Search

Theaters News Links

Advanced search
 

Theater Guide

Now listing 26,626 theaters & 1,598 photos… more
Browse by...
 

Add Your Cinema Treasure!

Add Theater
Add Photo (offline)
Add Theater News
 
 

Recent Comments

Nov 21 Corral Drive-In (3)
Nov 21 Bonham Theatre… (4)
Nov 21 Pelham Picture… (21)
Nov 21 Covina Twin… (6)
Nov 21 Stratford Theater (27)
Nov 21 Colony Theatre (31)
Nov 21 Carmike Majestic… (1)
Nov 21 Huron Theatre (9)
Nov 21 Village Playhouse (3)
Nov 21 Hollywood Theatre (8)
 
 
 
  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as York Cinema, Unit 4 Cinemas

Aaben Cinema

Manchester, England
Jackson Cresent, Hulme
, Manchester, England, United Kingdom M15
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Multiplex (4 Screen)
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 520
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
Opened in 1928 as the York Cinema, it was located on York Street, Hulme, an inner city district of Manchester. Seating was provided for 1,414 and in 1937 the operators were given as Thomas and Norman Royle, who operated it into the late 1940's. By 1954 it was operated by York Cinema (Manchester) Ltd and the seating capacity was given as 1,300.

In 1967 it was closed and converted into a bingo club, but this was short lived as in 1969 it was taken over by the Unit Four Cinemas Ltd. of Burnley who made one of their first conversions of a former single screen cinema here, when they converted the building into four screens, re-opening as the Unit 4 Cinemas. Seating capacities in the screens were 210, 101, 102 and 102. There was a bar and a snack bar for patrons. It was a 4 screen independent arts cinema from the mid-1970's through to when it closed finally in 1991.

The last year's of it life were rather troubled. In the late 1970's it was re-named the Aaben Cinema when it was taken over by the then Manager Geoff Banks who ran it as an independent arts cinema for the students and young professionals living in Hulme. Closing in 1983 - it was then taken over by Tony Fairclough (an ex-Odeon Manager from Blackpool) who ran it for less than a year. About six months later it was reopened by myself and Steven Hagen (ex-proprioter of the Arts Centre Cinema Bristol). Hagen pulled out 6 month later and I got the lease off Fairclough and we ran it until 1990 when we closed it. Then for less than a year it was taken over by Robin Price ( a local operator who then ran a number of cinemas in the North West) - who ran it into the gound with it's final demise in 1991, closing as the Cinetheque.

The building was left to rot, stripped of its assests by vandals, and eventually demolished in 1993 to make way for new housing as part of Hulme's City Challenge regeneration.

Although it was far from being an attractive building, it was a hive of activity and film culture which led the way for Arthouse cinema in Manchester - a cinema for the people - unlike Manchester's current art-house on Oxford Road.
Contributed by john wojowski, Ken Roe


YOUR COMMENTS

 
This website has a photo of an Aaben Cinema building in Hulme, Manchester.

posted by Lost Memory on Jan 24, 2008 at 11:17am
scan of a flyer for the Aaben Cinetheque from Oct 1988 (or possibly 1989)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/woody1969/2313596474/
posted by woody on Mar 6, 2008 at 3:38am
Comment
*

Notify me when someone replies to my comment?
Note: Please read our comment policy before posting. Comments which are off-topic, obscene, spam, or personal attacks will be removed. Help us keep the discussion productive!