Comments from handlebar

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handlebar
handlebar commented about Harborne Picture House on Nov 23, 2022 at 1:56 pm

Great little Cinema. Fine picture and sound. In the 40’s a staff member would walk down the aisle and sit on a stool at the bottom of the screen waiting to close the curtains as ‘The End’ title appeared. Waited there during the interval until the Censors credit appeared and then opened them and disappeared up the aisle. Always a 3 hour programme. Doors either side of the screen made proper ‘Cinemascope’ impossible. They installed a much larger 4x3 and when a ‘scope’ film was showing masking descended leaving a letter box picture at the bottom. This was smaller than the normal films! Films ran Mon to Wed and Thurs to Sat with old and sometimes ancient films shown on Sunday for one day. The Saturday morning children’s club was something to see. Cinema was packed for just 6d (2 1/2p) Always started with a sing song with words on the screen (hands knees and bumps-a-daisy…Underneath the spreading Chestnut tree etc) and then the club song: ‘We come along on Saturday morning’ sung on record by Tommy Handley, a famous radio comedian. Two hours of noisy fun with Tarzan, The 3 Stooges and Laurel and Hardy. It finished when the Royalty (just down the street) opened their ABC minors club in competition. The ‘Old Harborne’ (as we knew it) lost it’s audience. The cinema had no proscemium arch and curtains hung from a track fixed to the ceiling. Sounds primitive but it was neat and adequate. It closed in 1957 with John Mills in ‘Town on Trial’. How I wished I’d taken a photo of the inside before it closed. Happy memories of queues in the rain and great films seen with my mom and sister.

handlebar
handlebar commented about Royalty Cinema on Jan 3, 2016 at 12:05 pm

Hi sjh 123,

I was born and lived directly opposite the Royalty until leaving Birmingham in 1961. If I can help in any way I’d be happy to.

Dave Groves

handlebar
handlebar commented about Royalty Cinema on Feb 7, 2015 at 1:36 pm

We lived directly opposite the cinema. I could look through the window to see what was on. The Royalty was a somewhat posh cinema. If you had little money you went in the stalls through it’s own entrance (extreme right on picture) and queued down the side. The better off entered through the front doors and paid at a separate box office. The stalls crowd went down little steps and entered in front of the screen. Projection was from under the balcony. A huge place with excellent sound and picture. When Cinemascope was installed two large boards at opposite ends of the building proclaimed ‘in the wonder of Cinemascope’.It was actually quite impressive (unlike the Picture House up the road). They took the brown curtains down and replaced them with a frilly descending curtain that covered the wide curved screen. The place had an odd smell (Jeyes fluid?) but was always full until the advent of t.v. Films ran Mon to Wed and Thurs to Sat with old and often abridged films on Sundays. I expected a three hour show. Two films, Pathe News, Adverts, trailers and sometimes a Pathe Pictorial. The show would finish with the National Athem but folk would rush for the exit to avoid it!! They had a lively ABC Minors Saturday Morn kids club. When it started all the children previously attending The Picture House club left (free badges, Birthday presents etc.) and joined the new one. The Picture House (known as The Old Harborne) kids club closed as it’s audience had gone. I remember them showing a 3D film called ‘Metroscopix’ with red and green glasses. A ladder came out of the screen!! Another gimmic was a film called ‘House on Haunted Hill’ in a process called ‘Emergo’ It was simply a wooden coffin on stage which opened to allow a plastic skeleton to pass on a wire over the heads of the audience about ten minutes from the end of the film!! You could buy the ABC film review on your way out to read of the coming films and stars. Maurice Smith worked there and I used to help him on Saturdays. The Cinema is now closed and terribly run down. The people of Harborne should be ashamed that they have a single screen gem in their midst and have let it go to wrack and ruin. If only I lived back home I’d have tried to do something about it. Is it too late??

handlebar
handlebar commented about Harborne Picture House on Feb 7, 2015 at 12:41 pm

A great little cinema. Spent my childhood there. In the 40’s the curtains were opened by a member of staff turning a handle. No balcony. No proscemium arch. Curtains hung from a ceiling track.Doors either side made a ‘scope screen impossible so they installed a larger 4x3 with descending masking which left a letterbox picture at the bottom. Scope pictures were smaller than normal ones! Emergency gas lamps hissed on either side walls. Bright clear pictures and sound. Go through the front doors and up two steps and you’d be faced by the small pay box. You could enter the cinema from doors either side of the pay box and curtains across the back stopped light from the street as you entered. Always two films, news, adverts and trailers. I expected a three hour programme for 9d (about 4p) The Saturday kids club started at 10a.m. and cost 6d (2 1/2p) First there’d be a sing song with words on the screen (Underneath the spreading Chestnut tree/Hands, knees and bumps a daisy etc) then the club song ('We come along on Saturday morning greeting everybody with a smile’ sung on a record by radio star Tommy Handley), then cartoons, serial and feature film.The place was packed and the atmosphere fantastic. Films ran Mon to Wed, Thursday to Sat and old or abridged
stuff on Sunday only. The better pictures ran for six days. Queues would form down the road and if we couldn’t get in we’d walk down to The Royalty. It was a wonderful time that has passed into memory. I’m so glad I was able to experience it.