You mean..... Claude can be played by Ralph Bellamy in the film version of MOPO?

Phil



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: David Kusumoto 
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU 
  Sent: Sunday, June 21, 2009 6:55 PM
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEW YORK THEATERS


  These are all great, great stories, hilarious, esp. Joe B.'s story about the 
revival house filled with unruly patrons, i.e., "You bitches just have NO 
RESPECT!!"  And yes, as far as Claude Litton goes, as I've said many times, 
he's SO DIFFERENT from his Internet persona; I've always said that Claude 
reminds me of a gentle, respectful and protective sage that you'd find in any 
RKO movie.  Meanwhile, FRANC is spot on about Mamma Leone's.  My FIRST visit to 
NY many years ago -- yup, I was one of those idiots who ATE that spaghetti with 
ketchup sauce and immediately got the dry heaves, I'm not joking.  Just awful, 
a big rip-off.  It reminds me of that Woody Allen joke, "the food in this place 
is terrible!"  "I know, and such small portions."
   
  I'm in NY often for both business and for fun -- but what always gets me is 
this:  why do most New Yorkers move away?  The weather?  What?  Too expensive?  
NY isn't JUST Manhattan as some would like you to believe.  I NEVER run out of 
things to do; for ex., on a lark, I rode the train to visit Jackie Robinson's 
grave a few years ago and it was deserted.  After decades of lifting weights, 
hiking trails and what not, NYC permanently transformed me into an urban 
mind-set w/its arts, films, books, diversity and all that jazz, etc.  Greatest 
city in the world and I've been almost everywhere.  Yet I know pals in Brooklyn 
and in Manhattan -- who have NEVER walked across their own spectacular Brooklyn 
Bridge.  That cracks me up.  The only thing preventing me from moving east is 
the big family I married into here.  I guess it's analogous to my not 
appreciating the self-proclaimed "world famous" San Diego Zoo; but hell, at 
least I can say that I've traipsed through it a few times.  -d.
   
  -----Original Message----- 
  Date: Sat, 20 Jun 2009 20:17:45 -0400
  From: fdav...@verizon.net
  Subject: Re: NEW YORK THEATERS
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU


  Someone in Manhattan bought the remnants of an old Horn and Hardart and 
opened one in the early 90s in the East 50s but it wasn't the same at all. They 
used the automat dispensers for decoration only. They lines the walls but 
didn't work. The novelty wore off quickly and the restaurant folded. The 
building that the H&H was in on W57th Street still exists and is currently 
being used by a Seafood restaurant. 

  Momma Leone's served spaghetti with Ketchup sauce to gullible tourists on 
theatre packages up until the early 90s also. Being of Italian descent, I 
resented that restaurant and what they called Italian-American food. Luckily 
that's one is gone for good. FRANC 
  -----Original Message-----
  From: MoPo List [mailto:mop...@listserv.american.edu] On Behalf Of Richard 
Halegua Comic Art
  Sent: Saturday, June 20, 2009 5:26 PM
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEW YORK THEATERS


  i was trying to remember the name of Momma Leone's
  it wasn't my favorite Italian joint, being uptown and all, but I used to go 
there from time to time if we couldn't go to Little Italy

  the Horn & Hardart I remember best is the one that was across from Grand 
Central.. Tads was a few doors down

  I think that H&H was open until the early 80s, or at least until the late 70s


  At 02:15 PM 6/20/2009, Richard Del Belso wrote:


  You're right, Rich...it was called Horn and Hardart. there was even one on 
57th Street, near 6th Avenue.  I had forgotten about Tad's...perhaps that's for 
the best.  does anyone remember the Brass Rail, or Mamma Leone's besides me?  I 
used to eat there a lot ( again...a lot of food, for cheap) even though there 
weren't any movie posters there.  

