--- dg-publish: true Alias: [""] Tag: ["šŸ¤µšŸ»", "šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø", "šŸŽ„", "šŸ‘¶šŸ»"] Date: 2024-05-21 DocType: "WebClipping" Hierarchy: TimeStamp: 2024-05-21 Link: https://sf.gazetteer.co/the-true-story-behind-the-kid-who-went-1940s-viral-for-his-week-at-the-cinemas-in-san-francisco location: CollapseMetaTable: true --- Parent:: [[@News|News]] Read:: [[2024-05-28]] ---   ```button name Save type command action Save current file id Save ``` ^button-Thetruestorybehindthekidwhowent1940sviralforhisweekatthecinemasinSanFranciscoNSave   # The true story behind the kid who went 1940s viral for his week at the cinemas in San Francisco - Gazetteer SF Richard Allen was an intensely private man. He was an upstanding citizen, the sort of guy who was well-known and well-regarded in his community. He loved working in the metals industry, where he was known as a ā€œgo-to personā€ among his peers. He loved visiting Disneyland almost as much as he loved visiting Hawaii. He loved his wife and four children. He was once a local radio DJ. He helped spur a movement of Bay Area wrestling in the ā€™80s. He was given a Citizen of the Year award by the Union City Chamber of Commerce. [By all accounts, especially that of his daughter Denise, he lived a long, rich life.](https://www.tributearchive.com/obituaries/18421673/richard-allen) But Denise had no idea that her father made national headlines in 1947 for watching a weekā€™s worth of movies in one sitting. She also didnā€™t expect that this story, more than seven decades later, would become a beloved internet meme that has likely been seen by thousands ā€”Ā  if not millions ā€” of people online. Richard Allenā€™s wild week started on February 2, 1947.Ā  ā€œRichard had set out last Sunday, intending merely to spend a day at the movies,ā€ read an article published in the San Francisco Examiner on February 8, 1947. ā€œBut when he suddenly found it was 1:30 a.m. he was ā€˜scared to go home.ā€™ā€ So with a whopping $20 in his pocket, and one unidentified theater with a lax policy on kids watching flicks unsupervised, the possibilities were limitless. The fifth-graderā€™s wild week was filled with candy bars (150), comic books (15), hot dogs (ā€œa large numberā€), and movies (16), punctuated by naps at a tree-covered lot. It didnā€™t last. He probably had enough money to keep him afloat for a few more weeks, but by the following Friday, Richardā€™s father Marvin, a San Leandro restaurateur, had retrieved his son. He sternly told the *Examiner* that his boy gets ā€œadventurous ideasā€ from listening to the radio. Richard Allenā€™s story was eventually picked up by national news media. One of these outlets, United Press, also interviewed the Allens, and got a shrug of a quote from Richard that would stand the test of time: ā€œI guess I just like movies.ā€ In 2021, a year after Richard died, [a Tumblr account specializing in mid-century geekery circulated the United Press story](https://vintagegeekculture.tumblr.com/post/655003803379269632/1947), headlined ā€œLove For Movies Causes Boy, 10, To Lose A Week.ā€ Cinephiles and meme accounts on social media shared the story the world over. It caught traction on iFunny, the meme recirculator website. [Actors](https://twitter.com/DevonESawa/status/1408956055862849536), [film distributors](https://twitter.com/janusfilms/status/1682427710960705549), and [movie theaters](https://www.facebook.com/somervilletheatre/posts/we-just-like-movies-too/10159569367831663/) shared his story, often with a pithy line expressing admiration for the boy.Ā  But there was so much more to the story than the headlines. ![](https://lede-admin.sf.gazetteer.co/wp-content/uploads/sites/57/2024/05/205618798_10159569367211663_155733272382655791_n.jpg?w=710) *United Press International / Archival* --- I caught Denise on the phone, nursing her second glass of wine at her home in the Central Valley suburb of Tracy. What unfolded was a freewheeling, candid exercise in excavating her fatherā€™s life together.Ā  Toward the end of his life, Richard moved in with his daughter. He had reluctantly retired from his decades-long career in the metals biz. Then, in a stroke of terrible luck, he sustained a debilitating hip injury.Ā  ā€œIt was May 31, 2019, and my dad was dead a year later,ā€ she said. ā€œHe didnā€™t know what to do without working.ā€Ā  In the year or so that they cohabitated, she started to piece together a fuller picture of her fatherā€™s life. But itā€™s clear that Denise didnā€™t get to hear every story that she could about her father.Ā  Hereā€™s what she knew: Dick, as his friends and family knew him, *really* did like movies. She rattled off the actors her dad adored. He loved the comedy stylings of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. He *loved* OG *Mickey Mouse Clubhouse* star Annette Funicello, who, as she recalled, was his ultimate crush. His favorite actor, however, was probably Bela Lugosi. (And as luck would have it, Lugosi had a film that was released to theaters on February 1, 1947: a critically panned thriller titled *Scared to Death*. He probably saw that during his week out, Denise said. Chances are good that he probably also saw the Western *Last Frontier Uprising;* Dick loved Westerns*.