Wenatchee drive-in rides into the sunset [The Wenatchee World, Wash.] - Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet

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August 28, 2010 Newswires
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Wenatchee drive-in rides into the sunset [The Wenatchee World, Wash.]

Aug. 28--WENATCHEE -- Young mom Jo Hernandez will miss the Vue Dale Drive-In when it closes for good at the end of this season.

She'll miss the cheap admission price, the healthy snacks brought from home and the chance to work on her laptop while the kids watch the flicks.

At least once a month in summer, the 27-year-old East Wenatchee woman herds a passel of friends and kids into her SUV to take in a movie under the stars. The carload of three adults and four tykes costs only $19 for that night's kid-friendly double feature.

"It's cheap, it's easy and I get tons of work done," she said, sitting in the driver's seat, laptop braced on the steering wheel, Starbucks latte in a nearby cupholder. The computer screen glowed with a spreadsheet for her home-based business.

She'd parked the SUV backward so kids in rear-facing seats could see the screen through the upraised tailgate. Two friends lounged in lawn chairs and ate homemade chips and salsa from an ice chest chock-full of goodies.

Hernandez admitted her experience with drive-in theaters only stretched back three years. "But if you ask me, this is the way to see a movie," she said. "I know there's nothing to do about it closing -- that's progress, I guess -- but it's a shame all this is going away."

The 57-year-old Vue Dale Drive-In, one of only seven drive-in movie theaters left in the state, will go dark due to a variety of factors, said Bryan Cook, general manager of Sun Basin Theatres, the movie company that owns the Vue Dale and indoor theaters in downtown Wenatchee, East Wenatchee and other locations around the state.

The two-screen, 650-car outdoor facility -- a relic from the 1950s age of motoring -- has become a victim of advancing technology, dramatic shifts in movie-going habits and rising property values, he said.

Closure of the drive-in also figures into Sun Basin's plans for construction of a new 14-screen multiplex, the Gateway Cinema 14 in north Wenatchee's Olds Station. Financing of the new $8 million multiplex could be partially funded by the eventual sale of the 11-acre Vue Dale property, although long-term plans call for use of the property by light industry or development of condos or apartments.

The 2.95-acre Columbia Cinema parcel in East Wenatchee, sold last month to a Spokane developer, would also help finance the new multiplex.

Construction of the multiplex is set to start next month in hopes of opening in May for 2011's summer blockbusters.

"We know lots of people have fond memories of Vue Dale," Cook said. "But unfortunately, it comes down to economics, in finding the best use for the property and the best way to bring good movies to the area."

Cook said he remembers watching Elvis movies at the Vue Dale from the back seat of his parents' car. The theater, then owned by Charles Greime and partners, would be crowded with couples on Saturday night dates and families on evening outings. Back then, a sell-out crowd was common, he said.

"But now I can't remember the last time we had a sell-out," he said. "It's been at least 10 years -- and it must have been for one of the summer blockbusters."

Mel Duvaul, 72, who worked for local theater companies for more than 40 years, said he remembers Bryan Cook first starting out as a doorman at the downtown Liberty Cinemas. "He did really well, got along with people, and worked his way up. Now, he's got some good ideas for expansion."

Duvaul said sell-outs at the Vue Dale were frequent back in the 1950s and '60s. "We used to fill that thing up -- overflow crowds," said Duvaul, who managed the Vue Dale for a number of years beginning around 1960 and became known locally as "Mr. Vue Dale." He also managed and operated the Liberty and Vitaphone theaters downtown and, later, helped run the Columbia Cinema in East Wenatchee. He retired from Sun Basin Theatres in 2007.

"We'll always have people who'll miss the drive-in," Duvaul said. "In summer, it's a perfect place for orchard workers with families. They work till late, past sunset, then load the kids in the car for a couple of movies. People used to come to the concession stand and order pizzas and hot dogs and have dinner during the movie, in the back of their trucks or picnics in front of the car. Kids fell asleep on the back seats."

He remembered having three showings on the theater's huge, single screen. "Summertime, we wouldn't start the movie until 9:45 or so. It'd be daylight sometimes before I was heading home."

Said Duvaul, "Those were the days! Beautiful nights with big crowds. But times change, things change."

Of course, said Cook, television took its toll on the movie audience in the 1960s as viewing habits shifted from big-screen studio productions, shown in theaters, to small-screen comedies and dramas that could be watched while wearing pajamas at home.

Even as the number of drive-ins in the state peaked at 83 in 1975, the number of tickets sold was already declining, especially in urban areas, he added. "The writing was on the wall, or ... on the screen."

The challenge now, said Cook, is to present movies at the Vue Dale before they get to DVD. Changes in how movies are advertised and distributed nationally have shortened the time from movie screen to home screen, he said.

The whole concept of a second-run movie pretty much vanished when DVDs began appearing only months after a picture was released, Cook said. That meant yanking a movie early from the indoor theater to use at the drive-in, he said. "It didn't always make good business sense to do that."

The new multiplex in Olds Station could further complicate how and where movies are shown locally by increasing the number of area screens from 13 to 22. "Scheduling (movies) becomes a tricky balancing act of new and old," Cook said. "We need to keep those screens lit up with what's new."

Of course, smiled Cook, an enthusiastic crowd of drive-in enthusiasts still exists. "They love the whole experience of movies under a huge sky with warm breezes, sitting in lawn chairs in the bed of their pickup trucks. You can't really blame them -- it's a fun thing to do."

Sitting in her SUV while kids and friends watched "Toy Story 3," Jo Hernandez agreed. Her 6-year-old daughter, Allie, squealed as Woody and Buzz battled an evil Teddy bear up on the screen.

"She'll remember these nights for the rest of her life," Hernandez said. "This is something really special."

Mike Irwin: 665-1179

[email protected]

Memories of the Vue Dale Drive-In

Many Wenatchee residents have expressed support for saving the local drive-in theater on a busy Facebook page called "Keep the Vue Dale Drive-In Open." Many supporters have also posted memories of how the theater affected their lives. A sampling of comments:

"I went to the Vue Dale with my family when I was a kid back in the 1950s. Later, our family lived next door to the theater. I used to watch movies in my backyard. The one lone screen, back then, was enormous. And kids could play on big toys down near the screen -- safely -- unattended. Believe that? Let's declare it a historical landmark and make it illegal to tear it down."

-- Michael Ernest Bull

"We love the drive-in. Our son has ADHD and it's hard to keep him from disurbing others around him at the movie theaters. And my husband and I both have some back problems. It's nice to be comfy at the drive-in, and we all can enjoy being out of the house. Please don't close it; we've been going for years."

-- Shelly Louise Lau

"Being the youngest, I always sat in the front seat between mom and dad. I remember when we got our first car without a divided windshield, and I could watch the movie "all in one piece"! The Vue Dale is a great family event that is still important to our culture and heritage. I hope thousands more families will continue to build memories there!"

-- Karen Koch

"I remember many weekends with a pickup full of people, backed in to a back row spot, watching movies at the drive-in. It is not the only one left in the state, but it absolutely is the one that I have the fondest memories of. My husband and I had our first real date there almost 20 years ago."

-- Samantha Marsh Everett

For more comments and memories, visit Facebook.com, keywords "vue dale."

To see more of The Wenatchee World or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.wenworld.com.

Copyright (c) 2010, The Wenatchee World, Wash.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

For more information about the content services offered by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services (MCT), visit www.mctinfoservices.com, e-mail [email protected], or call 866-280-5210 (outside the United States, call +1 312-222-4544)

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