Reference Type |
The Age
journal
|
Title |
The Big Screens Disappear |
Author(s) | Vin Maskell,Penelope Nelson |
Issue |
Agenda |
Town |
Melbourne |
State |
VIC |
Country |
Australia |
Publication Date |
02-09-1990 |
Citation Date |
|
Page Number |
12 |
Comments |
Article lists twenty-two drive-in cinema venues within Melbourne, Australia. Venue names are accompanied by their operating dates (opening and closing), followed by the subsequent reason for their closure or distruction. Most reasons surround the areas subdivision.
The list appears alongside an article titled "Where are they now? The suburban drive-ins" which is filled with various memories of their drive-in experiences from Songwriter Billy Baxton to Film buff John Flaus. The article also highlights infornmation regarding "the last drive-in"; Coburg. |
Synopsis |
The Age is a daily broadsheet newspaper which has been published in Melbourne, Australia since 1854. Owned and published by Fairfax Media. The Age currently has an average weekday circulation of 190,600, increasing to 275,000 on Saturdays (in a city of 4 million). |
tags: "Megan Scollo"
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Notes ( click to view )
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Hoyts Drive-in/ Starlite Village Drive-In Frankston |
FRANKSTON: 1959-1989
Residential subdivision
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Close Notes
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