*) There were other things that she didnā€™t know firsthand, but ultimately made sense. Like, for example, how a 10-year-old could have earned $20 ā€” again, worth a couple hundred bucks in 1947 ā€” on his own.Ā  Denise figured that one out pretty quickly. ā€œWhen Iā€™m reading this story, Iā€™m like, ā€˜Oh my God, I have flashbacks of him telling me he used to panhandle in San Francisco when he was young.ā€™ā€Ā  ![](https://lede-admin.sf.gazetteer.co/wp-content/uploads/sites/57/2024/05/4b415c66-1cd7-4d30-bba6-c14fcb33dda6.jpeg?w=710) A young Richard Allen, dressed up in pigtails and a dress. *Courtesy of Denise Allen* Dick probably was good at it, too. He had a boyish charm: A cherubic face, a sweet smile, and a demeanor that could convince anyone to spare him a nickel, his daughter recalled. ā€œMy grandmother did put him in a dress on purpose because the curls in his hair were long,ā€ she said. ā€œIt looked exactly like Shirley Temple's hair. He just was a cute, cute kid and he knew he could use his charm. And he probably learned it from the movies.ā€ The kid with $20 in his pockets would grow up to be an adult with a cool grand in cash at hand at all times, she said. And, that, too, was explained by the article. ā€œHe said, ā€˜I promised myself when I was a little boy that I would always have cash on me.ā€™ And he did ā€™til the day he died.ā€Ā  Even little things, like his taste in food, lined up with what he liked as a boy. He didnā€™t eat much candy, but he continued to have a fondness for hot dogs ā€” and always kept them around the house. But there was one thing in the story that didn't quite add up for Denise. Neither the *Examiner* or *United Press* really examined how long it took Richardā€™s dad to find his wayward son, or if heā€™d run away before, or if the ā€œadventurous ideasā€ Richardā€™s dad said he heard on the radio concealed something else. Why would he be so scared of going home that he preferred to be out alone in San Francisco? How *can* a kid go to the movies by himself? How often did he go to the movies alone? ā€œI'm reading this thinking to myself, ā€˜What were my grandparents doing? What the hell were my grandparents doing?ā€™ā€ she recalled.Ā  Denise didnā€™t miss a beat.Ā  ā€œOh my God, no wonder my father was in foster care,ā€ she said, matter-of-factly. Her father didnā€™t talk much about his childhood, perhaps for this reason. Denise didnā€™t really know her grandfather, Marvin Allen, Sr., who died before she was born. His wife was a devout Mormon. They later split, and she remarried to another man ā€” a grandfather that Denise knew. All she remembered about Marvin was that he owned a restaurant in San Leandro, and later moved down to Los Angeles to open up a shop there. It was successful enough that the actress Connie Stevens (another one of Dickā€™s favorites) came down for a visit. She confessed that her dad ā€œnever really had a father figure.ā€ ā€œThat's probably why he ended up in foster care, because I know that my dad said that they couldn't control him,ā€ she said. Midway through our conversation, I bring up the overwhelmingly positive reception that Richard Allenā€™s story has received by strangers on the internet. I asked her how heā€™d respond if he were alive. ![](https://lede-admin.sf.gazetteer.co/wp-content/uploads/sites/57/2024/05/0aeda9e2-5dd7-400e-b59f-701068ca0a3b.jpeg?w=705) *Courtesy of Denise Allen* ā€œHe would sit there, he'd put his head down,ā€ Denise said. ā€œHe would probably shake it back and forth and just laugh.ā€Ā  But Richardā€™s penchant for modesty, even in peopleā€™s post-mortem recollections of him, belied just how much the story resonated with people. This silly story keeps being shared for a reason.Ā  ā€œPeople really loved the idea that your dad loved movies so much that he ran away from home and escaped to go to the theater,ā€ I told her. ā€œThatā€™s what it was,ā€ she said, with a catch in her throat. ā€œYou just used the word escape. Iā€™m getting emotional right now. And I think that's what he was doing, escaping from the home life.ā€ Richard Allenā€™s sense of adventure and spontaneity, a quality that persisted for as long as he lived, continues to live on after his death. The idea that someone could escape their life ā€” even if just for a few days ā€” to camp out in a movie theater and luxuriate in another world feels like a pipe dream. Itā€™s why the story continues to resonate, why people are still in awe of this 10-year-old. For a week, Richard Allen was free.Ā  ## Stay in touch Sign up for our free newsletter     --- `$= dv.el('center', 'Source: ' + dv.current().Link + ', ' + dv.current().Date.toLocaleString("fr-FR"))`