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| From Here to Eternity returns February 14 to the Michigan, where it first played September 24, 1953. |
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The acclaimed 2011 Iranian film A Separation screens at the DFT on February 24-26 and March 4. |
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Billy Wilder directs the Oscar-winning The Apartment at the Redford on February 17-18. Video courtesy of Turner Classic Movies |
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Step back in time to see what area movie theaters were presenting in February 1962. Film titles are linked to the Internet Movie Database.
For more information about these theaters, see Cinema Treasures or Water Winter Wonderland.
West
Side Story, which won the 1961 Oscar for Best Picture, first opened
in Detroit on Wednesday, February 14, 1962, at the
Madison (Woodward at Elizabeth). It had earlier premiered in New York
on October 18, 1961. In Detroit, the opening night show was a benefit
for the Variety Club's Growth and Development Center at Children's Hospital.
Appearing at the premiere was Russ Tamblyn, the leader of the Jets gang
in the movie.
"Perhaps never before has the screen adapted
a stage musical to its own purposes so effectively as it has in 'West
Side Story,' now beginning a long
engagement
at the Madison," wrote Al Weitschat of The Detroit News in the
"Picture Parade" column on February 15, 1962. "If the impact of the stage
success was potent, it is doubly so on film, because the fluidity of the
camera has been used to full advantage to add new dimensions to the drama,
music and dancing."
" 'West Side Story opened Thursday at the
Madison Theater, a movie of stunning technical excellence," wrote Detroit
Free Press Staff Writer Louis Cook on February 16, 1962. "It is such
a busy, noisy film, however, that the
tender love story is often obscured by other action and it's less a modern
Romeo and Juliet than it is Murder, Unincorporated."
Also opening in Detroit on February 14
was Lover Come Back
(Rock Hudson, Doris Day) at the Michigan. Ongoing downtown Detroit movies
on February 14 included The
Innocents (Deborah Kerr) at the United Artists;
Light
in the Piazza (Olivia de Havilland, Rossano Brazzi) at the Adams;
The Prisoner of the
Iron Mask at the Fox; Summer
and Smoke (Laurence Harvey, Geraldine Page) at the Grand Circus;
the Rat Pack in Sergeants
3 (Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin) at the Palms; and, in Cinerama,
El Cid (Charlton
Heston, Sophia Loren) at the Music Hall. The Redford was showing a double
bill of Flower Drum
Song (Nancy Kwan, James Shigeta) and World
By Night.
West Side Story settled in at the
Madison for an 8-month run of only reserved seating. The first Detroit
run of West Side Story ended on October 23, 1962,
and
the next day the Madison switched over to The
Chapman Report (Shelley Winters and Jane Fonda). West Side
Story arrived in neighborhood theaters on October 31, 1962 and played
until December 4. In the next few months, it had two more neighborhood
runs.
Ann Arbor audiences were treated to the
opening of West Side
Story at
the
State on Thursday, October 25, 1962. It played for about a month before
being replaced on November 22 by The
Chapman Report. Also playing in Ann Arbor on October 25 were Pressure
Point
(Sidney
Poitier, Bobby Darin) at the Michigan; and François Truffaut's Jules
and Jim (Jeanne Moreau) at the Campus.
Click here to see a PDF of newspaper images relating to the opening of West Side Story.