I was A Teenage Projectionist. (original) (raw)
TE: What was the first movie you remember seeing as a boy?
Ned: "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine."
TE: Since you are a Projectionist, we have to ask if you saw the Italian movie Cinema Paradiso.
Ned: "Yes. A fine movie. I liked it a lot."
TE: How did you become a projectionist? Were you in the high school adio-visual department?
Ned: "No, I was best friends with the theater owner's son. I started out helping out in the concession booth, but when the owner needed someone to show the movies - I was right there."
TE: Were there any memorable incidents involving the audience that you remember?
Ned: (laughing) "Well, I remember when the Alamo with John Wayne was playing back in 1960. The theater was still segregated back then. The white kids sat to one side and the Mexican-American kids sat on the other. The Blacks had the balcony all to themselves. When the fighting (on the screen) broke out - there was cheering from the whites when a Mexican soldier was killed - and cheering from the Mexican-American kids whenever an Anglo was killed. Popcorn and cups were thrown from one side to the other - but that was about it. The Black kids (who didn't take one side or the other) were yelling too - for the other groups to sit down."
TE: What was it like at the Drive-In?
Ned: "The action in the audience there was a little different. There were a lot of cars with steamed up windows - if you know what I mean. I do recall one winter day when we were scheduled to show the Jayne Mansfield film Playgirl After Dark. The weatherman had predicted a Norther and the owner was going to cancel the show for that performance. I wanted to see the movie, too - so I convinced him that the audience would show - despite the weather advisory. And show up they did. Jayne appeared on screen - looking a little under-dressed for the snow and sleet that was coming in. The audience ran their engines to use their heaters - and by the time it was over - no one could leave. They had either run out of gas - or their car was frozen in place by the frozen slush."
"A similar thing happened when we showed the movie Flipper. A less severe snow blew in - and the abundant blues and greens of the ocean were cast out from the projector - reflecting on the driven snow. The audience had a psychedelic experience - even before anyone knew what one was."
TE: What were your first experiences in Hollywood?
Ned: "Well, I have to say that I got over being star-struck pretty quick. As a Projectionist - I was present at many of the gala premieres - and was often in the lobby when many of the stars were arriving."
TE: Who did you see?
Ned: "On one occassion I was sitting in the lobby of Grauman's Chinese. At that time I was working there two or three times a week. Anyway, I was talking with a man who had once managed the Paramount Theater in NYC. His claim to fame was that his theater hosted the Premier for Elvis' first movie Love Me Tender. He was an older fellow - but unmistakably a New Yorker. As we talked, Katheryn Hepburn walked in with Roddy McDowell. The pair walked right in front of us - and Katheryn Hepburn said in her unmistakable dramatic way: "Ah, the smell of popcorn!" Our eyes followed them though the doors to the auditorium and my friend leaned over to me and said: "Yeah, she may like to smell it, but you notice she didn't buy any."
TE: Being a Private Projectionist sounds like it would've gone out of fashion a long time ago.
Ned: "Actually, you would be surprised. A lot of stars have private theaters. People like ----------. -----------, and -------------.. There's no getting around it - film is superior to digital. When there's a road show performance or a priemere of a restored 70 mm movie, and it's shown as it was intended - on a big screen - a lot of industry people might go into the movie singing the praises of digital - but they come out as "believers" of film.
A digital projector might cost as much as $150,000 - much more than a film projector. Theaters find it hard to justify the expense - especially when the picture becomes pixilated. A lot of those that afford it are switching back."
TE: Thanks for taking the time to share your stories and let us know the ordering information for your book of vintage calendars.
Ned: "It was my pleasure and I will do that. Let me know when the interview will appear, I'll look forward to seeing it published in your magazine."
FINIS
Mr. Ned Fairbairn's website
http://home.mindspring.com/\~starmale/