Gaumont Theatre
7 Boulevard Poissonnire,
Paris
75002
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Additional Info
Previously operated by: Gaumont France
Architects: Auguste Bahrmann
Functions: Retail
Styles: Neo-Classical
Previous Names: Cinematograph Theatre
Nearby Theaters
The Cinematograph Theatre opened on 15th June 1906 in a store on the ground floor of an industrial building. It was operated by Lucien Vives. It became the Gaumont Theatre, the first movie theatre operated by Leon Gaumont.
A narrow auditorium with a balcony at the first floor had a Classic design and was renovated in the 1930’s. The fabulous Grand Rex was built adjacent to the Gaumont Theatre in 1932.
Around the 1960’s, the Gaumont Theatre was a first run theatre.
In the late-1960’s the policy was Western movies and during the period of the “spaghetti western”, the movie “Le Bon la brute et le truand” (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly) ran for more than a year in 1968-1969.
But the Gaumont France chain decided to multiplex the Richelieu close to the Gaumont and as a single screen cinema, it closed in 1977 and was converted to a fast food restaurant. In 2004 it is a shoe store. By 2018 it is a Marks & Spencer food store. The “G” from the Gaumont remains on the façade.
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Recent comments (view all 2 comments)
The name of the architect also remains on the facade, “Auguste Bahrmann, Arch'te 1914”, next to the left G, which makes me believe the facade was created in 1914.
See a recent photo of the facade that I took in my flickr stream:
View link
another shot showing the full height of the exterior taken sept 2009, the Gaumont is right next door to the Rex
http://www.flickr.com/photos/woody1969/3951080447/