A month after a storm ripped up its big outdoor screen, one of the few drive-in theaters left in Minnesota is still shut down as workers try to repair the damage.
It's the longest the 61-year-old Long Drive-In in Long Prairie has been closed during the seasonal business' peak summer months.
But owner Michelle Claseman is determined to reopen her family's treasured central Minnesota theater by September and keep showing films under the stars for generations to come.
"It's hard not being open," she said last week, adding that the theater has been bombarded with questions about when it will start showing movies again.
"It's just a small community so they're anxious for us to open."
So is Claseman and her husband, Dan, who bought the theater five years ago from her parents, who ran it for 30 years after working there in the late 1960s. Now the Clasemans, who live in nearby Little Falls, run it full-time with the help of their two kids.
Never before has the theater suffered damage like it did July 17, when high winds destroyed the original 1950s-era screen — which is 86 feet wide and stands 60 feet high — hitting it from behind and scattering panels across the yard.
"It just hit it from the right angle," Claseman said, adding that it was "gut-wrenching" to see the vintage screen torn down. "It was right in the middle of our busy season."