A timeless pic of Marilyn Monroe |
Going
to the cinema now tends to be an expensive occasion, with costly seats, popcorn
and drinks, making it more of a treat. Back in the 1950s, going to the
‘pictures’ was a common place event, like going to a dance hall on a Saturday night.
Horwich, Lancashire, where I lived in the 1950s and where my book A Suitable Young Man is set, had three
cinemas. The posh one was the Picture House and that tended to attract the most
up-to-date films. Then there was the Palace which had a tin roof and where, if
it rained, you couldn’t hear the film. I was once sat on the toilet there when
a mouse ran from between my legs and under the gap in the door. Good job I’ve
not been particularly afraid of mice. Last of all, was the flea-pit known as
Johnny’s, real name long since forgotten though it might have been the Princes’
Theatre. No chance of hearing a film there either, with everyone talking among
themselves and walking about. Because Horwich tended to be last in the
distribution chain, the films shown at any of the cinemas tended to be old ones
and changed frequently. This mean that we could go to the pictures three times
a week for mere pennies. The most expensive seats were the one-and-ninepennies
at the Picture House. You usually only went in these seats if you were with a
boyfriend.
I
was mad about the pictures then. Every week, I read the Picturegoer Magazine
from cover to cover, learning about the comings and goings of the stars, what
films they were making and what films were up-coming. All innocent stuff
compared to today’s gossip magazines. For those were the days when all that was
permitted to be shown of sex in films, was a chaste kiss. The bedroom door
remained firmly closed. All down to censorship laws. When ‘From Here To
Eternity’ came out in 1953, the swimsuit clad bodies of Burt Lancaster and
Deborah Kerr in a passionate embrace on a beach caused an uproar. When the Rock
Hudson/Doris Day films came out in the 1960s, even they were little more than
saucily suggestive.
The gorgeous Dirk Bogarde |
They
don’t make ‘em like that any more!
Lovely memories, Anne - apart perhaps from the mouse :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing. I cried over David Bowie's death, so I can relate to your sadness over Dirk Bogarde. xx
Thanks,Berni. Our virtual chats certainly stirred up the memories and gave me the idea of doing this. Think I'm going to do one about singers too ... my big love was Tom Jones ... still is, come to that!
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