Plaza Super Cinema and Variety Theatre | |
---|---|
General information | |
Town or city | Stockport |
Country | England |
Coordinates | 53°24′41″N2°09′26″W / 53.4113°N 2.1572°W |
Construction started | 1932 |
Completed | 1933 |
Opened | 7 October 1932 |
Owner | Stockport Plaza Trust |
Technical details | |
Structural system | Brick and steel |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | William Thornley |
Designations | |
Listed Building – Grade II* | |
Official name | Plaza Cinema |
Designated | 12 March 1997 |
Reference no. | 1257697 |
Other information | |
Seating capacity | 1,314 (seated) |
Website | |
stockportplaza |
The Plaza is a Grade II* listed [1] art deco single-screen cinema and theatre in Stockport, Greater Manchester, England. It opened in 1932, its construction having involved the excavation of the sandstone cliff behind it. After an initial closure in 1966 and a subsequent period in use as a bingo hall by Rank Leiure, it has now been restored as a cinema and theatre, showing films and staging live shows.
The building was designed in 1929 by William Thornley and constructed in 1932–33. It is in the Art Deco style, and is of brick, with much internal structural steelwork, and with its front elevation clad in faience, a glazed architectural terracotta. [1] It contains a double-height auditorium with a gallery and small stage. The auditorium is decorated with vaguely Greek and Egyptian plasterwork and mouldings, including a broad proscenium arch, pilasters with Corinthian capitals, and friezes of dancing maidens and musical instruments. Many motifs were derived directly from the 1925 Paris Exhibition of Decorative Arts. These features were enhanced by a sophisticated concealed Holophane lighting system, fragments of which survive. [1] It had an original seating capacity of around 1,873, and in its restored state has 614 seats in the stalls, 318 in the front circle and 254 in the rear circle (the balcony). [2]
There is also a foyer with a long, first-floor restaurant above, overlooking Mersey Square. It was listed in 1997 at Grade II* by Historic England. It is described as a "remarkably lavish exercise in the Art Deco style", and an "exceptionally complete example of a 1930s 'super' cinema, which survives little altered and retains its Compton organ". [1]
The Plaza's original organ is still in situ. It was built by the John Compton Organ Company and was ready in time for the opening of the cinema on 6 October 1932. It was the first Compton theatre organ to be built with sunburst decorative glass panels, which can be illuminated in a range of colours, and is now one of the very few that remains in its original location. [3]
The Compton organ is a three-manual instrument with a unique 150 stop tab layout which was designed for the Plaza by Norman Cocker, the resident organist from Manchester Cathedral, and Arthur Ward, one of the original Directors of the Plaza. It has in addition 42 toe and thumb pistons. [4] There are 11 ranks of pipes contained in two chambers, one over the other to the right of the stage. These are concealed behind the decorative grille in the wall. There is no electric amplification, as the sound is produced acoustically straight from the organ pipes. The console is on a lift so that it can rise out of the floor, adding to the theatrical effect. As there is no amplification the organist controls the volume using swell pedals that operate shutters in the grille. It was played before shows, and during silent movies, variety shows and musical interludes between films. The organ can supply a large range of effects from sleigh bells to aircraft and sea sounds. [4]
The first plans for a cinema on this site were made speculatively by William Thornley in 1929. It was a conservative scheme that incorporated a motor garage, a billiard hall, and a restaurant all above a 1,600-seat cinema. [5] Thornley, an architect originating from Bolton who had trained with Bradshaw Gass & Hope, was experienced in designing small-scale silent film cinemas. [6]
Directors of the Ambassador cinema circuit, Fred Read, Alfred Snape and Arthur Ward had just opened the 1,850 seat Regal Cinema 7.9 miles (12.7 km) away in Manchester Road, Altrincham, were looking for a site in central Stockport in 1931. They evaluated Thornley's speculative scheme but rejected his original design. As a condition of buying the site on Mersey Square to develop, they commissioned him to adapt the plans for the Regal Altrincham - which was designed by Drury & Gomersall and described as the 'Cathedral of the Movies' - for the smaller and more restricted Stockport site without reducing the seating capacity for 1,850 patrons. [5] [lower-alpha 1]
Although he was uncredited due to part of the sale contract, Joseph Gomersall from the Regal's design team is responsible for the interior design rather than Thornley. He had travelled around Europe to sample the latest architectural trends and had a professional background in theatre design. [7]
