You are of course right Pete it should read 1910 and not 2010.I passed the Regal many times when I was young but never went in. It had quite a frontage on Woodfield street. If you walk down Woodfield Street now, you will notice that the shops from Boots to Iceland are set back on the pavement, this was the location of the Regal. I should have made that clearer
in my piece above. Some people may not remember Woolworths
The Regal Cinema originally opened in the third week of August 1899 as the New Opera House, Woodfield St Morriston and cost £5,000 to erect. The original capacity depending on which account you read was somewhere between 1100 and 2000.It claimed to have the largest stage in Wales measuring 50ft by 25. It had overhead lighting, footlights and a fly tower. During its early life it seems to have specialised in plays and musicals moving later on to variety.
On the 19 March 1903 an advertisement appeared in the press selling off, cheap scenery, clothes, sky borders, wings, flats, rollers and stage screws. This was the end of the New Opera House.
In 1903 the New Opera House was purchased for £1800 by the Forward Movement (Presbyterian Church in Wales). The building was modified, the stage was boxed in and the two dressing rooms backstage became the ministers and the elder’s vestries. The 4 rooms downstairs remained; one room had been a coffee tavern and the other a bar-room. Support for the Forward Movement fell drastically and in May 2010 William Coutts announced the opening of a “Bioscope Hall”. It was advertised as a cine-variety hall seating over 1,000. In later years the Bioscope Hall was renamed the Picturedrome and then it became the Regal Cinema. The last film was shown on the 4 August 1962 and the building was demolished in 1965.
The empty site became the location of Boots and Woolworths, Woolworths having relocated from a site near St John’s Church.
You are of course right Pete it should read 1910 and not 2010.I passed the Regal many times when I was young but never went in. It had quite a frontage on Woodfield street. If you walk down Woodfield Street now, you will notice that the shops from Boots to Iceland are set back on the pavement, this was the location of the Regal. I should have made that clearer in my piece above. Some people may not remember Woolworths
The Regal Cinema originally opened in the third week of August 1899 as the New Opera House, Woodfield St Morriston and cost £5,000 to erect. The original capacity depending on which account you read was somewhere between 1100 and 2000.It claimed to have the largest stage in Wales measuring 50ft by 25. It had overhead lighting, footlights and a fly tower. During its early life it seems to have specialised in plays and musicals moving later on to variety.
On the 19 March 1903 an advertisement appeared in the press selling off, cheap scenery, clothes, sky borders, wings, flats, rollers and stage screws. This was the end of the New Opera House.
In 1903 the New Opera House was purchased for £1800 by the Forward Movement (Presbyterian Church in Wales). The building was modified, the stage was boxed in and the two dressing rooms backstage became the ministers and the elder’s vestries. The 4 rooms downstairs remained; one room had been a coffee tavern and the other a bar-room. Support for the Forward Movement fell drastically and in May 2010 William Coutts announced the opening of a “Bioscope Hall”. It was advertised as a cine-variety hall seating over 1,000. In later years the Bioscope Hall was renamed the Picturedrome and then it became the Regal Cinema. The last film was shown on the 4 August 1962 and the building was demolished in 1965.
The empty site became the location of Boots and Woolworths, Woolworths having relocated from a site near St John’s Church.