The Granada Theatre opened on 7th September 1931 for Sydney Bernstein's Granada Theatres. The opening film was Jack Buchanan and Jeanette MacDonald in "Monte Carlo" and Alex Taylor on the Wurlitzer organ. Over 2,000 people were turned away on the first night!
The architect of the building was Cecil Masey who designed a Moderne Italianate styled towering entrance with four tall pillars topped by Corinthian capitals. The entire interior of the theatre was designed in a Gothic style by famed stage set designer Theodore Komisarjevsky. On the side walls at balcony level are a series of panels with painted murals of medieval figures painted by Alex Johnson from small originals by Lucien Le Blanc.
The theatre was fully equipped for stage shows as well as movies and it had a Wurlitzer theatre organ (4 Manual/12 Rank) which was originally installed in a theatre in Sacramento, California (3 Manual/10 Rank).
Many stars played one day concerts at the Granada including Danny Kaye, Lena Horne, Frank Sinatra, The Andrews Sisters, Betty Hutton and Carmen Miranda. In the late 1950's / early 1960's pop singers such as Johnny Ray, Frankie Laine, Pat Boone and Jerry Lee Lewis played to packed houses.
With only an average audience of 600 patrons a week attending by 1971, the writing was on the wall and applications were made to demolish the theatre to build an office block. The local Council stepped in and served a local preservation notice on the building. This eventually led in June 1972 to a Grade II* listing being placed on it. However this didn't help the fate of the theatre and it closed as a cinema on 10th November 1973 screening Clint Eatwood in "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly".
It remained closed and un-used until it re-opened as a Granada Bingo Club on 14th October 1976. Taken over in May 1991 by Gala Bingo it remains in operation today.
In 2000, the listed status of the Granada was upraded to Grade I by English Heritage. This is the highest Grade Listing that any building in the UK can receive and it puts the Granada Theatre on the same scale as the Tower of London, Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, Stonehenge etc. It is the first 1930's cinema building to be given this honour.
The Grade I Listing now gives the owners more clout to apply for public funding to maintain the building and work is in progress to 'open up' the orchestra pit again (long covered over by the bingo callers podium). In the pit still on its lift and still playable, is the Wurlitzer organ. The organ chambers are under the stage, so no sound has been heard in the theatre from the pipes 'live', apart from being amplified by microphones and played via the PA system.
Restoration work on the Wurlitzer organ was completed in Spring 2007 and the first public concert since the early 1970's was held on 22nd April 2007.
Contributed by KenRoe
|
|
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!
|