A row of cottages previously occupying the site were purchased and demolished. A set of limestone steps was then built to connect Mersey Square with the higher-level Lawrence Street, which are now known as The Plaza Steps. 10,000 tonnes of sandstone was excavated to a depth of 42 feet (13 m) to create The Plaza and the adjacent steps, leaving the building partially underground and secured by 111 rock bolts. [8] The Plaza was welcomed by the local cinemagoers but opposed by the local business community, unhappy about the use of labourers from elsewhere while the town was still suffering from the Great Depression. Technically the cinema had all the latest equipment; the projectors that could project silent and sound stock, and a Compton organ to be played during the silent news reels. It opened as a cine-variety venue. [5]
The Plaza first opened its doors to the public on 7 October 1932, with a charity show for Stockport Infirmary. As soon as the mid-1930s, cine-variety had ended and the Plaza shows assumed the familiar pattern of one feature film and a supporting B movie. The Plaza attracted competition and by 1939 there were two further super cinemas in the town centre, and two in the suburbs. [lower-alpha 2]
During World War II (1939–1945), being cut into the rock face led to the Plaza being considered one of the safest to shelter during an air raid. After the war, despite audiences declining nationally, the Plaza was in the 1950s refurbished with the entertainment tax relief incentive, and diversified into CinemaScope and 3D screenings. [5] As well as screening films, it staged variety acts, hosted acrobatic troupes, offered stand-up comedy, concerts and during Christmas 1960, staged its first pantomime. [7]
However, audiences declined as the 1960s went on, during a period where TV ownership was ever increasing. In July 1965, the Plaza was sold to Mecca Bingo for conversion into a bingo hall. The conversion to a bingo hall was refused by Stockport Borough Council planning committee; this ruling was then overturned by appeal to the government and Mecca proceeded with its plan. The Plaza’s final show was on 31 December 1966 and featured Jerry Lewis in Three on a Couch and Audie Murphy in The Texican . [5] The bingo hall opened in February 1967. In the 1970s the first-floor café was converted into "Samantha's" nightclub but this later converted into extra bingo seating.
By 1999, The Rank Group, which had bought Mecca in 1990, decided to close the bingo venue at the Plaza. By the time of closure, it had been listed at Grade II was the last remaining building in the Borough of Stockport still capable of full-scale theatre and entertainment use. Following a local campaign, the building was sold in March 2000 to the Stockport Plaza Trust, a newly established charity which intended to bring back the former use of showing films and staging live shows. [5]
After the sale to the Stockport Plaza Trust, the group of volunteers initially raised over £3 million to put towards some early-stage restorations and the reopening of the Plaza for live shows and vintage film presentations. Its listing was upgraded to Grade II* in August 2000; the lobby, auditorium and café still feature original plasterwork in striking geometric designs along with original tiling, whilst previously lost features such as murals have either been restored or recreated. The first cinema show in December 2000 featured a performance of 42nd Street (1933) which had been the first film shown at the Plaza in 1932. The Compton organ was found to be in working order, it was powered up and a performance of 1930s singalong music was given by Nigel Ogden.
The Plaza was closed during 2009, and a £1.9 million restoration, funded by a National Lottery grant took place. [10] Volunteers restored the Plaza to its original 1932 configuration. The façade has been given a new name sign as well as red and green side panels, all constructed with neon lighting. 2017 saw the installation of new Art Deco seating for the whole auditorium, cast from the original designs.
The Plaza was the final cinema constructed for the Ambassador Cinema Circuit (1926-1933), beginning with the Ambassador Super Cinema in Pendleton in 1928. This circuit also included the Kingsway Super Cinema in Levenshulme, the Heaton Park Cinema in Whitefield, the Carlton Super Cinema in Clayton, all built in 1929, and the Regal Super Cinema in Altrincham in 1931. Unfortunately, all of these cinemas have since been demolished, making the Plaza the last surviving cinema from the original Ambassador Circuit
Owners were; Ambassador Circuit 1926-1933; Snape & Ward Circuit 1934-1955 G.B. Snape Circuit 1956-1965, Mecca Bingo 1965-1990; Rank Organisation 1990-1999..Current owners Stockport Plaza Trust 2000 - present.
1929 (April): First scheme submitted to Stockport Corporation for the construction of Cinema, Mersey Square, Stockport.
1931: Construction of the Regal Cinema, Altrincham, designed by Drury and Gomersall for the Ambassador Cinema Circuit.
