Comments from HJHill

Showing 176 - 200 of 269 comments

HJHill
HJHill commented about Pavilion Cinema on Jun 24, 2014 at 10:41 pm

The open space diagonally across the road from the Pavilion is now (2014) thick with trees. The building opposite the cinema has gone, as has the next building which abuts the bank “B”.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Classic Cinema Chorlton-cum-Hardy on Jun 22, 2014 at 4:10 pm

johnr … you’re not alone in being irritated by Cinema Treasure’s preference for indexing cinemas by their final trading name. I’m of the opinion that the original name should be used, whilst also recording any other names in chronological order.

It’s almost three years to the day since your message was posted. They’re not going to re-index it as the Rivoli!

HJHill
HJHill commented about Shalimar Cinema on Jun 22, 2014 at 12:23 pm

The Kinematograph Year Book charts the blighted history of the Rivoli. KYB 1937 simply has Ben Kanter as proprietor and 1520 seats as the capacity. KYB 1942 has “(closed)”. Understandably, KYBs 1945, 1947, 1950 and 1954 make no mention of it. 46 years of existence; and closed for 30% of the time!

HJHill
HJHill commented about Majestic Theatre on Jun 11, 2014 at 11:37 pm

Strictly speaking, the fly tower roof, having two pitches to it, was a mansard roof.

I’m intrigued by the box construction on the roof above the “Union Cinemas Majestic” sign in this 1937 shot. It isn’t there in the equivalent 1929 view.

A public services building with library, housing administration offices, etc is now on the site.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Rialto Cinema on Jun 11, 2014 at 2:07 pm

The Rialto opened 10 May 1937 and was similar in design to the E J Hinge Circuit’s Ritz Cinema in Forest Hall. The architects were Percy L Browne, Son and Harding. The façade was brick and coloured cement with a tower and metal canopies. The entrance vestibule contained the pay-box beyond which was a foyer. The auditorium was decorated in red, beige and gold and had 1026 seats (according to a non-KYB source). The proscenium arch was enhanced with decorative plasterwork. The Rialto closed on 25 June 1961 and became a bingo hall. It was demolished in July 1964 and the site is now occupied by a health centre.

HJHill
HJHill commented about ABC Bolton on May 25, 2014 at 4:31 pm

There is silent film footage of the opening day, Wednesday 13 February 1929, at the Huntley Archive on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSjITqG0rd

(I wish I knew how to do links on here.)

HJHill
HJHill commented about Queen's Picture House on May 25, 2014 at 3:08 pm

Given the (new) information in the Overview, I am inclined to the view that this is a 1970s view of the Queen’s whilst showing Asian films. The hint is in the style of the poster on the right and in the cars at the traffic lights on Trinity Street.

Presumably the roller shuttered door at the very far right is what served as the entrance to the cheap, front stalls, seats.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Rialto Picture Playhouse on May 25, 2014 at 9:45 am

Leslie Halliwell in ‘Seats In All Parts’, page 314 describing his return to Bolton “in the 1980s” has this: “The Rialto had at some fairly recent date become the Apollo, but was now firmly shuttered”.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Cannon Bolton on May 22, 2014 at 7:38 pm

“ . . the Lido in Bradshawgate, as unprepossessing and unVenetian building as could be imagined despite its gondola-filled proscenium frieze… it was little more than a cheap shell. The foyer was bare and cramped, and the centre stalls were by crash doors which opened from the auditorium straight out into the side alleys, sometimes drenching the adjacent customers in rain or snow… . the Lido was . . the proud possessor of a Christie organ, and the interlude for this could stretch the gap between solid celluloid items to as much as thirty-five minutes. Though it had the advantage of a phantom piano attachment, the Lido organ did not rise from the orchestra pit, nor did it change colour as it came. From some of the side seats you could see it waiting in the wings throughout the performance, and since the main curtain hung slightly short, front stalls patrons could count the feet of the men who pushed it on stage at the appropriate moment.”

Seats In All Parts: by Leslie Halliwell

HJHill
HJHill commented about Belle Cinema on May 22, 2014 at 7:24 pm

“The … road leading north to Blackburn, once boasted three cinemas. Furthest out, on the corner of Belmont Road . . was the Belle. Snuggled away behind a pub, it was a stone building, quite tiny, and low inside; apparently clean enough but never without a dank smell. The front stalls uniquely consisted of backless wooden forms, riveted to the floor; not very comfortable, but for a penny one could hardly complain.”

Seats In All Parts: by Leslie Halliwell – a description of visits shortly before WW2.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Odeon Westover Bournemouth on May 22, 2014 at 6:39 pm

It also looks as though the projection suite was set high, with access to the roof over the entrance block.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Clifton Ludlow on May 20, 2014 at 1:29 pm

The Kinematograph Year Books for 1947, 1950 and 1954 list the capacity as 712.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Odeon 1 Bournemouth on May 20, 2014 at 12:05 am

No it isn’t. The only three-projector Cinerama installation is the the National Media Museum in Bradford.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Temple Cinema on May 15, 2014 at 10:46 pm

In the photo, right to left: Temple school; Temple cinema; and Temple public house. The spire is on St Luke’s church which was largely demolished in the 1970s, leaving the spire-less tower as a decorative ruin within the graveyard. This landmark may help fix the site of the Temple cinema in the featureless collection of modern housing along that (i.e. east) side of Cheetham Hill Road north of the Queen’s Road junction.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Shipcote Hall on May 14, 2014 at 11:17 pm

The tagged-on rectangular extension in the centre of the sunlit end of the building is absent from the street-level photograph, which presumably was taken before 1927.

