Palladium Cinema

Lower Cardiff Road,
Pwllheli, LL53 5NF

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Showing 26 - 42 of 42 comments

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on September 16, 2011 at 2:01 pm

The cafe which Mr Jones mentioned closed in 1966 11 years before the cinema itself, I never understood why as it was a very popular place,but I guess they had to save money somewhere,they also cut to one house only in the seventies, except maybe during the summer months.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on September 16, 2011 at 1:50 pm

Nice to see the picture of John Hughes the Chief projectionist above my introductory contribution on the Palladium,I guess Mr Morris Jones posted it, anyway it’s very good.I also have a photo somewhere of John, when I find it I’ll try to include it on this site.

The film advertised on the still box is probably the"Dragnet" that was released in 1947,the tv series with Jack Webb according to IMDB started in 1951.

I was also interested in Mr Morris'comment about changing the records on the single 78 rpm turntable in the minimum amount of time, as a schoolboy I always wondered how the Town Hall Cinema (Neuadd Dwyfor)were able to play continuous music,I soon found out when I started there as a trainee projectionist,it never occured to Me that they had two turntables.

David_Morris_Jones
David_Morris_Jones on September 5, 2011 at 6:59 am

Here is John Hughes the Palladium’s projectionist – wearing jeans and denim in 1956 – long before they were in fashion. https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=15fd87c5d4&view=att&th=11ec01698f7aa737&attid=0.5&disp=inline&realattid=file4&zw John – or “John Palladium” as he was called – was also a diver and a lobster fisherman. He and jack Lewis used to go out to catch mackerell and empty their lobster pots every morning at 4.00am, then return home at 9am to start work at the Palladium where they finished their day at 10.30 pm. The Palladium’s manager, Jack Lewis is photographed here – working in his little office to the left of the cinema foyer. https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=15fd87c5d4&view=att&th=11ec01698f7aa737&attid=0.14&disp=inline&realattid=file13&zw Both John Palladium and Jack Lewis have now passed away – but this note is a salute to them and all the staff of the Palladium, Pwllheli

David_Morris_Jones
David_Morris_Jones on September 5, 2011 at 3:40 am

My uncle, J E (Jack) Lewis, was the manager of the Palladium Cinema. I spent much of my summer holidays in Pwllheli in the operating box – a hot and noisy place where the clatter of the Gaumont Kalee projectors was almost overwhelmed by the volume of the film audio coming from a speaker with the level cranked up to the max. There was a first and second house each evening with matinees on Saturdays (for children) and at midweek. Each house closed with a film of the National Anthem – a short film of the Queen trooping the colour with the anthem playing on the sound track. The audience always stood up at this point. Another job for the projectionist was to operate the switch to start the curtains closing. Because they took a while to close (the screen was a big one) this had to be done on the word at the point in the national anthem where the word “victorious” would have been sung. If he got it right the curtains would be fully closed by the time the anthem ended. There sound track was just a military band so the projectionist had to mentally “sing” the anthem in his head whilst the film ran in order to flick the switch at the right point. Interval music was played in from 78rpm discs on a single turntable. Again it was a challenge to the manual dexterity of the projectionst (or more usually the assistant projectionist) to minimise the time between the end of one record and the start of the next.The new record was slid down onto the turntable from the left forearm of the projectionist whilst his left hand removed the old record and his right hand moved the arm of the gramophone. With practice there was a barely discernible gap between the two records. The key job was to look after the 35mm film. The feature movie changed every two days – so there was a new programme to be put together every two days – along with shorts, travelogues, documentaries, (like the March of Time) and cartoons (eg “Mighty Mouse” or “Tom and Jerry”. When each new batch of features and shorts arrived at the Palladium (delivered in metal containers in special fireproof delivery vans) they were run through on a winder before being put in sequence into one of a numbered rank of specially-made fireproof metal cupboards. Every join in the film was checked by John by hand and usually remade by him with film cement to make sure it didn’t break during the performance. (He never trusted the joins made by other projectionists on the Paramount Circuit) When the show started it was a matter of starting at reel one and going on, reel by reel, until the end (the National Athem) . Each reel would be taken out in sequence, threaded into the projector. As the previous reel on the other projector came to an end e a round dot mark would appear on the top right hand of the screen. This was the signal to run the second projector and operate the lever to open the metal plate which protected the film from the hot light of the arc lamp. The projectionist then had to watch for the second “dot” (top right hand of the screen again). This was the change-over signal – the point at which interconnected shutters were simultaneously operated on both prokectors – cutting off the light from the first projector and allowing the light from the from the second projector to hit the screen. The light in each projector was generated by carbon arcs encased in glass which gradually burned down during each run. An automatic feed system kept the carbons towards the incandescent burn point – but they also needed constant manual adjustment to ensure the light was at the optimum. This was gauged by a simple transluscent indicator on the side of the projector which showed where the burn point was in relation to the optimum position. The Palladium showed Pathe newsreels which arrived by Crosville bus – but which were sometimes up to 13 days old. The manager – Jack Lewis – always complained to head office when this happened The Palladium also had a cafe at first floor level which was open all day and was a favourite haunt of local retired sea-captains who used to meet there for coffee most mornings.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on June 12, 2011 at 1:13 pm

