This is an attempt at a survey of 16mm venues that were running silent films and other vintage Hollywood product during the 1940 to 1975 period. Many of these locations were very short-lived. The list is organized according to their year of opening.
Several of these locations are still in business. See our
Classic Film Screenings page for a list of some additional venues and organizations currently offering vintage films.
Bijou Theatre [1971-1977]
7059 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood 90028 | map |
Opening:
It started in 1969 as a porno venue and became a revival house in 1971.
There was a relapse in 1973 but it was back to running revivals again
from 1975 until 1977. The Bijou is on the left in this detail from a
c.1971 photo in the Kurt Wahlner collection. At the time, they were
running "Psycho" and
"The Birds."
Cinematheque 16 [c.1962-1973]
8816 1/2 Sunset Blvd. West Hollywood 90069 |
map |
Opening: In
the early 60s this 16mm house was running "nudie-cutie" but then moved
into experimental fare under Robert Lippert's ownership. Later they ran
silent films and revivals of films from the 30s and 40s. In 1974 it went
to porno and after that became a legit venue. The June 1966 photo by Ed
Ruscha is from the Getty Research Institute collection. It's on their "
12 Sunsets" site.
Classic - Art [1966-1972]
8257 Santa Monica Blvd. West Hollywood 90046 |
map |
Opened: 1966. The location was on the north side of the street between
Sweetzer and Harper.
"Beautiful - New." A March 1966 ad located by Ken McIntyre.
An April 1966 ad.
A May 1966 L.A. Times ad. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating this and other ads for this venue for a thread on the
Photos of Los Angeles private Facebook group.
Running
Fellini's "Juliet of the Spirits" and Antonioni's "Red Desert" at the Classic Art in May
1967. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for digging out this column of Hollywood
theatre ads.
Heading into being a full time porno operation. A September 1968 ad.
Closing: 1972 was the end of this one.
Coronet Theatre [1947-present]
366 N. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles 90048 | map |
Opening: 1947. The c.1958 photo by Danny Rouzer is from the Tim
Lanza
Collection. Paul Ballard's Hollywood Film
Society found a home at the Coronet in the late 1940s. In 1950 Raymond Rohauer took over
the operation with his "Society of Cinema Arts" and "Coronet Louvre"
programming with daily screenings of silents, foreign films and experimental works.
More information: It's now a venue for concerts and comedy shows. See our page about the
Coronet Theatre.
Flicker: Old Time Movies [1949]
10909 Burbank Blvd. North Hollywood 91601 |
map |
Opened: April
1949. Thanks to Ranjit Sandhu for the research. The site is on the
north side of the street two blocks east of Vineland Ave.
In
an April 8, 1949 Citizen-News ad they were offering Clara Bow in
"Primrose Path" along with a commemorative biopic of F.D.R. On April 15
they advertised "Orchids and Ermine" with Colleen Moore along with Mary
Pickford in "The New York Hat," a Will Rogers short, and a serial.
Closing:
May 1949. Ranjit speculates that they didn't do well because of the
strange location. The last ad he was able to locate was on May 13
offering "Burlesque on Carmen" and "The Nickel Hopper."
Status: Unknown. Perhaps the building on the site is the one used briefly as a theatre. It's now a smog test business.
More information: Scroll down to the 1949 listings on Ranjit's
Revival Cinemas page for more titles, dates, and links to ads.
Flicker Silent Movie Theatre [1949-1950]
6726 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood 90028 |
map |
Opened: 1949.
The location was on the south side of the street
between McCadden Place and Highland Ave., just west of the
Christie/Drake/Hollywood Inn Hotel. The Flicker Theatre entrance can be
seen on the right in this detail from a Marc Wanamaker collection photo
appearing on the
Hollywood Historic Photos site. That's McCadden Pl. on the left.
The
theatre was in the east storefront of the original hotel building,
constructed in 1917 as the Glidden. The expansion building on the left
was constructed in 1922. The hotel had been renamed the Drake in 1945.
At the time this photo was taken in November 1949 the theatre was
running "Topsy and Eva," starring the Duncan Sisters. The film's
first-run engagement began June 16, 1927 at the
Egyptian, a block to the east. It had been Sid Grauman's last presentation there.
Seating capacity: Unknown. Presumably very small.
