Hull's Angels
By Richard Matthews
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Members
of Hull’s
Angels saved and purchased America’s only
community-owned drive-in theater in Lexington,
Va.
– Photo
by Doug Miller |
When the big screen
at Hull’s Drive-in remained
dark in the summer of 1999, moviegoers were disappointed.
After all, Hull’s had been showing films off
Route 11 north of Lexington, Va. (pop. 6,867), for
more than 40 years.
“It was disheartening,” recalls Sam
Newcomer, 51, a longtime fan of the drive-in theater. “I’m
very nostalgic and this was something I could relate
to my childhood—happy times. No matter what
was going on, I felt I could come to Hull’s
and slow down.”
The fate of the theater—owned and operated
by Sebert Hull and his wife, Effie, for four decades—became
uncertain when Hull died before the drive-in opened
for its 1998 season. At first, locals were encouraged
when Effie sold the business to W.D. Goad whose auto
body shop is adjacent to the drive-in. Goad kept
the drive-in going that summer, but the following
year, the cost of needed technical upgrades prompted
him to close the theater and look for a buyer who
would run the business in the family-friendly way
of Sebert Hull.
Enter Eric and Elise Sheffield. The Sheffields
moved to Lexington in 1993 and Hull’s, Elise
says, “was our weekend date.” In their
30s, the Sheffields had a new baby and Eric had started
a woodworking business. The drive-in, with its $4-a-person,
double-feature tickets (children under 12 free),
was affordable entertainment.
In June 1999, the couple organized a meeting to
see what could be done to keep the theater open.
More than 50 people—from all walks of life—
attended. Sharing a fondness for Mr. Hull and a love
of the outdoor theater, they formed a non-profit
organization called Hull’s Angels and re-opened
the theater on July 7, 2000.
At first, the group leased the theater from Goad.
But after two years of fund-raising, Hull’s
Angels—today composed of 700 dues-paying members—amassed
$75,000 to renovate and purchase America’s
only community-owned drive-in theater. With an annual
budget of $175,000, the drive-in pays the bills primarily
through ticket and concession sales, but also raises
money with $5 memberships, raffles, and the sale
of T-shirts and hats.
“Mr. Hull had quite a following,” says
Eric, who along with Elise are members of the elected
board that administers the drive-in. “He was
very down-home.”
Preserving that spirit is important. Though tickets
were raised to $5, concession prices remain low with
75-cent popcorn and 75-cent sno-cones. On an average
weekend, the theater sell 500 pounds of french fries,
according to Frank Kulesza, part-time projectionist
and executive director of the
citizens’ board running the drive-in. The staff
at Hull’s is a mix of paid and volunteer workers.
Board members often are behind the concessions counter
on busy weekends, which can see up to 315 cars spread
across the venue’s five acres.
Hull’s still shows mostly family-appropriate
movies and on summer nights, kids, some already in
pajamas, play and catch lightning bugs on the grass
in front of the screen.
Newcomer, who greets moviegoers while manning the
ticket booth, says the drive-in is much the same
as it’s always been. He recalls his aunt piling
a bunch of kids into the car and taking them—and
him—to the drive-in. “It was how I knew
it was summer, when the drive-in opened.”
Theater board member Peggy Payne, 47, recalls the
decision to save Hull’s as an outpouring of
community determination. “I’ve often
since thought of Margaret Mead, who said: ‘Never
doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed
people can change the world. Indeed, it’s the
only thing that ever has.’”
But it is a familiar bit of the world the people
of Lexington have saved. At dusk, Kulesza announces
over the microphone: “Okay, folks, it’s
show time. Who wants a movie? Let’s hear those
horns.” A chorus of honks and beeps rise from
the grassy berms and into the starlit sky and, with
a flip of a switch, the giant outdoor screen lights
up once again.
Richard Matthews is a writer in Goshen, Va.
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