Houston’s first outdoor theatre, originally known as the Drive-in Theatre, opened on June 7, 1940. The generic name gave way to the Texas Drive-in, and later, its better-known name of the South Main Drive-In.
Many other followed: The Epsom Downs, Winkler, Shepherd, Market Street, Trail, Airline, Hempstead Road, Irvington, Post Oak (two separate ones), King Center Twin, Hi-Nabor, Red Bluff, Tidwell, Gulfway, Thunderbird, Telephone Road Twin, and McLendon Triple.
Then there was the massive Loew’s Sharpstown Drive-in, with an oversized concession stand and children’s play area, including a miniature train ride.
The last drive-in to be built was also the last to go. Gordon McLendon’s I-45 Drive-in opened on July 2, 1982. It closed ten years later, on February 29, 1992. With the I-45, the era of the Drive-in came to a close in Houston.
Sort of.
In 2005, the owners of the Crossroads Drive-In in Shiner constructed a new drive-in theatre, the Starlite, on Highway 59 near Kingwood. The following year, the Showboat Drive-in opened in Tomball. For those who are willing to make the drive, it is still possible to see a movie under the stars, just like the old days.