Sorry but have to ask.

--- On Sun, 7/25/10, Phil Edwards <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Phil Edwards <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Tales Of Lost Treasure - You Got One?
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, July 25, 2010, 7:24 PM



 
 

Original rolled KING KONG insert.... 1977. Don't 
ask.
Phil

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  Tom Martin 
  To: [email protected] 
  
  Sent: Monday, July 26, 2010 1:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] Tales Of Lost 
  Treasure - You Got One?
  
great story Ron
-Tom

Ron Moore wrote:

  
    
      
      
        
          The One That Got Away…
          

          August 1990-
          

             Ken Schacter and I were speeding East across Arizona 
          as fast as we could. Our 1986 Ford Aerostar van was staying cooler 
          than we were. I was born and raised in the heat of Texas and was used 
          to the 100 + degree heat, but Ken was a Canadian and not used to the 
          scorching air of the desert. The only songs on the radio (when we 
          could get a station) were “golden oldies”. It appeared that Arizona 
          hadn’t moved past 1959. 
             “If you can tell me who recorded this song, I’ll 
          give you my Bride of Frankenstein insert,” Ken laughed.
             My knowledge of music was vastly inferior to my 
          knowledge of film- but our impromptu trivia sessions helped pass the 
          time.
          

          We had already spent a month in New Mexico scouring the state for 
          posters. We checked every theatre from Truth or Consequences to Santa 
          Fe. All we had to show for our work was a whole lot a nuthin’- zilch, 
          and “Nada”. We had started the trip with a bankroll of $6,000 and now 
          our pockets were about $3000 lighter. We had a couple of hundred 
bucks 
          in quarters for the pay-phones and even those rolls were running low. 
          We knew if we didn’t find something soon, our two month odyssey 
          through the southwest was going to break us. New Mexico was a bust so 
          we decided to move on to Arizona.
          

          The theory sounded good- “Let’s go look for posters where there 
          aren’t many collectors, no sign of poster exchanges, not many antique 
          shops and remote as it gets.” Where else but New Mexico and Arizona? 
          The two states seemed to fit the bill. Only problem; it wasn’t 
exactly 
          a target rich environment. During the 1930’s and 1940’s the two 
states 
          combined only had around 193 theatres.  Most of those were in a 
          few large cities and the rest had about a hundred miles between 
          them.
          

          Our little excursion in the summer of 1990 occurred in the days 
          before cell phones, GPS’s and laptop computers. We kept notes on the 
          theatres we checked out on a legal notepad. We started Arizona in the 
          southern part of the state, heading westbound on I-10 and I-8 and 
          gradually worked our way north to I-40. Along the way we had stopped 
          in numerous towns and kept hearing the same response-
             “Yeah, some feller come through here a few years ago 
          and picked up all the posters.”
             “Did he say where he was going?”
             “Nope.”
             “How about what he was planning on doing with 
          them.”
             “Nope.”
             “Does anyone else around here know where we could 
          find him?”
             “Nope.”
          The Gary Cooper impressions in every city were getting old until 
          Ken and I hit “paydirt” in Flagstaff. The manager of the Orpheum 
          Theatre slipped us a business card and stated that the guy that had 
          picked up all of their posters was a theatre owner himself. 
          Apparently, the fellow and his brother had gone all over Arizona 
          picking up the posters and had taken them back to their theatre in 
          Snowflake.
          

          118 Miles to Success, Victory and unknown Poster Treasures. Ken 
          and I both had visions of grandeur. At my driving speed that was two 
          hours at the most. It was already 8:00 pm but I figured we could 
          easily make the city by 10:00. Desperation pushed the peddle of the 
          van past 80. We careened off the Insterstate at Holbrook and screamed 
          south towards Snowflake. By the time we pulled into the city and made 
          our way to the town square, it was already dark. Sure enough, there 
          was the theatre on the business card- The Snowflake Theatre.
          