It was noted by Marc Chevalier in comments to a post about the venue on the
Los Angeles Theatres
Facebook page that for several earlier club/restaurant tenants the
Flicker's storefront seen in the photo had just been the entrance down
to a larger space in the basement of the newer 1922 Christie building to
the east.
Marc
says that just beyond the sidewalk line there was a stairway "which led
down,
then turned east, and went further down… into the cavernous basement
directly beneath the (still existing) Christie Building. In
the late 1920s, that basement was a chop suey restaurant named the
'Oriental Cafe' …but in 1932, it became the 'Club New Yorker,' a
fashionable cabaret which specialized in male and female impersonation
acts. Very popular with the movie biz crowd, it lasted only a couple of
few years. In 2012, I was able to sneak into that basement when the
Christie
Building was being renovated. Sadly, the basement had become a hollow
shell, stripped of every detail."
A
1933 photo shows the stairway down to the
basement of the Christie's 1922 expansion building from what was later
the Flicker storefront. The basement space was later repurposed as Ciro's. Its opening was noted in "
Ciro's Opens to Good Success," an item in the February 17, 1934 issue of Filmograph. It's on Internet Archive. Next it was
"Streets of Paris." In the 1947 phone book they were using a 6726
address.
The
structure that Flicker went into was initially called the Glidden
Building, constructed in 1917 for owner W.B. Glidden. In addition to
retail spaces on the street level it housed the 66 room Glidden Hotel.
The project got a mention in the construction news column of the
December 1, 1917 issue of
The Hotel World. It's on Google Books. The item was old news by the time they printed it:
The
designers of the Glidden Building were Eilet P. Parcher and Edward A.
Strong, with offices across the street at 6723 Hollywood Blvd. They were
mentioned in the October 12, 1917 issue of
Southwest Builder and Contractor
in an item about the project's tile work. It's on Google Books. Haldane
Christie bought the Glidden Hotel in 1919 for $200,000 and announced
plans for his "skyscraper" expansion, noted in the December 6, 1919
issue of
Holly Leaves.
The sale also made the December 27, 1919 issue of
The Hotel World. The Glidden Hotel was renamed the Christie and is seen as such on plate 40 of the
1921 Baist Real Estate Map.
It's on the David Rumsey Map Collection website. In the 1940s both
buildings were owned by Phil Goldstone with the hotel operated by
Matheson Investment. The property made the December 7, 1944 L.A. Times
with "
Christie Hotel, Hollywood, to Change Hands,"
an article noting that Robert P. Schreiber had signed a 20 year lease
worth $1 million and would be the new operator of "Hollywood's first
'skyscraper' hotel" after January 1, 1945. It was soon renamed the
Hollywood Inn.
The
Glidden Building storefront just west of the eight-story Christie Hotel
expansion had earlier been the
location of a set of stairs down that connected to the newer building's
basement. Once in the early 40s the stairs had been closed off to make
more storefront space and then reopened. It's assumed that the stairs
had been filled in again and the
area turned into rentable retail space before Flicker arrived on the
scene.
It's unknown if the Flicker operation in 1949 and 1950 had anything to
do with the same person who had operated an earlier North Hollywood
venue called the Flicker. Thanks to Ranjit Sandhu for the research on
this location. He comments that they weren't advertising in the papers
initially so the opening date of this Hollywood Blvd. location is unknown.
Reed
Porter noted noted in the September
5, 1949 issue of the L.A. Mirror that they were running the 1925 Rudolph
Valentino film "The Eagle." It sounds like he only did a drive-by and
didn't visit the new theatre. Thanks to Ranjit for the clipping. The
Pico Theatre at this time was running a mix of exploitation films, revivals and recent Russian releases.
An item about a showing of "The Son of the Sheik" that appeared in the October 7, 1949 issue of the L.A. Times.
It
could be that the Flicker did their pre-opening remodel without a
building permit and got a visit from the building department. Or perhaps
they decided to upgrade the premises and make it look less makeshift.
Thanks to Ranjit for locating
Permit #24959 for the 6726 space, issued on October 19.
The
permit specifies work only in the 3 story building west of the main
hotel for a "16mm M.P. Theatre" including: "Install partition for candy
stand -- Install seats -- construct projection booth and false stage in
front of space (for effect only) -- construct partition at bottom of
stairs. Install exit signs." That partition at the bottom of the stairs
presumably was to close off access to the basement next door.
