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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Kings Cross Cinema, Gaumont, Odeon

Scala Cinema

Kings Cross, London, England
275 Pentonville Road
, Kings Cross, London, England, United Kingdom N1 9NL
(map)
+44.020.7833.2022
Status: Open
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Church, Concerts, Live Performances, Nightclub, Pool Hall
Seats: 1800
Chain: Unknown
Architect: H. Courtenay Constantine
Firm: T.P Bennett & Son
Scala Cinema
Recent exterior view of the Scala
Photo courtesy of Ian Grundy
An imposing and partially blind facade conceals a rather more prosaic brick box of an auditorium with an asbestos roof.

Built to the design of architect H. Courtenay Constantine and opened on 26th April 1920. It was closed on 8th May 1949, to repair damage done by German bombs during World War II. Extensively altered in 1949 to the plans of T. P. Bennett and Son, it was re-opened as the Gaumont on 17th March 1952. Re-named Odeon 25th November 1962, the Rank Organisation closed the Odeon on 22nd August 1980 with "Airport".

It was taken over by an independent operator and re-named Kings Cross Cinema, which closed on 29th March 1975 with "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly" and "A Fistful of Dollars". The building was converted into a Primatarium, diplaying live apes, but this venture was not successful. The stalls were converted to a snooker hall.

In 1980, the operators of the Scala Cinema Club had been ejected from their home on the site of the old Scala Theatre on Charlotte Street, and the former circle was reopened in July 1981 as the 350-seat Scala Cinema. The opening film was the Classic 1933 version of "King Kong", and the Scala Cinema quickly became a successful 'art-house' repertory venue. Especially popular were its all night screenings on the weekends.

Sadly, the Scala Cinema was closed in 1993, after the operating company had gone into receivership, caused by court costs in a battle with director Stanley Kubick. It all happened after they had screened "A Clockwork Orange" illegally, as Kubrick had withdrawn screening rights in the UK, due to bad publicity over gang behavour on its initial 1971 release.

The building is now in use as the Scala nightclub, with concerts and live performances. A church uses the former stage area, and the snooker club still occupies the former stalls area.

Overshadowed for many years by the Kings Cross regeneration scheme, the future of this building is still uncertain, although the 2008 regeneration of St. Pancras Station as an International Eurostar destination has brought more respectable life into this once seedy area of the city.

Related Websites

Scala, London (Official)
Contributed by Ian Grundy


YOUR COMMENTS

 
CORRECTION
This building has been open since 1999 as the Scala nightclub and it hosts a lot of varied and very successful evenings and has regular bands performing there.
The nightclub is built in the stalls area and has a separate main dancefloor and stage in the former balcony area and a third dance floor upstairs in what would have been the cirlce lounge/projection rooms.
As you can imagine none of the auditorium decor has survived and the building has gone back to the bare brick, the only remaining areas of interest are the enterance lobby with its terratzo flooring and the staircases that go up the curved corner of the building which retain some plasterwork and decorative metal railings and grills.
Externally the building has been restored and looks wonderful at night with the circular windows picked out in blue neon.
As a point of interest the last film show at the Scala was "a clockwork orange" and this was during the time it was banned in the UK and was the reason the Scala closed.
posted by woody on May 27, 2004 at 7:34am
Exterior photo and some history on the Scala Cinema, Kings Cross, London here:
http://www.tnunn.f2s.com/scala.htm
posted by KenRoe on Jul 27, 2005 at 10:07am
A couple of nightime shots from 2006 here:

http://flickr.com/photos/12494104@N00/269197240/
http://flickr.com/photos/12494104@N00/269197239/
posted by Ian on Oct 14, 2006 at 3:06am
Two daytime shots from September 2007 here:-

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12494104@N00/1349795125/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12494104@N00/1349794853/
posted by Ian on Sep 9, 2007 at 8:27am
Another couple of exterior shots taken in 2010 here:-

http://www.flickr.com/photos/stagedoor/4294399639/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/stagedoor/4294399447/
posted by Ian on Jan 22, 2010 at 1:46am
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