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Author
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Topic: A huge thank-you to the Heights Theater
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 11-16-2004 01:32 PM
As some of you may know, I've been spending the last week at the annual convention of the Association of Moving Image Archivists (AMIA) in Minneapolis. This is an international body representing just about anyone and everyone involved with film and video preservation. This year the members' screening night - in which around 20 member archives contribute a 6-minute piece from their collections - took place at the Heights Theater, north-east of the city. My friend Katie Trainor, who organises the evening each year, asked me to lend a hand in the booth this time, and I'd just like to say how much I enjoyed being there and to thank everyone at The Heights for making us so welcome, putting up with two strangers (one of them a limey!) running around in their booth and much else besides. A special mention is due to Tom Letness, T.J. Hopland, Graybow Communications for the video projection, to Film-Tech's very own Bill Carter, who rode shotgun on the Heights' amazingly neat auditorium remote fader... and of course Skippy! Thanks again, folks. This show consisted of 24 clips, 11 on 35mm, 5 on 16mm, 5 on Beta SP, 2 on DVD and one on VHS. These covered a range of formats from 1.85/SR to full-gate 18fps, and the presentation was incredible throughout. Katie tells me that at the closing night reception afterwards, AMIA veterans were commenting that this year's screening was the smoothest and best presented they'd ever seen, and we certainly have you guys to thank for that.
That's the good news. The bad news is that there is a theatre somewhere in or near Austin, Texas which Katie and I will be invading around this time next year. Book your vacation now!
Leo and Katie cueing up the reels for projecting the right clips. As you can see, I'm in 'red eye avoidance mode'! And no, I don't normally dress like that in the booth. I was showing a film from our collection that night, and had to look reasonable when standing up at the front to introduce it. Besides, it was the end of the week by then and apart from my suit, all my clothes were in need of the washing machine.
Katie and Bill Carter in front of the organ console. The Heights has a full-scale Wurlitzer which was played for us before the screening and in the closing film, a Max Fleischer cartoon from the Library of Congress in which the audience was invited to sing along.
A very appreciative AMIA crowd at the closing reception after the screening. People were telling us throughout the evening how much they enjoyed the screening and being in that theatre.
It was also great to meet Joe Beres at last, and furthermore to rope him into joining an AMIA group which Katie and I are forming to advise and help the membership on archive projection and presentation issues. All in all a great week.
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