That would imply there were alterations to the building before those in 1933. Was the extension built at the time of the organ being installed? My reading of the building is that the stage/screen is at the other end; so the extension has nothing to do with stage/screen (or organ?).

HJHill
HJHill commented about Majestic Picture Theatre on Apr 1, 2014 at 11:11 pm

Oddly, the Kinematograph Year Book for 1914 has no mention of this cinema (nor any in Burnham on Sea).

KYB 1932 lists it but with no specifics about the building. KYB 1942 and KYB 1947 list 650 seats and 400 seats, respectively.

W Trueman Dicken had the monopoly in the town, being the owners of the Ritz, too.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Western Talkie Theatre on Mar 29, 2014 at 5:22 pm

“Leeds Cinemas Remembered” by Robert E. Preedy lists this cinema as opening under the name of ‘Pictureland’.

As KYB 1914 lists it as ‘Armley Picture Hall’, could it be that ‘Pictureland’ was the operating name whilst owned by American Bioscope Co Ltd from April to July 1910?

HJHill
HJHill commented about Classic Royal Cinema on Jan 16, 2014 at 10:40 pm

The large white building across Manningham Lane from the Theatre Royal is Busby’s department store. In the foyer of the (1950s) Theatre Royal was a sign announcing that records played in this theatre may be obtained from the record department of Busby’s!

HJHill
HJHill commented about Regal Cinema on Jan 4, 2014 at 7:35 pm

The old small midget next to the new huge Regal was the Popular Cinema (previously White Cinema; and Electric Theatre prior to that). It’s all reminiscent of “The Smallest Show On Earth”!

HJHill
HJHill commented about Capitol Cinema on Jan 3, 2014 at 10:25 pm

According to the Kinematograph Year Book 1931, the Capitol was using sound-on-disk; and the proprietor and manager was Chris Evans.

In KYB 1942 the sound is RCA and Jack Evans has joined Chris; the capacity is 650; the proscenium is 22ft wide, the stage 14ft deep with 6 dressing rooms. KYB 1947 information is the same.

In KYB 1954 the proprietors are The Capitol Cinema (Cross Hands) Ltd; and the seating has fallen drastically to 400. The screen is 20ft by 14ft. Bizarrely, the proscenium has shrunk by 2ft to 20ft and the stage is still 14ft deep (14ft again?). I think some of the numerical data is garbled in KYB 1954!

In the London Gazette of 16 September 1966 (pp 10086/7), The Capitol Cinema (Cross Hands) Ltd was in a list of companies to be deleted from the Register at Companies House, as no longer trading.

HJHill
HJHill commented about County Theatre on Jan 3, 2014 at 9:33 pm

CORRECTION

The Kinematograph Year Book for 1914 has a “Supplementary List of Provincial Picture Theatres” which lists only the Market Theatre under Aylesbury. There were 600 seats and the proprietors were Aylesbury Electric Theatre Company.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Cecil Theatre on Dec 29, 2013 at 4:32 pm

The hospital’s railings on Anlaby Road would have gone for munitions during WW2 (see the 1952/53 ground view of the bombed Cecil).

On the corner across from the Cecil’s (yet to be built) entrance is a shop topped with a spire/turret. It’s still there as a café/bar.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Cannon Cecil Cinemas on Dec 23, 2013 at 6:38 pm

The large white-façaded building was The Mariners' Hospital. The post-war Cecil sits on its grounds.

HJHill
HJHill commented about Odeon Bradford on Dec 21, 2013 at 10:26 pm

The framework for the Odeon’s roof is (mostly) in place. This is almost the same angle as the other aerial view of the Odeon before the wrecker’s ball set to work on it 30+ years later.

Also in this shot are: the New Victoria (as it would have been at the time) showing very clearly the Thornton Road element which had the restaurant at ground level and the ballroom above; the white domes of the Alhambra are beyond the New Vic; and the white façade of the principal entrance to the Prince’s Theatre is beyond the domes (the theatre auditorium is the large building practically at Manchester Road.

The screen end of the Morley Street Picture House’s auditorium is visible, backing against the rear of the Alhambra’s stage.

HJHill
HJHill commented about County Theatre on Dec 16, 2013 at 11:37 pm

The cinema closed early in WW2 and was used for storage. When it reopened on 19 September 1947 it was as a repertory theatre. Martin Tapsell in “Memories of Buckinghamshire’s Picture Palaces” reports it traded as the County Theatre from May 1948 to March 1954.