
Click on the image to see it full size (and to see if you can understand the Norwegian text).
Reports from the road, home office and theaters of the workings of a silent film accompanist.

launch of the fall season of my Silent Clowns series, a show at Scandinavia House (NYC), and my return to Massillon OH for the "Fall Cinesation". Over 20 shows in all, plus the DVD release of Houdini: The Films by Kino Video.
The theater became a movie house several decades back, and was acquired by Colgate College several years ago, and is currently primarily a first-run house with occasional special events. The vintage-looking marquee you see was built and installed last year as a gift from the Colgate class of 1956.
A local car collector parked two vintage 1920's Ford automobiles in front of the theater. That's theater manager Chuck Fox posing with me at the running board of one of the Fords. The other photo shows the theater staff; at the far right of the group is chief projectionist Henry, who when we started rummaged around the theater and found the lens and plate for silent full aperture for our 2004 show of Seven Chances.
The following weekend found me in Manchester VT for a Harold Lloyd program of Grandma's Boy, plus the shorts Number, Please? and Ask Father...all 16mm from my collection. Every August I do a show at this suburban platter-twin, but I bring in my own projectors and my daughter runs them. I also bring in one of my digital pianos for the program, and the theater arranges for a guitar amp.
This year I also brought a tray of 35mm repro slides of 1920's movie theater glass slides to run before we started. The show, which started at 12noon before the theater's usual first show of the day, went really well, with quite a few kids in attendance, and the films played nicely.
Bruce Lawton and I have run this a number of times to slightly iffy response and I'd always wondered if it just needed to be slowed down a hair, and this seemed to work.