1932 (Oct): The Plaza Super Cinema opens in Stockport
1933 (Sept) Death of Fred Read, Chairman of the Ambassador Cinema Circuit
1934 Remaining Ambassador Circuit Directors, Alfred Snape and Arthur Ward assume control under the Snape & Ward Cinema Circuit
1936 Death of Director Arthur Ward, son Harold succeeds to his share of the business
1937: Front Circle rake altered, balcony front raised, stage level raised
1947 Death of Director Alfred Snape, son Brian succeeds to his share of the business
1949: Seven day programme introduced (same film for seven days)
1953 (Aug): Large 48 ft.x 18 ft. projection screen installed
1953: Stockport's first 3D film presentation at – "Sangaree"
1954: First CinemaScope presentation
1955 Harold Ward exits the business to form the Ward Cinema Circuit
1956 Brian Snape took ownership of the Plaza and the remaining Snape & Ward cinemas, renaming the circuit as the G.B. Snape Circuit
1960: First pantomime, Babes in the Wood featuring the Dallas Boys
1965 (July): Purchased by the Mecca Group
1966 (Dec): Closes as a cinema [10]
1967: Modifications to the auditorium to accommodate bingo; removal of roof tiling, loss of external verandah, neon lighting and signage. Flat floor insertion at rear of stalls, and alterations to foyer. Alterations to café area.
1967 (Feb): Reopens as a bingo hall
1997 (Mar): Cinema listed Grade II by English Heritage
1999: Cinema closes as a Bingo Hall [10]
2000 (Aug): Listing upgraded to Grade II* by English Heritage
2000: Purchased by the Stockport Plaza Trust, first restorations started, and re-opened for live shows and vintage film presentations. First cinema show in December 2000 featured a performance of 42nd Street which had been the first film shown at the Plaza in 1932. There was also a variety performance, and Nigel Ogden of BBC Radio 2's The Organist Entertains played the Compton Organ for a 1930s style singalong before the screening. (The organ had been found to be in full working order, only needing the power switched on to be used.)
2005: Further restoration plans begin
2007: The Heritage Lottery Fund approves an application for funding of £1.9m towards further restoration of the Plaza
2009 (Feb): Jimmy Carr officially closes the Plaza with two sell out shows and work begins on restoration and refurbishment of the Stockport Plaza
2009 (May): 'Plaza on Tour' commences – a host of events in alternative venues throughout the region during the Plaza's closure
2009 (Dec): The Plaza reopens following a £3.2 million restoration
2012 (Apr): Plaza obtains a venue licence enabling it to host wedding ceremonies, Louise Burchell and Ben Wainwright become the first to be wed at the Plaza Cinema, Stockport. [11]
2013: Front Circle rake restored and balcony front lowered to original design, stage surface renewed
2014 (Jul/Aug): Brand new Art Deco seating cast from the original designs for the entire auditorium, removing the mixed origin seating. [12]
2015 (May): Murals reinstated in the balcony of Wetherlam and Little Langdale Tarn in the Lake District. [13]
2015 (Aug): Compton organ restoration including the glass panel sides, pipes and bellows. [14]
2016 (July): Murals reinstated in stalls of musical instruments which include cymbals, tambourines, wind and various string instruments. [15]
2024 (Aug): New House Tab Curtains more exact replicas of the 1932 design are installed, expertly recreated by J&C Joels, Theatrical Curtain & Drapes specialists
Used as filming location, including for:
Notes
Footnotes
The Rex is a cinema in the town of Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, England. Designed in the art deco style by David Evelyn Nye in 1936, the cinema opened to the public in 1938. After 50 years of service, the cinema closed in 1988 and became derelict. The building was listed Grade II by English Heritage, and following a campaign to save the Rex by a local entrepreneur, the cinema re-opened to the public in 2004.
The Capitol is a theatre on Swanston Street in the central business district (CBD) of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Opened in 1924 as part of the Capitol House building, the art deco theatre was designed by American husband and wife architects Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin. It is the oldest of Melbourne's large picture palaces and is known for its extravagant decor and abstract motifs, including an intricate geometric ceiling containing thousands of coloured lamps designed to evoke the walls of a crystalline cave.
Gatley is a suburb in the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England, 3 miles north-east of Manchester Airport.
An atmospheric theatre is a type of movie palace design which was popular in the late 1920s. Atmospheric theatres were designed and decorated to evoke the feeling of a particular time and place for patrons, through the use of projectors, architectural elements and ornamentation that evoked a sense of being outdoors. This was intended to make the patron a more active participant in the setting.
The Eros Cinema is an Art Deco style cinema theatre located in Cambata Building at Churchgate, Mumbai, India. It has a seating capacity of 1,204 people per show.
The State Cinema is a Grade II* Listed building in Grays, Essex. Designed by F. G. M. Chancellor under Matcham & Co., it opened in 1938 as one of the most modern cinemas of its type at the time with seating for 2200 people. As a cinema, it closed in 1988 but has held numerous events and been used for various purposes since. Historic England describe the cinema as being "one of the best preserved of the super cinemas of the late 1930s."