The
storefront used as the Flicker is indicated in red and shown with a
6728 address in this detail from page 1048 of volume 10 of the
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map
that's in the Library of Congress collection. On the LOC site it's
image 46. The map had been updated as recently as late 1949. Note the
curvy new marquee of the Egyptian, over on the right at 6712.
This
map gives no indication that the east storefront of the former Glidden
Building still had stairs down to the newer Christie basement next door.
Indicated in green at the rear of that space is what we do get: a
connecting door that
then existed between the two buildings on both the first and second
floors. The first floor door is still there, now
with a new little box as the entrance to it, protruding into the vacant
lot to the west.
Closing: October 1950.
"Flicker
Closes" was the announcement in this October 9, 1950 ad appearing in
the "Independent Theaters - Your Daily Guide to the Best in
Entertainment" section of the Hollywood Citizen-News. Thanks to Kurt
Wahlner for locating it. It's not known whether the proprietor, whoever
he was, ever relocated to another location.
Status:
The Glidden Building that the Flicker was in was demolished sometime
before 1958. The site is a vacant lot west of the 1922 vintage Christie
Hotel expansion building, both properties now owned by the Scientology
gang. The surviving Christie building was constructed in 1922. It was a
design by Arthur R. Kelly for Haldane H. Christie, former
Michigan auto parts manufacturer turned L.A. real estate developer. It
was later called the Drake Hotel and then the Hollywood Inn.
The stairs from just beyond the sidewalk line down to the basement of
the 1922 building were revealed again after the site of the 1917
building became a parking lot. They survive, now with a wrought iron fence around them. See two 2012 Marc Chevalier photos:
looking in from the street and
down from the first landing. In the second shot the bricked-in opening leading into the Christie basement is on the left.
The buildings in 1928. We're looking east in a shot taken by George D. Haight that's in the
Los Angeles Public Library collection. That's the roof of the Egyptian half way up on the right edge of the image.
A
pre-1932 look at the storefront just west of the newer Christie
building when it was the entrance to the Oriental Cafe "with dancing."
Thanks to Marc Chevalier for locating the image. He notes that the cafe
was in the basement of the 1922 hotel expansion building to the east.
The
storefront west of the main Christie Hotel building in 1932 when it was
used as the entrance to Jean Malin's Club New Yorker. Thanks to Marc
Chevalier for locating the photo from the Wanamaker collection via the
Hollywood Historic Photos site. He notes that the stairs down to the club space under the Christie began just beyond the gate we see. Also see
a September 1932 ad Marc located for the club. It was using a 6728 address.
A 1933 photo Marc Chevalier located via Getty Images that shows stairs down just inside the entrance.
The basement of the Christie in the Club New Yorker days. It's a photo located by Marc Chevalier that appears with an
Art Deco Society of Los Angeles Facebook post:
"Once
upon a time (well, 1932), the luxurious Hotel Christie building at 6724
Hollywood Boulevard transformed its deep, enormous basement from a chop
suey restaurant into a lavishly decorated Art Deco cabaret. Renamed the
'Club New Yorker,' it was the first of the then-called 'pansy
nightclubs' — specializing in 'female and male impersonation acts' — to
achieve enormous popularity in Los Angeles, especially with Hollywood
stars.
"The
interior’s decor and murals were designed by Jack Schulze, Fox Studios'
art director. Sadly, all of its Deco elements were completely stripped
away many years ago… leaving the room a hollow, dirt-floored shell for
decades."
A 40s card with the storefront west of the newer portion of the hotel in use as the Christie Grill. It's in the
California State Library collection.
More information: See Ranjit Sandhu's
Revival Cinemas page for a list of titles, dates, and links to ads.
The Movie Parade / Nickelodeon / Comoedia / Highland Playhouse [1940-1949]
1737 N. Highland Ave. Hollywood 90028 | map |
Opened: This 16mm revival venue was in an upstairs hall in a building that had been around since at least 1907. The location was the west side of the street in the
block north of Hollywood Blvd.
