Regal Cinema
1 Manor Street,
Donaghadee,
BT21 0HB
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Additional Info
Functions: Community Center
Previous Names: Picture House, Arcadian Picture House
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Located in Donaghadee, County Down. The Picture House was opened on 25th March 1914 when it was owned by Bob Evans. It was briefly closed in the early-1930’s and by 1931 it had reopened as the Arcadian Picture House and by 1933 it reverted back to the Picture House name. The stage was 12ft deep and there were two dressing rooms. By 1934 it had been equipped with a Morrison sound system and was operated by T. Duffy. In February 1936 it was re-named Regal Cinema, opening with “The Barretts of Wimpole Street” starring Norma Shearer. It had been equipped with a Picturetone sound system. It was operated by Solar Cinemas of Belfast. It had a 20 feet wide proscenium. When CinemaScope was installed, the proscenium was expanded to 25 feet wide. The Regal Cinema closed on 6th April 1968. By 1980, it was being used as a social club.
In recent years it has become a community centre, but in June 2008, construction began on a new community centre building adjacent to the Regal. When this is completed, the Regal Cinema will be demolished, and the site becomes the car park for the new community centre.
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The Picture House opened on 25 March 1914; the proprietor was named as Bob Evans.
The opening advertisement, which appeared in the Newtownards Chronicle, 21 March 1914, included the following line – ‘Whenever you come to Donaghadee, “Dinna forget” the wee “Picture Hoosie” down by the sea’. The opening report in the same paper on 28 March was essentially brief. It noted that a new and up to date projector had been installed but no seating details were given. The proprietor was named as Bob Evans but the first entry seen in the Belfast and Ulster Street Directory (1916) shows E. J. Evans as proprietor.
The KYB for 1927 shows D. Frazier as the lessee of the cinema although the street directory for 1930 still shows E. J. Evans as the proprietor. Perhaps Evans was the owner of premises and Frazier was the cinema operator (lessee). A period of closure followed in the early 1930s (dates not known). The Brevitees column in the County Down Spectator, 15 April 1933, in a couple of lines under the heading ‘Just think of it’, bemoans that ‘There is no cinema licence in Donaghadee. Our picture house requires a lessee. Anyone game?’ The KYB for 1934 shows T. Duffy as lessee so it appears that the cinema had reopened.
This new situation only persisted for a time because on 15 February 1936 the County Down Spectator announced that a new picture house will open on Monday next – 17 February 1936. The old name had been dropped and it was now called the Regal Cinema. The owners were Solar Cinemas, whose offices were in Corporation Street, Belfast. The cinema had been newly equipped with ‘the most up to date sound and talkie equipment in the country’. A new manager, Mr William McDonald, had also been appointed. Seating was given as 300, the same as previous.
The Regal may have closed around 6 April 1968. The last press advert seen was in the Newtownards Chronicle, 28 March 1968, which detailed the programme to 6 April. There was no indication of any closure pending and no editorial coverage has been found.
In February 2019 it was announced that Copeland Gin are to transform the building on the former cinema site. The new premises will include a visitor centre, events space and fully-operational gin and whiskey distillery. Copeland Gin takes its name from the Copelands Islands, a group of three small islands north of Donaghadee.
Revisiting the Thirties (again!), a period covered briefly in previous Comment. It was a time of flux for the Picture House. A new lessee was listed in the K.Y.B. (1931), W. Carlisle. A change of name, to the Arcadian Picture House, was also revealed that year. Sadly, proprietor Bob Evans died in 1932. It seems that he was still owner of the building but not involved with the cinema operation.
The KYB (1933) revealed that the Picture House name had been restored and another new lessee was in place, T. McChesney. There was also a schedule change, to a single show nightly. The stage had been increased to 12ft. deep and there were two dressing rooms, presumably to cater for the occasional variety shows. T. McChesney didn’t stay long; the KYB (1934) showed T. Duffy as lessee. It also noted the presence of a Morrison sound system. Whatever the nature of these new arrangements, they would only have persisted for a relatively short period.
When the Regal Cinema opened in February 1936, the first film shown was ‘The Barretts of Wimpole Street' (1934).
On to the 1950s, when Mr & Mrs Carr managed the cinema; during this time Cinemascope was installed.