          And as luck would have it, there was a payphone in front of the 
          theatre. I quickly looked at the owners phone number on his business 
          card and dropped a quarter into the phone. He picked up after a 
couple 
          of rings.
             “Hello?”
             “I’m sorry to disturb you at this hour, but I just 
          drove into Snowflake and wanted to call you as soon as I could. I’m a 
          collector of old movie posters and understand that you might have 
          picked up some posters around the state.” I could feel my heart 
          hammering waiting for the man’s response.
             “Yes. My brother and I have picked up several 
          thousand of them over the years.”
          My mind reeled at that as I asked him more about the posters. I 
          could see Ken waiting anxiously for the result of my question and I 
          gave him a thumbs up. Then I returned to the conversation, “Really? 
          Several thousand?”
             “Oh yes. We took them all back to our theatre in 
          Snowflake. Put them in the basement. But the theatre’s gone 
now.”
             I looked behind me at the theatre in the darkness. 
          “The Snowflake Theatre?” I asked?
             “Yes.”
             “I’m standing right in front of it.”
             “No you’re not,” the man said sadly. “The theatres 
          gone.”
              I was quite confused as I stared at the 
          marquee, the brick exterior and the poster in the theatres display 
          case. For a moment I thought the man had gone senile.
             The owner continued, “It burned to the ground two 
          nights ago. Go look through the front window.”
             I was stunned! Ken and I went to the theatres door 
          and looked through. All we could see, where the roof of the lobby 
          should have been, were the Arizona stars in the evening sky.
          

          The next morning the man agreed to meet us at the theatre so we 
          could take a look for ourselves. We wanted to see if anything could 
be 
          salvaged. He unlocked the door and we went inside. Every time we 
          brushed up against anything we got covered in soot and ash. As we 
went 
          down the steps to the basement we held our breath with anticipation. 
          The basement floor was still covered by about two or three inches of 
          water- the last amount not picked up by the pumps after the fire 
          department had used their hoses.  Along the wall ran stacks and 
          stacks of posters. The piles were about four feet high and ran the 
          full length of the room, about thirty yards. Ken and I tried to pull 
          some of the piles apart, but the water had fused them together into 
          one massive block of paper mulch.
            “Yep, this whole room was underwater for about 
          twenty-four hours,” the owner sighed.
          

          Ken and I knew there was no way the posters could be salvaged. We 
          had looked all over New Mexico and Arizona for two months trying to 
          find where the posters had been taken. And when we found them, we 
          “missed” them by two days. Two days… I felt like Walter Huston at the 
          end of The Treasure of Sierra Madre; laughing at treasures lost. We 
          had made finds before and knew we’d find more posters in the future. 
          This was just a slight setback in our quest.
          

          As we left Snowflake in the van’s rearview mirror, Ken tapped his 
          foot to the tune on the radio and said, “If you can tell me who 
          recorded this, I’ll give you my whole collection.”
          

          Ron Moore
          Cinema Icons
          

--- On Sat, 7/24/10, Michael Spampinato <[email protected]> 
          wrote:

          
From: 
            Michael Spampinato <[email protected]>
Subject: 
            [MOPO] Tales Of Lost Treasure - You Got One?
To: [email protected]
Date: 
            Saturday, July 24, 2010, 10:08 PM


            When I was around 12 years old our house was 
            almost 100 years old and the attic was never really touched. When 
            the time came to gut it and insulate it, add a floor (you had to 
            walk between the beams) etc they cleared out a ton of old stuff. 
            

But what I found up there was a rolled up piece of paper. 
            Upon opening it I was looking at a one-sheet from Lon Chaney Sr's 
            PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. It was a beautiful poster in beautiful 
            condition. I still remember the colors. I stored it away rolled in 
            "my cabinet" which, a few years later, my mother apparently decided 
            to clean. Bye bye PHANTOM.

In later years when I started 
            collecting old film posters I scoured the place for that poster 
just 
            in case. No luck.

I was already a huge film buff (as 
            mentioned in the Expanding Hobby thread) with a tremendous affinity 
            for the old horror and sci-fi films, and I actually recognized this 
            as something special. I think this find sank deep in my 
subconscious 
            and help steer me to collecting old horror and sci-fi posters. 
            

Anyone else have one that got away?

Pov

May 
            the holes in your collection be filled.

      
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