A
c.1950 view of the block. The Movie Parade had been on the 2nd floor of
the darker of the two similar buildings on the left, the one with
the Gruen watch sign for a bar called Highland House. The smaller
vertical sign down lower said "cocktails." It's a photo by Weegee
appearing on the
International Center of Photography website. Thanks to Dave Cutter for locating this for a post on the
Photos of Los Angeles private Facebook group.
As the Movie Parade, it closed in 1942. It was later revived as a legit/film space called the Coemedia, running perhaps until the end of 1947. Then there was some sort of afterlife as Jack Walklin’s Highland Playhouse.
Status: The building was demolished in 1963. The site is now occupied by the Ovation mall.
More information: See the page covering this Highland Ave. location of
The Movie Parade for more dates, ads and articles.
The Movie Parade [1941]
1455 Gordon St. Hollywood 90028 | map |
Opened: The building dates from 1931 and at one point was known as the Academy Review Theatre. In 1941 it got the name The Movie Parade when Eddie Kohn ran a summer series of silent films on 35mm under the auspices of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences. The 2019 image is from Google Maps. The space continues to be used as a screening room, now part of the Sunset Gower Studios.
Nickelodeon Old Time Movie Theatre [1954-1955]
11938 Ventura Blvd. Studio City 91604 |
map |
Opened: July
12, 1954 with the Duncan Sisters in "Topsy and Eva" along with shorts
featuring Colleen Moore, Lionel Barrymore, Charlie Chaplin and Mary
Pickford.
The
location was on the south side of the street between Carpenter Ave. and
Laurel Canyon Blvd. That's just east of the current Trader Joe's. A
June 21 listing in the L.A. Times Independent Theatre Guide, listing it
just as Nickelodeon, had said "Opening Soon."
A July 11, 1954 article from the Valley Times. Thanks to Ranjit Sandhu for locating this for his
Revival Cinemas page.
The L.A. Times listings for San Fernando Valley theatres in the July 12 Independent Theatre Guide.
"The Lost World" and "Tumbleweed" were advertised on August
11, 1954. This listing listing was the last one for the Nickelodeon that Kurt Wahlner could find in the L.A. Times.
Running
"Birth of a Nation" in August 1954. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating
this Valley Times ad as well as other items here on the page for a
thread about the theatre on the
Photos of Los Angeles private Facebook group.
An October 1954 Valley Times ad spotted by Ken.
The
special Cinemaspook screen was unveiled for the 1954 Halloween season
"This is Spookerama" showing of "Nosferatu" and other ghoulish delights.
Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating the article. It appeared in the
October 30 issue of the Valley Times.
A
February 1955 double feature of "Tarzan of the Apes" with Elmo Lincoln
along with Clara Bow in "Dancing Mothers." Thanks to Ken McIntyre for
spotting the story.
A "Wild West" program in February 1955. It's another item located by Ken McIntyre.
Closing date: It was running as late as March 1955. The closing date is unknown.
Status: The building that the Nickelodeon was in still survives.
The former Nickelodeon is seen as the Laurel Tavern in this view west toward Laurel Canyon Blvd. Image: Google Maps - 2023
Odyssey Cinema [1972]
5220 Hollywood Blvd. Los Angeles 90027 |
map |
This venue was a storefront in a building on the north side of the street between Harvard Blvd. and Kingsley Dr. That's four blocks east of Western Ave. The same building had several several porno operations over the years including an adult book store at 5224 and the Cine III/Richard's Theatre at 5228. The latter is covered on our
Storefront Porno page.
Opening: It was running in 1972
A February 1972 L.A. Times ad. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating all of the ads.
A March 27, 1972 listing in the Times.
"The General" and "Tillie's Punctured Romance." It's an ad from April 20, 1972.
April 24, 1972.
May 27, 1972.
June 3, 1972.
Closing: 1972 appears to have been the only year of operation. It may have lasted only a few months. Ken McIntyre notes that he couldn't find any titles advertised after June 23.
"Call Theatre For Program." The L.A. Times listing for June 25, 1972. As Ken comments: "Never a good sign."
Status: The building survives.
A 2024 look at the building. The two guys are standing in front of 5220, the storefront that had been the Odyssey. At the time of this shot it was the Fourth Wall Comedy Cafe. Image: Google Maps.
