Motion Picture Daily (Jul-Sep 1960)

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Lost World9 Finds Crowds of Fans at N.Y. Bow 'in Allen's "The Lost World" roared into New York yesiay and was greeted with tumultuous welcome by thouds of youngsters who lined up hours before doors opened the Warner Theatre. Three busloads of Police Athletic igue youngsters led a procession down Broadway to the nt. id Hedison (left) another of the stars of "World" helps a special police(right) and a PAL representative hand out free copies of the special st World" comic book version to the waiting youngsters. 10 full days of national exploitation by the stars of the attraction and producer-director Irwin Allen paid off in 20th's most sensational opening day in New York since "The Young Lions." Here, Allen and Claude Rains, one of the stars of "World" pose before a special preview held in New York. David Hedison (center) shows one of the "Dinosaurs" in the picture to some of the PAL youngsters before the show started, as Lieut. Robert P. McManus (right) Director of Youth Programs for the PAL looks on. | Rosen (left) vice-president of the Stanley-Warner Corp. I Abe Dickstein (right) 20th-Fox New York Branch manI chat with the special policeman on hand to keep the lings in line. Lines reached around the block more than two hours before the attraction opened yesterday, at the Warner Theatre. Clowns and bands greeted the bow and sustained applause nearly stopped the picture several times in its first performance. The Irwin Allen production is in CinemaScope and DeLuxe Color.