Tribute to John Pente and the Little Italy Open Air Film Festival

Welcome back! To stay up to date with the outdoor movie industry please subscribe to the Open Air Cinema feed or newsletter. If you have any questions regarding outdoor movies or Open Air Cinema, please ask!

John Pente ant the Little Italy Film FestivalJohn Pente lived his entire life within a one-block radius in Little Italy. He worked as a machinist for Western Electric and devoted himself to his family, his neighborhood and his church, St. Leo’s.

But in 1999, he allowed the community promoters of an open-air film festival to install a projector in his grown-up sons’ old bedroom. By the time Mr. Pente died on Monday, at 100, this simple act of generosity had made him “Little Italy’s ambassador to the world.”

Little Italy’s Open Air Film Festival didn’t just heal a rift that had developed between area restaurant owners and residents. It became a celebration of movies and community that attracted tourists to the corner of High and Stiles streets and set an example for neighborhoods around the world.

“He’s been so well known and so well acknowledged for his kindness and his hospitality and just being a simple man who lived a simple life. He never achieved any kind of greatness, but in his own small way, he did remarkable things,” his older son, Joseph, said Tuesday.

The festival provided him with a long life’s perfect closing act. Joseph Pente continued, “He was always there to contribute: to neighbors, to the church, to the school. He did it without any fanfare, and he did it well. … He welcomed people into his home of all colors, all races, male or female.” It didn’t matter whether they were distinguished Italian jurists or a woman who needed a phone to call for jumper cables. They savored his hospitality and often became friends for life.

When he was 89, Mr. Pente was only hoping to do his bit for his community when he agreed to have movies projected on summer nights from his third-floor window. In 1999, nothing but white space filled the outer wall of the Ciao Bella restaurant where Little Italy’s restaurateurs had hoped to install a 15-by-20-foot mural on a billboard facing the Da Mimmo’s restaurant parking lot.

The Little Italy Owners and Residents Association protested, fearing gaudy billboards. The Little Italy Restaurant Association fired back that the neighborhood had to be commercial to stay alive. The mural was shot down, and the space stayed blank for months. At a neighborhood association meeting in 1999, one frustrated restaurateur brainstormed, “I think we should just show movies on it, ’cause it looks like a drive-in.”

Read the rest of the story in the Baltimore Sun.

Tags: ,

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Cast Your Vote in the Projector People Backyard Theater Photo Contest

Submissions to projectorpeople.com’s backyard theater photo contest have now officially closed, so now is the time to go cast your vote!

The final selection consists of a number of worthy contenders, including a screen set up by the Blue Man Group’s band and an outdoor movie setup composed of eight projectors simultaneously screening 8 different sporting events. We of course are biased toward the Open Air Cinema setup in the middle of the woods in Sundance, but hey, vote your conscience and may the best backyard theater win! Voting will remain open until August 11th after which two winners will be selected to win a Cisco Flip Ultra HD camcorder.

Outdoor Movie Screening in Sundance

Cast Your Vote in the Backyard Theater Photo Contest

Also, if you somehow missed the submission in either the ProjectorPeople.com photo contest and you have some great shots of your outdoor movie setup, don’t worry. We will soon be announcing round two of our Open Air Cinema video contest.

Check back here next week for the announcement.

Tags: ,

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Twister Prompts Cancellation of Open Air Screening of Wizard of Oz

It’s a twist in the plot as a tornado watch clears the park during a showing of “The Wizard of Oz.” But pay no attention to that man behind the curtain—the show will go on tomorrow at 8 p.m.

Outdoor movie in Maplewood, New Jersey

George Rague, Director of the Maplewood Department of Recreation, asked movie-goers to clear the park and promised that the show—featuring the classic 1939 film “The Wizard of Oz”—would be rescheduled for Saturday, July 24, at 8 p.m. in the park.

The evening was sponsored by the Maplewood Recreation Department, which commandeered the help of Gary Walz and his twin sons, Mike and Nick, along with Andrew Gnutti, Chris Spurrier and Cindy Roth. All were on site early with Rague to set up for the evening. Mike Fusco from NJ Backyard Movies of Summit Soundz arrived with the inflatable movie screen and together the group began blowing up the 16-foot screen.

At 6:30 p.m., the first movie-goer arrived. Angela Nash chose her spot alongside the yellow brick road as she set up her chairs and blankets. Many others entered the park, following the yellow brick roads that led to the screen. Music, provided by Summit Sounds, entertained guests as children danced to the tunes while waiting for the movie to begin. Crane’s Deli was there selling popcorn, Moonpies, lemonade, iced tea and water.

Maplewood Director of Cultural Affairs Marcy Thompson and her partner from Studio B, Jenny Turner-Hall, were there as co-sponsors. They brought along two short films by local artists: George Lange’s “Flying Kids” was shown first followed by animator Emily Hudley’s ” The Power.”

At 8:15 p.m., the main feature began. Shortly after “Dorothy” fell into the pigpen, lightening was detected in the area and the park was cleared. Disappointed film fans were relieved to hear that the movie would be shown Saturday evening. So, indeed, there will be a rainbow at the end of this storm.

Source: http://maplewood.patch.com/articles/screen-twister-rescheduled-due-to-threat-of-real-twister

Tags: ,

Read full storyComments { 0 }