Old Movies / Old Time Movie Theatre [1945]
484 S. San Vicente Blvd. Los Angeles 90048 | map |
Opened: January 15, 1945 as Old Movies
with "Tillie's Punctured Romance" and a Charley Chase comedy. The
building is on the east side of the street five blocks north of
Wilshire. A 1941 tenant of the building had been the Aeoneon Institute
of Higher Thought.
At the time of the opening the
Silent Movie Theatre on Fairfax was dark with it's co-owner, John Hampton in jail for refusing to serve in the Army.
A March 1945 ad for Erich von Stroheim's 1923 film "Merry-Go-Round."
Beginning in May 1945 it was advertised as Old Time Movie Theatre.
This May 8 Citizen-News fictitious name statement located by Ranjit
reveals that the business operator was Harold A. Kuschner.
"Phantom of the Opera" with Boris Karloff. It's a May 1945 ad located by Ken McIntyre.
An item located by Ranjit Sandhu in the June 5, 1945 Citizen-News.
Colleen Moore in "Little Orphan Annie." It's a June 22, 1945 Citizen-News ad.
A July 1945 Citizen-News ad for Ben Turpin and "Wife's Relatives."
Closing: It was running at least into October 1945.
The
last ad Ranjit Sandhu located was in the October 22, 1945 Hollywood
Citizen-News for a screening of Rudolph Valentino in "His Wonderful
Chance." See Ranjit's Revival Cinemas page for a more complete list of titles exhibited at this location and links to ads via Newspapers.com.
Status: The building survives. As of 2024 it was the office of Dugally Oberfeld, a residential developer.
Looking
north on San Vicente. The building that was occupied by the theatre is
toward the right, behind the orange traffic sign. Image: Google Maps -
2022
Old Time Movie [1946]
5440 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood 90027 |
map |
Opening: March
29, 1946 with Clara Bow in "Dancing Mothers" and Lon Chaney in "Nomads
of the North." This was in a building on the south side of the street
just east of Western Ave.
We're looking west toward Western in this c.1935 view from the
Los Angeles Public Library
collection. A decade after this shot the theatre operation opened in a
space in a row of single-story storefronts beyond that telephone pole on
the left. Across Western on the left it's S. Charles Lee's 1928 Central
Casting building. The
Apollo/Star Theatre was down a bit farther at 5546 Hollywood Blvd. That's the Rector Hotel in the foreground on the right. Also see a
pre-1928 shot.
A
March 29, 1946 Hollywood Citizen-News ad located by Ranjit Sandhu. It's
unknown who was operating this venture or, other than borrowing the
name, if it had any connection with Harold Kuschner's 1945 operation at
484 S. San Vicente.
A
July 11, 1946 Citizen-News ad for something with Norma Shearer along
with Irene Rich and Monte Blue in "Lucretia Lombard," "Smoky Comes
Through," an Our Gang comedy, a serial and another comedy short.
A July 27, 1946 Citizen-News ad for "Miss Bluebeard" and other offerings.
An August 8, 1946 ad for "My Lady of Whims," "The Cat and the Canary," and other shorts.
Closing:
It appears that August 1946 was the end of it. Thanks to Ranjit Sandhu
for the research on this short-lived location. August 8 was the last ad
he found.
Status: The building it was in has been demolished. There's a new building and a Metro entrance on the site.
More information: See the 1946 listings on Ranjit's
Revival Cinemas page for a list of titles, dates, and links to ads.
Old Time Movies / Old Movies Club [1946-1947]
Yucca St. at Wilcox Ave. Hollywood 90028 |
map - approximate |
Opening:
November 26, 1946 was the first ad located by Ranjit Sandhu in the
Hollywood Citizen-News. The location was a block north of Hollywood
Blvd. and three blocks west of Vine. The
Warner Hollywood was a block to the south.
Initially not even giving an address. It's the ad from the November 26, 1946 Citizen-News.
A December 20, 1946 Citizen-News ad for "As You Like It" plus a Bob Hope comedy.
A December 30, 1946 ad for "Only Angels Have Wings" and "Lady Windermere's Fan."
Not a good sign. This was the January 3, 1947 ad.
Closing: January 1947. Thanks to Ranjit for the research. He notes that there was not any reopening.
Status: Well, the building it was in may still be around but we don't have an exact location.
More information: Scroll down to the 1946 listings on Ranjit's
Revival Cinemas page for more titles, dates, and links to ads.