I must admit to geoff a second mistake, I’m pretty sure by now that the first Cinemasscope film was another John Wayne seafaring adventure titled ‘Blood Alley’

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on April 2, 2011 at 7:31 pm

Just noticed that in my introductory posting on the Palladium, I stated that it was demolished in the late 1980’s, typing error should have been 1990’s.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on March 9, 2011 at 2:51 pm

When the Palladium converted to Cinemascope in 1956, the work was done over the course of a weekend, they started after the last show on Saturday night and completed it in time for the first show on Monday.
Pwllheli cinemas were closed on Sundays anyway in those days, so they did not lose on any performances. The new screen was wall to wall & in front of the procenium arch, also there was no need to lose any seats for the conversion. The old Kinematograph Cinema Directory is incorrect in attributing the Palled with 800 seats, as it was always 702. I have the old monthly programme, when i find it I’ll know the exact date.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on March 8, 2011 at 8:53 am

Here is a photo from 1991 during the supermarket years, It’s not the same without the name Palladium on that white wall.
View link

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on March 5, 2011 at 5:51 pm

Here’s a photo from 1993, when the Palladium was a supermarket.
View link

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on February 4, 2011 at 2:32 pm

The late John Hughes Palladium’s chief projectionist was an excellent self taught tv engineer, probably the most knowledgable in town.
He could be quite witty, he once told me during the run of ‘The Longest Day’ “another week of this and I would have been suffering from shell shock” !.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on February 1, 2011 at 2:12 pm

Here’s a 1964 photo of the Palladium.
View link

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on January 24, 2011 at 3:41 pm

I also remember the school trips to the cinema, another one during the same year as The Conquest Of Everest (1953) was the Coronation Of Queen Elizabeth II, not a film to hold the attention of us under 11’s.

hoppy
hoppy on January 10, 2011 at 8:33 am

The ‘Palled’ then was a Mecca of popular culture for those in quest of glamour, spectacle and entertainment. It not only served adults but also each Saturday afternoon the foot stamping, whistling progeny of Pwllheli and its surrounding district who raucously vented their encouragement or disapproval as a pacey action of a cowboy film or weekly serial unfolded. It was the exhilarating highlight of my week and nothing short of being bedridden would have kept me from cycling from nearby Efailnewydd to sit in those plush seats, savour the charged atmosphere in that darkened auditorium and be transported to fantasy land. It also served the occasional educational role, I remember a school trip to see the conquest of Everest by Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing also Vivian Fuchs’s successful South Polar Expedition.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on April 6, 2010 at 8:04 pm

The Palladium was probably struggling like most cinemas when it closed, but it i’m not sure it would have closed when it did, that is 7 years before the rest of the curcuit.

It did not close only to stand empty for years like many others, they had an offer from Kwik Save supermarkets, probably an offer they could not refuse,the local council looked into the possibility of purchasing the building, but as I understand it they can have grants for refurbishing a building they own but not for buying one.

The council were already running the Town Hall cinema in the town, and would have replaced it with the palladium. However even if they could have bought it I don’t think they would have, as most councillors in those days like many other people thought that cinemas were things of the past. Who would of forecasted today’s multiplexes springing up everywhere ?

geoffjc
geoffjc on March 31, 2010 at 7:19 pm

The film mentioned by Eric wasn’t released until 1959 so couldn’t have been the first CinemaScope film shown. Was there another film with Curt Jurgens or a similar title?

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on March 31, 2010 at 12:08 pm

The Palladium converted to Cinemascope in 1956 one year after Pwllheli’s other cinema The Town Hall (now Neuadd Dwyfor)and in order to ensure that they had a bigger screen than the opposition they did something different to their other cinemas,they erected the screen in front of the proscenium arch.

The screen curtains reached from wall to wall, which I thought was rather untidy,(but then some would say that I would say that as I was a projectionist at the other cinema! !)actually I grew up a stone’s throw from the Palladium and thought the world of the place.

The first Cinemascope film to be screened at the Palladium was ‘Ferry To Hong Kong'starring Curt Jurgens.also 1956 was the year Palladium celebrated it’s 21st anniversary.

Eric Evans
Eric Evans on December 7, 2009 at 4:03 pm

Mr Turner is quite right that the Palladium’s capacity was 702,that was the figure I thought I’d typed in my comments.I’m not old enough to remember Captain Pritchard but I have heard a lot about him, but I do remember Mr Guy Baker.

For many years Paramount Pictures were unhappy with the circuit Palladium belonged to for obvious reasons,and consequently they were not allowed to screen their products.However they made peace in 1960 just in time for the big box office attraction of Elvis Presley’s first film after leaving the army “G I Blues” But Mr Baker held on to the name