Long Description:The Charcoal Corral Music Stage is located at the Charcoal Corral
in Perry, New York.
The Stage hosts a myriad of musical artists throughout the
summer in what the Corral calls their "Summer Concert Series".
Every Tuesday evening at 7pm they host a wide variety of live bands
ranging from classic rock to country. Patrons can sit in the grass
lawn to enjoy a beautiful summer night of music and
entertainment.
The Charcoal Corral also offers a variety of fun activities and
food for the whole family. On site visitors can entertain
themselves with minigolf, a video arcade and a drive-in movie
theatre. After the festivities the Corral serves us a myriad
assortment of goodies including burgers, fries, pizza and ice
cream.
The following passage was taken from the Charcoal Corral's
website:
John Reinan, Rochester D&C , Sept. 3, 1995
On summer nights, a former cow pasture is the hottest spot in
Wyoming County.
The action begins around dinner time, when the first wave of
cars turns off Route 39 and streams past the cornfields that border
Jake Stefanon's brainchild.
Visitors from Rochester and Buffalo. From Ithaca and
Irondequoit. From Attica, Arcade and Avon. They've driven an hour
or more, many of them, to enjoy an old idea given new life bar a
farsighted family of promoters.
In this old pasture, the best scenes aren't always on the
screen.
A family from Seneca County negotiates the windmills on the
putt-putt course. A fellow from Canandaigua polishes off a
cheeseburger in the Charcoal Corral. A group of teen-age boys from
Buffalo share a pizza while they eye the girls at the next table.
Couples stroll bark-covered ways under a canopy of towering pine
trees, passing time until the movie starts at dusk. Laughing
children swarm over the playground equipment in the shadow of the
giant screen.
It's a far cry from the passion pits of old - those shabby,
sleazy roadside attractions where teen-agers drank beer and fogged
the car windows while "Bloodsucking Freaks" or "Wild Women of
Wongo" flickered onscreen.
But it works. On a busy weekend night, as many as 2,000
people will eat, golf, play video games and watch first-run movies
- a good-sized village, with all its needs taken care of by the
Stefanon family and their 70 employees.
"They really have a gold mine up there," says Shirley Carr,
the Perry town clerk. "It's quite and attraction."
"Oh, what a neat place," seconds Beryle Bell, deputy clerk
for the village of Perry. "They come out from Rochester for that
place. They know that place in Toronto.... because it's
unique."
DRIVING AMBITION
At the center of it all is a visionary old gentleman and his
hard-working son.
Jake Stefanon, has been in the theater business most of his
adult life. In 1949, he opened a drive-in theater in Altoona, PA. -
one of thousands that sprang up across the country after World War
II. The car was king, and Americans delighted in doing everything
possible from behind the wheel. It was an age of drive-in Movies,
drive-in restaurants, drive-in churches and drive-in
weddings.
In 1966, while operating a string of outdoor theaters in
Buffalo, Jake bought a decrepit drive-in near the eastern shore of
Silver Lake that was nothing more that "cow pastures and posts."
Four years later, he moved to Perry and devoted all his time to
transforming the Silver Lake Drive-In into a family entertainment
center.
It wasn't really the best time to pursue that idea. While
Jake was dreaming of char pits and ice cream parlors, his fellow
drive-in operators were going belly-up by the thousands.
In 1971, there were 3,720 drive-in screens in the United
States, according to the Motion Picture Association of America. In
1994 they reported only 885..... that's a drop of 76 percent. As of
1995, only 40 drive-in screens remain in all of New York state,
according to the National Association of Theater Owners.
But Jake had learned a few things during those years running
drive-ins across Pennsylvania and Western New York. Foremost among
them: Don't let some other guy take advantage of your drawing
power.
"While I was with the Blatt Brothers (a Pittsburgh-based
theater chain), we'd build a drive-in out in the country..... and
pretty soon, a hot dog stand would spring up, and a custard stand -
capitalizing on our ability to draw people," he says. "So I
realized, if you draw people, you have to have something to sell to
them."
He built a hotdog stand outside the theater gates; it grew
into the Charcoal Corral, a sit-down restaurant. The ice cream
parlor came next; the arcade, pizza parlor, mini-golf and outdoor
bandstand followed.
