Currently
46°
Fog

Advertisement





Lifestyle

CLASSIFIEDS


Advertisement


Free Ad

Place an ad
in print and online, 24/7 for free, select the Clean Sweep option. Unable to submit Real Estate, Services, and Business Investements at this time.

Get a Subscription


Map the Valley


Subscriber/
Reader Services

Subscribe Now
Contact Customer Service



Opening night at Fox Theatre

Editor's Note: Velma Chase (formerly Curtis, Swan and Hogue), 93, is a resident of the Remington Home for Gracious Living retirement facility. She has submitted this article to The Sentinel as a member of the Remington Ramblers writing group.

I was barely 16 years old when I worked at the new Fox Theatre as an usherette. It was a hurried-up job as they wanted to open before Christmas and introduce the "talkies" with Al Jolson singing in "The Jazz Singer."

There were new Fox Theatres in Fresno, Visalia, Hanford and other places. Ours had a wonderful ceiling with stars and lights and a few bats flying around. There was the head usherette in a white uniform (custom-tailored) under a spotlight who directed people to go to which aisle they needed. There were two girls in their custom-tailored uniforms on each aisle, flightlights in hand, to escort you to your seat. The usherette leaned over and excused herself and told the people how many seats to go and sit.

Everyone came to the movies early to see and be seen. The women wore their fur coats, hats and gloves, and waited in the foyer for the movie to start before going in.

An organist came from Fresno to play the mighty Wurlitzer at intermission. Later, Charlie Bryan, a local fellow, played the organ there and at Johnson's Cafe, a local bar and grill.

Our projectionist was Art Le Cavalier from the old T and D Theater on Seventh Street. We called it the "Old Tough and Dirty." For our efforts we were paid $1 per night and we could see every performance for free. We learned to walk backwards up the aisle so we didn't miss anything. We also had to police the kids who would open the exit doors so their pals could come in for nothing. Mr. Peletier was our boss, a handsome man who caught the eye of Sara Hicks, a ticket seller, and married her.

The ticket-seller sat in a lit-up cage in the front of the theater and was chosen for her looks as well as her knowledge. We had a lot of pretty ones. Leila Watkins was one. She had long blonde hair done up in a bun. There was a lot of entertainment that we enjoyed but the talking movies were so enchanting. The musical movies were so good with Nelson Eddy and Jeannette MacDonald.

I can't remember how many people worked there, but we were the very first ones. I am now 93 years old and never thought this would be my claim to fame. Looking back I am amazed at the changes. Now we are coping with computers - a whole new world.

Mr. Humason rescued the theater and it is a great asset to Courthouse Square. I will never forget the happy memories I have of those days. I think I am the only one left of those in the picture.

(Jan. 28, 2007)

POST A COMMENT

 

Hanfordsentinel.com encourages readers to engage in civil conversation with their neighbors. Comments that are submitted are not posted to the site immediately. They go into a queue to be moderated and may take several hours to be reviewed, particularly if they are posted after normal office hours.

We reserve the right to remove comments in total that violate our code of conduct. If you want to report a violation, please e-mail editor@HanfordSentinel.com

For more information please read our Terms of use, and Rules of the Road.

 


Please log in to post comments
*Member ID:
*Password:
  Forgot Your Password?
 
If you don't have an account you can create one for free by clicking the link below.
CREATE ACCOUNT
The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Hanford Sentinel

Alan G. wrote on Jan 29, 2007 6:58 PM:

" Thank you Velma! Nice piece. It would be great to see more of these from citizens on a regular basis. I hope this is the beginning of a series. The LA Times has a recurring series called "LA Then And Now" where they will pull an article from the archives the coincides with the anniversary of that date. "




Advertisement


HOT TOPICS

> More Hot Topics


SENTINEL BLOGS

Daydream Island by Shannon Milliken

38 Things

I know, I know. It’s been a long time. But I’m back on the blogs again and thanks to my coverage of education I’ve got something to say in light of tomorrow’s holiday. (haha, I rhyme, and get ready, because this is going to be cheesy). So, in school, the teachers typically have their students write [...]

Signposts by Seth Nidever

Faith in the ruins

I interviewed an 85-year-old woman on Monday. I will surely never hear “young man” as much as I did for the hour I talked with Merry Loo. “Young man,” she said. “Go out there and find a wife.” Go out and find a wife. Procreate. Buy a house. Be civic minded. Treat people with fairness, honesty and [...]

Sentinel Online by Josh Parrish

Sentinel Photo Galleries

You might have noticed we just launched our new photo gallery section.  Not only will you get to sift through multiple new galleries every week from our excellent photographers, Apolinar Fonseca and Gary Feinstein, but you will be able to look at local readers’ photos as well. Enthusiasts, parents with a camera, or anyone else can [...]

Going All-in by Richard de Give

Fearful Football Forecast: Week 12

Are some of these leagues getting so predictable that even I can predict them right? I was just doing last week’s totals and can’t believe I again nailed just about all of them. The one miss, the Cowboys, of course. I generally haven’t fared well in these things at other papers, seriously! 13-1 again, now [...]

Signposts by Seth Nidever

The poison of ideology

Ideology is often the bane of this blog. I say this at the risk of alienating some of the most frequent commentators. But it needs to be said: Ideology is one of the great poisons of the modern age, remnants of which survive into the postmodern world we now live in. For evidence, just read some of the [...]

> More Blogs


MORE LOCAL NEWS

Lemoore:

Selma:

Kingsburg:



EMAIL UPDATES

Sign up today to get all your local headlines delivered to your home or work e-mail address, so you don't miss the latest in breaking and local news.
E-Mail:
Daily News Updates
Breaking News Alerts