Old Town Music Hall [1969-present]
140 Richmond St. El Segundo (Los Angeles) 90245 | map |
Opened: In
the 1920s, at times known as the State and the El Segundo Theatre. It
became a silent movie venue in 1969 after a remodel and installation of a
pipe organ. Initially it was 16mm, later going to digital. Thanks to
Claudia Mullins for the 2018 photo.
Riviera/Capri/New Beverly [1958-present]
7165 Beverly Blvd. Los Angeles 90036 | map |
Opened:
The building had been a legit house since the 50s but only started
running movies in 1958 when Robert Lippert remodeled it into 300 and 200
seat twins. Raymond Rohauer took over the twin theatre operation in
1959. They were 35mm houses but presumably he also did some 16mm revival
screenings there as well. He had earlier been doing a variety of
eclectic programming at
the Coronet Theatre. The photo is from a 1959 article in Boxoffice.
Silent Movie Theatre [1942 - present ]
611 N. Fairfax Ave. Los Angeles 90036 | map |
Opened: February 1942 by John Hampton and his wife Dorothy as the Movie. This pre-opening view from Marc Wanamaker's Bison Archives. appears on the W&PA Museum page Early L.A. City Views (1925+) page 3. It's also on their Early L.A. Buildings (1925+) page 4.
After the opening the plywood panel across the front where a marquee should have been said Old Time Movie. In a 1943 article the Times called it the Old Time Theater. It didn't get the Silent Movie Theatre name until later.
Status: It's still in business, now running as a revival house called Brain Dead Studios.
Windsor House [1940-1941]
14016 Ventura Blvd. Sherman Oaks 91423 | map |
Opened:
For a year in 1940 and 1941 silent movies on 16mm were a regular Monday
night thing at this restaurant. It was owned at the time by Bud Abbott,
of Abbott and Costello fame. The location is on the south side of the
street between Woodman Ave. and Beverly Glen Blvd. The c.2023 image from
Westmac, the broker handling the property, appears on a PDF about the property that was located by Ranjit Sandhu.
Ranjit
notes that the programming was done by playwright Herb Sterne,
presumably using prints from his personal collection. It was fairly
regular thing between May 1940 and May 1941. Sometimes the titles for
the week were noted in ads but it seems that the screenings relied more
on mentions in columns of movie news.
A
May 27, 1940 item in the Valley edition of the Hollywood Citizen-News
for a "Nickelodeon Night" program that included "Fatty and Mabel
Adrift," "His Prehistoric Past," "Her Indian Hero" and "Shadows of
Doubt." Thanks to Ranjit Sandhu for locating this item as well as the
others on the page for this venue.
A mention of a program in the Monday, June 24 Citizen-news.
An item in the July 1 Citizen-News.
An ad in the Saturday July 6, 1940 Citizen-News.
News
tidbits in the July 22, 1940 Citizen-News. That night at the Windsor
House it would be David Belasco's "Tiger Rose" along with Charlie
Chaplin in "East Street."
A
news item and an ad Ranjit located in the December 16, 1940
Citizen-News on the day of Windsor House screenings of "Romola" with
William Powell and Ronald Colman.
Closing as a film venue:
May 1941 appears to have been the end. On May 5 they ran "White Tiger"
with Priscilla Dean and Wallace Beery along with "The Grinning Gringo,"
starring Douglas Fairbanks.
More information: See Ranjit's Revival Cinemas page on his site about Buster Keaton's "The General" for a more complete list of titles that were run at this venue.
Other revival theatres: A number of regular 35mm houses occasionally flirted with revival programming in the 40s and 50s. See our pages about the Cinema Theatre on Western near Santa Monica Blvd., the Sunset Theatre on Western near Sunset, the Tele-View Revival/Hitching Post across from the Pantages, and the Admiral/Vine Theatre on Hollywood Blvd. just west of Vine.
In addition to the 16mm venues covered here see Ranjit Sandhu's Revival Cinemas page for a discussion of other locations where silent films were screened in the 40s and 50s including Wilbur Jerger's 1949 "Great Films Festival" at the Westwood Community Club, screenings for the Beverly Hills Great Films Society, at Mission Village Fiesta Hall, Beverly Hills High School, Horace Mann School and others.
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