent films noted for his acrobatic skills and deadpan face (1895-1966) Joseph Francis Keaton, Keaton comedies in December, ``King of Kings'' and ``The Bishop's Wife'' for Christmas. Tuesdays will be regularly devoted to sound films released before 1950: ``The Jazz Singer,'' Laurel & Hardy's ``Flying Deuces,'' the Marx Brothers' ``Duck Soup'' and John Ford's World War II classic ``They Were Expendable'' are the November entries. Some may consider the presence of recorded dialogue in the silent movie shrine a tacit admission that the audience indeed may not be that big for silent movies these days. Then again, that's what investors told the Hamptons in 1942, and they made a go of it for more than 35 years. And Lustman is confident that the same thing that happened to him can happen to people his age and younger. ``We're gonna gon·na Informal Contraction of going to: We're gonna win today. get the audience that's left to come back and we're going to create an entirely new audience,'' he says. ``I'm young compared to most silent film fans. I never knew about this and the more I learn about it, the more I love it. ``It's just like the Van Gogh show at LACMA LACMA Los Angeles County Museum of Art LACMA Los Angeles County Medical Association LACMA Latin American and Caribbean Movers Association . Young and old went to see the Old Master's art. Well, it's the same thing (with film), and that's how we're marketing the theater. Come see the art, it's a museum, they're movies! We all love movies - come see the originals.'' CAPTION(S): Photo Photo: Charlie Chaplin's classic ``Modern Times'' will screen this weekend to mark the reopening of the Silent Movie Theatre in Hollywood. |
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