In its days as an entertainment centre for London, Harringay in North London also provided more locally directed entertainment in the shape of four cinemas. The earliest was opened in 1910 and was operating as a cinema until January 2003.
John Haywood Compton (1876–1957) was an English pipe organ builder. His business based in Nottingham and London flourished between 1902 and 1965.
The Regal Theatre, formerly known as the Chelsea Cinema, the Princess Theatre and the Ozone Marryatville or Marryatville Ozone Theatre, is a single-screen cinema in Kensington Park, a suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. Originally built in 1925 to the designs of South Australian theatre architect Christopher Arthur Smith, it retains the features of a major renovation in Art Deco style in 1941 designed by noted cinema architect F. Kenneth Milne. It was heritage-listed on the South Australian Heritage Register in 1983. It is the oldest continuously running purpose-built cinema in Adelaide, and the only remaining silent cinema still operating in the city. It is owned by Burnside Council.
Merlin Cinemas Limited are a British cinema chain with Head Office based in England. The company was formed in 1990 and predominantly operates in small coastal towns. In many cases, the cinemas were saved from closure and run on very small margins, but they are supported by some of the larger ones in the group that have been extensively refurbished and modernised to include luxury screens with waiter service, plus licensed bars, restaurants and live theatre.
The Plaza Cinema is an art deco cinema in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, owned by Merlin Cinemas. It was built by Odeon Cinemas and known as the Odeon Weston-super-Mare until 2023. It was designed by Thomas Cecil Howitt and is a Grade II listed building.
In 1898 William Morton's Theatre Royal showed a 'Veriscope' film, probably the first time any film was shown in a Hull theatre. The Prince's Hall was the first purpose-built cinema in Kingston upon Hull, and was opened in George Street by Morton in 1910. As Hull embraced the new age of public entertainment, attendances at traditional theatre declined. Luxurious cinemas, taking their inspiration from theatres and music halls, were built to accommodate audiences in almost every neighbourhood in the city. By 1914, there were 29 cinemas, theatres and halls showing films in the city. The London and Provincial Cinema Company owned the Hippodrome; the National Electric Picture Theatres owned the Theatre de Luxe, but Morton's was the largest and most influential cinema chain in Hull.
Aberdeen has been the host of several theatres and concert halls through history. Some of them have been converted or destroyed over the years.
John Stanley Coombe Beard FRIBA, known professionally as J. Stanley Beard, was an English architect known for designing many cinemas in and around London.
The Astoria Theatre was a former cinema in Brighton, part of the English coastal city of Brighton and Hove. Built in 1933 in the Art Deco style for a local entertainment magnate who opened one of Brighton's first cinemas many years earlier, it was the first and most important expansion of the Astoria brand outside London. It initially struggled against the town's other "super-cinemas", but enjoyed a period of success in the 1950s and 1960s before rapid decline set in, culminating in its closure in 1977.
Towers Cinema was a former cinema in Hornchurch, England. It was built in 1935 on part of the former Grey Towers estate and was noted for its Art Deco style of architecture. From 1973 it was used as a bingo hall until it closed in 2015. Despite the efforts of a local campaign to preserve the structure and to have it listed by Historic England, the building was demolished to make way for a Lidl supermarket.
The Embassy Cinema is a former cinema in the town of Chadwell Heath, Greater London. It was once known, among locals, as The Gaumont. It was designed in an art deco style, with a streamline moderne interior, by Harry Weston in 1934. The building is situated on the border of Redbridge and Barking & Dagenham, in the Chadwell Heath District Centre. The cinema closed in 1966 and became a Bingo Hall. In 2015, following the closure of the Bingo Hall, it was then used as a wedding hall/banqueting suite. The building was listed as an Asset of Community Value by the 'Chadwell Heath South Residents' Association' in August 2017 and is currently the focus of a major cinema restoration project.
The Odyssey Cinema is a film theatre in the city of St Albans, Hertfordshire, in the United Kingdom. It is a locally listed Art Deco building, located on London Road, around 0.7 kilometres (0.43 mi) east of St Albans Cathedral. Originally built in 1931 as the Capitol Cinema, the current building stands on the site of an earlier film theatre, the Alpha Picture Palace. This former cinema was of particular historical significance as it was opened in 1904 by the film-making pioneer Arthur Melbourne-Cooper and is considered to have been the first cinema in Hertfordshire.
The Ritz Cinema is a Grade-II listed art-deco former cinema located on Abbey Street, Nuneaton. It was opened on 23 July 1937, originally for the Union Cinemas circuit, however, in October of the same year, ABC Cinemas would take over the building. The Ritz would stop showing films in 1984. After being used as a cinema, the building would be converted to a bingo hall, and trade as such until its closure.