Over the years, he's invested hundreds of thousands of
dollars in his operation, always looking to add another attraction
that will give people a reason to pile into the car and head for
his greener pasture.
'HEY RICK'
But while Jake may be the idea man, the person who makes it
work is his son, Rick. "He's the visionary..... I get it built and
make it go," says Rick, a slender man of 45 with hound-dog eyes, a
mustache and a walkie-talkie dangling from his belt as he makes the
rounds of the 13 acre complex.
Rick has been working at his father's theaters since he was
14. Over the years, he's done or over seen most of the actual work
involved in expanding the Silver Lake operation. "Hammer and
nails..... that's my favorite job," he says.
The drive-in is open from mid-April through late October; the
restaurants are open from late March until just before Christmas.
During the offseason, Rick takes care of the maintenance and any
new building plans.
His duties expanded considerably a couple of years ago, when
he bought the business from his father. Now, Rick is the public
face of the Silver Lake Drive-In - and judging from the response as
he endlessly walks the grounds, it's a face his customers his
customers feel quite comfortable with.
"Hey, Rick," a man in the pizzeria says, clapping him on the
shoulder. "Hey, Rick," a teen-age girl says minutes later, stopping
him in the video arcade. "Hey, Rick," a ticket-taker says asking
him a question outside the projection booth.
Other drive-in operators have adopted some pieces of the
Stefanons' approach - but few, if any have done it on such a
scale.
"They may be the only ones doing all those things in
combination," says Jim Kozak, director of communications for the
theater owners' association who adds that a thriving drive-in is "a
license to print money."
Ultimately, though, the success of the Silver-Lake may lie
not in the novelty of the ideas, but in their execution. The whole
operation reflects an attention to detail and a concern for
cleanliness. The lighting for the putt-putt course comes from giant
carriage lamps 20 feet tall. The pizzas and wings are served in
real wicker baskets; the sodas come in chilled glass mugs. The
neatly trimmed lawns wouldn't look out of place on a golf
course.
"Things have to look nice," Rick says. "After all, we're in
the middle of nowhere."
DRIVE-IN DREAMS
When Jake bought Silver Lake Drive-In, he says, there were 13
drive-ins around Rochester. Now, there are none remaining in Monroe
County. But there are plenty of people who haven't forgotten
them.
"I used to go to drive-ins all the time in high school," says
Patricia Crompton of Chili, settle comfortably in her car awaiting
the show. "Let's see, there was the Lakeshore, the Starlite, the
Washington, the Empire," she says rattling off the names of local
drive-ins that now exist only in memory.
In the back row of the 500 car theater, Brian Hall and Betsy
MacIntyre of Dansville, Livingston County, are lounging on lawn
chairs in the bed of Brian's pickup, playing cards and drinking
cold beer from the ice chest that sits between them. "I don't
understand why there aren't more drive-ins," Betsy says. "It's
packed everytime we come here."
Next to them, a van is parked backward, its double doors
swung open wide toward the screen. Inside, a small boy and girl
dressed in pajamas lie on their stomach on a mattress, heads
propped up in their hands, watching the Mickey Mouse cartoon that
precedes the feature.
An hour later - as Kevin Costner battles a 60-foot-high
Dennis Hopper onscreen - both the pajama-clad kids are sleeping
soundly.
SMALL PLEASURES
The old pasture, which used to nourish cows, has taken good
care of the Stefanon family over the years. Jake proudly points out
that he and his wife, Josie - who works the mini-golf course -
"raised six kids on the theater business."
Rick's wife, Susan, runs the ticket booth; his sister and
brother-in-law, Ann and Keith McWhinney, manage the restaurants.
And Rick says with a wink that he's already breaking in his own
children - 6 year old Sarah and 4 year old Jacob John.
In an era when local merchants across the country are being
shoved aside by giant conglomerates, this family has built their
own commercial juggernaut in a most unlikely place.
"I wouldn't take a million dollars for it," Jake
beams.
"I don't know, Jake," Rick replies. "Some nights you could
offer me a buck and a half and I'd take it."
But as he heads out into the dark for another trip around the
grounds, it's a good bet this isn't one of those nights.