The drive-in movie stages a comeback in U.S. in coronavirus era
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[May 23, 2020]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - The drive-in movie, dismissed
by many as a relic of an earlier time in America, is making a comeback
as entertainment seemingly designed for the coronavirus era.
Beth Wilson, who owns the Warwick Drive-in about an hour's drive from
Manhattan, says it has been sold out since May 15, the first day
drive-ins were allowed to operate under New York's reopening plan.
The drive-in has struck a chord with Americans who have been largely
confined to their homes since March watching the death toll from
COVID-19 accumulate on their TV screens.
Customers come "just to be out and for some form of entertainment that
is not streaming on their TV," said Wilson, adding she hopes the Warwick
Drive-In can help people reconnect. "I just want to see their happiness,
their well-being."
The drive-in experience is virtually tailor-made for the pandemic.
Patrons control their close social interactions and any contact with
other people happens outdoors, which is seen as lower risk for infection
than indoors.
The Four Brothers Drive-In in Amenia, New York, which like Warwick has
halved its capacity to put more distance between cars, is selling into
next week after running out of tickets for the Memorial Day weekend.
"It's a lot of first-time people that are inquiring and coming," John
Stefanopoulos, whose family owns the drive-in and an adjacent
restaurant. "People want to get out of their house."
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People leave after watching a movie at a drive-in theatre while
keeping social distancing following the outbreak of the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, U.S., March 28,
2020. REUTERS/Marco Bello
Stefanopoulos sees a chance for the industry, which has shrunk by
some 90% from a peak decades ago, to grow out of the crisis. He has
received inquiries about developing drive-in theaters from England,
Ireland and across the United States.
Some outsiders are looking to capitalize on the trend.
The Bel Aire Diner in the New York City borough of Queens propped up
a screen in its parking lot and has been holding movie nights,
serving food to customers in their cars while they watch classics
like "The Princess Bride" and "The Rocky Horror Picture Show."
In perhaps the most ambitious plan, one businessman said he was
organizing a "drive-in on steroids" event to be held almost nightly
in a parking lot of Yankee Stadium after July 4th. Marco Shalma,
co-owner of the MASC Hospitality Group, said the evenings would
include food, performances and a feature film, and he sees them as a
way to reinvigorate New York.
"We make something out of nothing in New York," Shalma said. "It's
going to be epic."
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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