  Richard Del Belso
    
  -----Original Message-----

  Date: Sat, 20 Jun 2009 12:55:46 -0700
  From: sa...@comic-art.com
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEW YORK THEATERS
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU

  yeah there were a few of those.
  One used to be right by Grand Central Station
  Horn & Hardart's I want to say was the name.....

  they were famous in the 1930s as places where out of work people would go in 
and at the time you could get a cup of hot water without having to pay first. 
Ketchup & crackers were still available on the condiments counter & they would 
put ketchup in the hot water, stir it up and make tomato soup and then crumble 
the crackers into it. I think you were able to do this into the 1960s before 
they changed it so you had to pay first so they would give you a cup and the 
crackers were taken off the counter

  I can't remember what 1930s movie showed this practice

  you know what folks.. reminiscing can be fun!!!

  Rich

  At 12:43 PM 6/20/2009, Roland Lataille wrote:


    Hey,


    I remember going to a restaurant and you put coins in a slot, opened the 
little glass door and took out a sandwich or a piece of cake. What were those 
called?

    --- On Sat, 6/20/09, Richard Halegua Comic Art sa...@comic-art.com wrote: 

    From: Richard Halegua Comic Art sa...@comic-art.com   
    Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEW YORK THEATERS 
    To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU   
    Date: Saturday, June 20, 2009, 3:18 PM

     
    Times Square was one of the most interesting places on Earth for many 
years.  I always liked it because it was an anachronism of life..  in the 
winter a limousine could be dropping off a guy in $1000 tailored suit with a 
fur-coated babe on each arm and they might have to step over a homeless guy 
sleeping on the subway grating (warm air comes up through the gratings), there 
would be a couple society ladies headed up to Broadway to see a play and then a 
couple hookers rousting a guy while a couple dopers would be buying from a 
pusher. Every kind of person you could imagine was standing on that street 
trying to make plans

    One of the most obvious places was  a pinball & later video game parlor 
called Fascination and Melody Burlesque was down the street.  There were 
several theatres showing Kung-Fu flicks and to this day I have never been able 
to find a copy of one of my favorites - Mad Monkey Kung-Fu. I remember seeing 
it on a double bill with the 12 Drunken Masters  In front of some of the 
theatres were hawkers trying to get you in and there was the porno bookstore on 
ground level that had the private booths upstairs. All the babes would be 
advertising to get you to walk into "their booth" for a show. I remember 
running into a comic book dealer friend up there once and even though he was a 
buddy, he was so embarassed he left almost immediately

    There was a Howard Johnsons and if I remember correctly Dempsey's too. I 
think Dempseys had a sign that told you how great their pie was and there was a 
Nathan's hot dogs joint. I was surprised on more than one occasion to see Carol 
Channing, Walter Cronkite (Walter is about to take his last breath folks) or 
other actors there. Once - and this would be specifically be 1978 because of 
the girlfriend I was with - we were having milkshakes and Will Geer sat down at 
our table (Nathan's had those long 16 people tables). I asked him for his 
autograph and he said "Sure. Just let me finish my hot dog". 

    I know I had seen teh flea circus that Richard Del Belso mentioned, but I 
was pretty young. Maybe 5-6, so I don't recall any of it sadly, all of this is 
gone now.. Left in our collective memories which will also be gone to the black 
hole at some point and all that will remain will be pictures.  I lived in 
Queens and the theatre I most often went to as a kid & young teen was the 
Lefferts Theatre on Lefferts Boulevard and 120th street. I remember seeing a 
double bill Hard Day's Night & HELP! in 1965. I was with my 2 brothers (I was 
8, my brothers 10 & 11). Before the movie they had the Dave Clark 5 short, 
Manfred Mann and some others and outside they had scads of posters including 
the billboard on the side of the building that was 120th st. The Beatles heads 
were enormous. They also had freebies like a beatles wig and stuff. It was a 
big weekend and the theatre was jam packed and if I remember correctly, it was 
just 75 cents!! We were there all day long. Nobody chased us out after the 
first feature. Not too long ago I was able to score the Dave Clark 5 1sh that 
was displayed. The theatre was great - they had stills and posters and lobby 
cards all over the outside and on the inside too.

