The Cleveland Cinematheque was founded the same year that the U.S. Supreme Court essentially ruled that home video was legal. But Cinematheque director John Ewing has always preferred to see films on the big screen. The driving force behind the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque announced Friday that he will retire in June 2024.
鈥淢y hope was to show movies that wouldn't come to the region otherwise, and I really think we've done that鈥攊n spades, Ewing said in a statement. Film history has been reduced to a short list of 鈥榞reatest hits鈥 like 鈥楪one with the Wind,鈥 鈥楾he Godfather鈥 and 鈥2001: A Space Odyssey.鈥 But, film history is so much richer than those titles that will always be shown in multiplexes.鈥
His efforts have been recognized with a Cleveland Arts Prize and, in 2010, he was named a Chevalier (knight) in the Order of Arts and Letters of the Republic of France.
Ewing said it鈥檚 the 鈥渞ight time鈥 to retire as Cinematheque audiences have returned to pre-COVID pandemic levels. He also cited health considerations and a desire to spend more time with his grandchildren. CIA plans to begin a national search for his successor in the coming weeks.
In his statement, Ewing acknowledged his co-founders, Ron Holloway and George Gund III, while saying their efforts have made Cleveland 鈥渁 major American film city.鈥 They co-founded the Cinematheque in 1984 and first started showing Cinematheque films in 1985 at Case Western Reserve University. A year later, the Cinematheque moved to the Cleveland Institute of Art.
Ewing previously ran film series at his alma mater, Denison University, and then was director of the Canton Film Society from 1975-83. From 1981-86, he was a contributing editor and regular film reviewer for Northern Ohio Live magazine.