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Win a Solo Exhibition this February. Juror: Harvey Stein
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Photo Book

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By Steve Fitch

Publisher: George F Thompson Publishing
Publication date: November 2025
Print length: 136 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Screen Towers: The Drive-In Theater in America is a visual and cultural journey through one of the most distinctive inventions of twentieth-century American leisure. Released in November 2025, the book traces the rise of the drive-in theater as both architectural landmark and social space, born from the postwar embrace of the automobile and the collective magic of cinema. These outdoor screens once transformed empty fields and roadside lots into places of shared anticipation, where movies unfolded beneath open skies.

The drive-in reached its height during the 1950s and 1960s, when thousands of towering screens punctuated the American landscape. More than venues for entertainment, they became gathering points for families, teenagers, and travelers, blending everyday life with Hollywood spectacle. Their presence reflected a confident, mobile society, eager to merge comfort, technology, and popular culture into a uniquely American experience.

Photographer Steve Fitch began documenting these structures in the early 1970s, traveling across the country to capture their often-overlooked beauty. His early black-and-white photographs focus on the monumental backs of the screens, where neon signs and painted murals announced the theater’s identity to passing traffic. Shot at dusk or night, these images lend the towers an almost mythic quality, glowing against the darkness like modern roadside cathedrals.

As the decades progressed, Fitch transitioned to color photography using a large-format view camera, turning his attention toward the screens themselves and the quiet interiors of drive-ins in decline. His work records a period of transformation, as many theaters were abandoned, repurposed, or erased entirely. Yet within this sense of loss lies a profound tenderness, as empty screens and fading paint speak to memories of laughter, romance, and ritual.

Today, with a small number of drive-ins still operating, Screen Towers stands as both archive and homage. It preserves the visual poetry of these structures while honoring their role in shaping American social life. Fitch’s photographs remind us that cinema was once an outdoor affair, rooted in place, community, and the simple pleasure of watching stories flicker to life under the stars.

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