    the Lefferts was a fun theatre too. Saturdays always had matinees and they 
may have been just a quarter. Always a double bill, cartoons, in the mid-60s 
they showed the Superman, Batman, Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials - one 
episode of Batman and Supe or later Flash & Buck each week and you got a little 
wallet card they would punch out. If you saw episodes 1-11, you got to see 
episode 12 for free (I guess that meant we got in free that week period)

    across the street and down a block or so was Uncle Jack's toy shop. I 
bought all the Aurora monster kits there and the old man was as nice as anyone 
you could meet. If he didn't have the toy or model you wanted, he would order 
it for you for a 10 cent deposit and seeing as he didn't have the Bride of 
Frankenstein model kit in stock, I ordered that one. Sometime in the late 60s I 
remember the shop was closed for a few days because a couple junkies had robbed 
& beaten him

    also, Bruce is right.. at 8-9-10-11, we used to get on the subway by 
ourselves and go all the way to Manhattan. When I was 9 I took the trains all 
the way up to the Bronx - by myself - with $100 cash that I had made selling 
comics - to go to a guy's house who was a friend of Gary Dolgoff so I could buy 
early Marvels. I came back - again, all by myself - with 2 shopping bags full 
of comics. I don't think anyone bothered me. I also used to take the trains 
regularly at that age to go to the Museum of Natural History on 79th street in 
Manhattan because I was in love with dinosaurs and they had the best exhibit of 
fossils and the rooms with live lizards were totally kick-ass.


    NYC was lots of fun back in those days, but I haven't been back since 1992 
or 93, even though I've been planning on going for a visit for some years. The 
first place I'm going to head to os Katz's Delicatessen on Houston St and have 
some corn beef, some of their hand made hotdogs and a potato kanish

    Rich


  At 08:03 AM 6/20/2009, Bruce Hershenson wrote: 
  Richard 
   
  One of the great disappointments of my childhood was when my uncle (a weird 
guy and the highlight of my childhood) promised to take me to HUBERT'S FLEA 
CIRCUS. It must have been around 1964 or 1965 when I was around 11 or 12. 
   
  I was really excited, and I met him at Penn Station (my parents used to let 
the 11 year old me go by myself to Manhattan, where strikes me as crazy in 
retrospect), and we went to Times Square, and if I remember right it was in the 
basement of some building, but the flea circus was gone (although the sign was 
still there). 
   
  So I never did get to see those trained fleas! 
   
  Bruce

   
  On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 9:40 AM, Richard Del Belso <rdel...@msn.com > wrote: 
   
  Bruce, claude... 
  The "art house" on 42nd street back in the day was called the Apollo. I used 
to go there late at night, after doing my college homework, and see double 
bills of old Ingmar Bergman movies, like THE NAKED NIGHT and MONIKA. It  was a 
"grind house'..just kept repeating the shows all day and all night. The Theater 
is still there but It has been converted into a legitimate playhouse now, under 
a different name, repudiating its somewhat unsavory past. So has the theater 
next door, the Victory. 
  Across the street is the New Amsterdam , which was originally used as a legit 
theater for the Ziegfeld Follies. When I was in college, it had fallen into 
disrepair and was just another grind house showing third-run American movies 
and exploitation films...but signs of its former glory were still visible. 
After almost falling apart, the theater was beautifully restored and the 
musical version of THE LION KING was installed there. I think disney put up a 
lot of the money for the restoration, as they did in LA for the El Capitan. 
  Around 1960, i once went down to the penny arcade on the corner of 42nd St. 
and Broadway to see the flea circus. Yes, it was a real flea circus (HUBERT'S 
FLEA CIRCUS) where the guy had put thin-stretched strands of gold wire around 
the necks of these tiny fleas, which he kept in a box filled with cotton 
wadding. he could pick them up by the wire, and then attach them to toy 
chariots to stage a chariot race, or turn them upside down and place balsa wood 
balls on their legs to stage a 'who can kick the ball farthest" contest. he 
also had cut out tiny paper triangular costumes in different colors and placed 
one over each flea. the fleas wold then naturally start to jump, and the 
costumes would wriggle, which, when set to music, became 'the dancing fleas". 
The cost for this never-to-be-forgotten display of weirdness? One quarter! 
  Ah, New York, New York. I'm with Claude...a total New York-o-phile. but I had 
to move to LA in 1976, and I have to admit it's pretty nice there, 
too...Academy screening are one of the nicest things about life here. 
  ciao for now... 
    Richard


