Coburg Town Hall 90 Bell Street, Coburg, VIC - Harry Olag Peterson (pictured) began screening silent movies in 1929 until the council installed Raycophone Sound in 1930
Uploaded By
Featured Theater
More Photos
Photo Info
Taken on: May 9, 2020
Uploaded on: July 31, 2023
Software: Windows Photo Editor 10.0.10011.16384
Size: 65.8 KB
Views: 371
Full EXIF: View all
Software: Windows Photo Editor 10.0.10011.16384
Date time: 2023-08-01 00:17:26 +0000
Date time original: 2020-05-09 12:41:44 +0000
Date time digitized: 2020-05-09 12:41:44 +0000
Subsec time original: 00
Subsec time digitized: 00
Color space: 1
Coburg Town Hall 90 Bell Street, Coburg, VIC - Harry Olag Peterson (pictured) began screening silent movies in 1929 until the council installed Raycophone Sound in 1930
The first known major screening was in 1926 by Rudds Bio Entertainment with the one-off roadshow screening of Cecil B. DeMille’s silent epic “The Ten Commandments.
Harry Olag Peterson (pictured) began screening silent movies in 1929 until the council installed Raycophone Sound in 1930 (this was the first installation of Raycophone Sound in Victoria).
Business was such that a neon sign was mounted on the decorative dome of the buildings' façade flashing the word ‘Talkies’. During this period the council complained of unsightly placards advertising the screening of pictures in the City Hall, and considered it was the fury of the municipality to preserve the aesthetic appearance of the the civic centre, and was passed by a majority that the council should advise Mr Peterson to have these horrors removed.
Henty Olag Peterson opened the Plaza Theatre in Coburg in 1934, while continuing to run the Coburg City Hall until the arrival of Hoyts in 1939. Hoyts ran the venue under the title Hoyts Town Hall Pictures Coburg until 1951. The Coburg Town Hall had closed for pictures by the end of 1956.
In February 2000 a Blackett & Howden 9 ranks organ with a Christie 3 manual console was installed in the building. The Coburg Town Hall continues to operate with live functions & social gatherings and is regarded as a building of significance, while it currently houses the offices of the Moreland City Council - Notes by Greg Lynch & Ken Roe
Contributed by Greg Lynch -
No one has favorited this photo yet