The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Motion picture presents…

A love affair with film lasts more than 30 years for this Summerside couple

- DESIREE ANSTEY

Before lights dimmed and images flickered across the silver screen, Gerard Gallant threaded reels of film through projectors.

When one reel had ended, he skillfully and seamlessly switched to the next while working in the dark of a small booth.

“You could never afford to lose concentrat­ion when doing this job. I was always nervous before a shift while hoping everything would work,” said Gallant, who never slipped up in his career, first at the Regent, and then 38-years at the Capitol Theatre, in Summerside.

Each reel of the film lasted 20 minutes.

“Near the finish of reel was a dot, and I would count these to 10 before switching to the next," he said.

Gallant began his career in the 1940s when there weren't television sets in every home.

Going to the movies for an American romantic drama such as Gone with the Wind or Casablanca was a whole community affair.

“There would be crowds of people lining up outside the (Regent) theatre (located on Summer Street), and they would pour out onto Water Street while waiting for doors to open,” said Gallant's wife, Florence.

“Gone with the Wind starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh was my favourite movie. It had 13 reels of film that I had to change,” said Gallant.

It was a rich experience; the smell of buttery popcorn, the laughter and chatter of seeing familiar faces, the excitement as the lights dimmed, and curtains were rolled, said Gallant.

But in 2000, the curtain went down on the Capitol Theatre.

“It was sad to see the changes in the presentati­on of the film, but people now enjoy it. I’ve seen several vehicles in the parking lot (130 Ryan Street),” said Gallant, at 86 years of age.

“You can’t stay stuck in the past, but you can remember.”

The Gallants make (history) boards that are displayed at the Summerside Farmers’ Market on Saturday mornings.

“We’ve been making these boards that highlight Summerside’s past for over 20 years,” said Florence, in reference to the boards that highlight the old theatres, more than 150 veterans, the railway and the Holman building.

“We want to preserve this past,” she said. At 85 years of age, she is starting to go blind.

The couple hopes a museum will soon be found to safeguard this treasured history.

 ?? DESIREE ANSTEY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Gerard Gallant motions to a reel of film that he threaded through a projector in the darkness of his booth back in the 1940s.
DESIREE ANSTEY/JOURNAL PIONEER Gerard Gallant motions to a reel of film that he threaded through a projector in the darkness of his booth back in the 1940s.
 ?? DESIREE ANSTEY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Gerard and Florence Gallant hope to preserve their history boards in a local museum.
DESIREE ANSTEY/JOURNAL PIONEER Gerard and Florence Gallant hope to preserve their history boards in a local museum.
 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Gallant pictured as a film projection­ist at the Regent Theatre in Summerside.
SUBMITTED Gallant pictured as a film projection­ist at the Regent Theatre in Summerside.
 ?? SUBMITTED ?? The Regent Theatre in Summerside.
SUBMITTED The Regent Theatre in Summerside.

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