  Richard Del Belso

   
  -----Original Message-----  
  Date: Sat, 20 Jun 2009 09:32:37 -0400 
  From: twoni...@aol.com 
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEW YORK THEATERS 
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU 
  In the 70's there were a huge amount of those theaters and peep shows in that 
area.  This went from 8th Ave to 6th Ave and from 40th St to 50th St.  There 
were also a huge amount of street walkers hanging around all the theaters and 
they were very dangerous if you were not polite.  I remember when one man was 
approached and instead of saying "no thanks" called her a whore.  She stabbed 
him right in broad daylight. 
   
  In my college years I went to a theater on 86th St. where they only showed 
films in German.  I used to go on Fridays when classes ended early.  86th St.  
was known as Germantown.  We went to a famous German restaurant there when I 
graduated from law school.  I don't recall the name.  The real estate boom also 
killed the area and the developers moved in.  Today it hardly exists.  This is 
a part of town that I really miss. 
   
  Claude 
   
  In a message dated 6/20/2009 9:21:22 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
brucehershen...@gmail.com writes: 
  In my youth they would still show some classic movies in the falling down 
Times Square theaters. I think the admission was like $1.75. 
   
  I remember once I went to some classic movie, and a scary guy was hanging by 
the ticket booth. I gave $2 to the ticket taker, and was handed a quarter back, 
and the scary guy said, "Give me the quarter". I just kept walking and he said, 
"Give me the quarter or I'll kill you"! 
   
  I kept walking, and he said, "I am going to wait right here, and whenever you 
come out, I will kill you." 
   
  I went in and watched the movie, and the whole time I kept thinking of that 
guy. When it was over I went out, and he was nowhere to be seen.  If that was 
the present day, I would give him the quarter! 
   
  Bruce 
  On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 7:47 AM, Claude Litton <twoni...@aol.com > wrote: 
  I have seen them all since I was 17 years old.  I went to college and law 
school in New York City and have spent my working life there.   I have walked 
the streets of NYC for over 50 years and have always been thrilled with 
everything.  I have been involved with NYC real estate all these years and 
still love it.   I went to NYU in Greenwich Village and my friends and I  used 
to peek in at the old burlesque theaters  (before we got kicked out) and got to 
the movies in virtually every theater already mentioned in other emails (so I 
wont repeat them).  I remember all the old decrepit Times Square theaters 
before they cleaned up the area.  The police used to walk 4 abreast because the 
area was so dangerous and I am speaking about daylight hours, not just at 
night. 
   
  I remember going to the theaters on 57th street when one of them was an art 
theater and the other was showing xxx films.   I remember Deep Throat and the 
Devil In Miss Jones playing for many years as a double bill.  The Paris Theater 
showed art films for many, many years before the real estate got too valuable 
and getting old movies on VHS destroyed the market for these theaters. 
   
  My office is at 295 Fifth Avenue across from the Empire State Building and if 
anyone is in NYC they are welcome to visit.  I have over 50 movie posters 
framed in my office suite including 6 of my Chan 3 sheets.  Joe Bonelli stopped 
in last year and we had a great time.  Just email me in advance to make certain 
I am in  because I don't work as many hours as I did when I was younger.  I 
stopped going to work on Fridays 9 years ago and leave at 2 pm. 
   
  Claude Litton 
   
   
  In a message dated 6/20/2009 3:06:34 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
ghostsandghoul...@verizon.net writes: 
  I was lucky enough to be in NYC when HORROR OF DRACULA had just opened at the 
Marfair Theater so I got to see the hugh Times Square wrap-around billboard 
poster above the theater.  I also got to see the display of the fiends (in a 
hugh fish tank) from FIEND WITHOUT A FACE located right in front of the theater 
in Times Square.  Anybody else in our group see these fantastic advertising  
displays????   Larry Springer

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