I stand under correction, but the cinema was twinned well before the early 1980’s. During the early 1970’s, the cinema was the host of the Kinekor Kiddies Klub which used Kine 2, the former dress circle of the Van Riebeek. This was a highlight for kids of Cape Town as admission included a complimentary comic book and the session included a cartoon and a serial. I distinctly recall seeing front of house display materials for Zardoz which would place that around 1974. I also recall seeing Breakheart Pass in Kine 1, that would have been in 1975. Both screens were very impressive, the rake in Kine 2 was particularly pronounced allowing for an exaggerated stadium seating long before this was the norm. The former stalls in Kine 1 resulted in a relatively flat auditorium, but a very impressive one none the less.
The Roxy showed double-features, it had a long passage-way entrance off Longmarket Street which had glass display areas on either side, allowing the cinema to display many one-sheet posters. The program was changed twice-weekly with shows running Monday-Wednesday and Thursday-Saturday. From memory the cinema was closed on Sundays, as were most entertainment venues during the 1970’s in South Africa. The basement had no rake, so all seats were level, my memory suggests there were around 400 seats with an aisle running down the centre. At the front left side of the cinema was a small area you could buy food and drink, this was after all one of the early tea-room cinemas where the row in front of you had a formica panel on it from which you could eat and drink. Smoking was allowed in the cinema! I recall watching Blade Runner there and literally having to try to part the smoke by waving my hands in front of my face to see the screen. Heaven knows how many people developed lung problems from that! The cinema was not particularly clean or friendly but it was one of the few locations in Cape Town where you could see double-features of recent first-run movies.
I stand under correction, but the cinema was twinned well before the early 1980’s. During the early 1970’s, the cinema was the host of the Kinekor Kiddies Klub which used Kine 2, the former dress circle of the Van Riebeek. This was a highlight for kids of Cape Town as admission included a complimentary comic book and the session included a cartoon and a serial. I distinctly recall seeing front of house display materials for Zardoz which would place that around 1974. I also recall seeing Breakheart Pass in Kine 1, that would have been in 1975. Both screens were very impressive, the rake in Kine 2 was particularly pronounced allowing for an exaggerated stadium seating long before this was the norm. The former stalls in Kine 1 resulted in a relatively flat auditorium, but a very impressive one none the less.
The Roxy showed double-features, it had a long passage-way entrance off Longmarket Street which had glass display areas on either side, allowing the cinema to display many one-sheet posters. The program was changed twice-weekly with shows running Monday-Wednesday and Thursday-Saturday. From memory the cinema was closed on Sundays, as were most entertainment venues during the 1970’s in South Africa. The basement had no rake, so all seats were level, my memory suggests there were around 400 seats with an aisle running down the centre. At the front left side of the cinema was a small area you could buy food and drink, this was after all one of the early tea-room cinemas where the row in front of you had a formica panel on it from which you could eat and drink. Smoking was allowed in the cinema! I recall watching Blade Runner there and literally having to try to part the smoke by waving my hands in front of my face to see the screen. Heaven knows how many people developed lung problems from that! The cinema was not particularly clean or friendly but it was one of the few locations in Cape Town where you could see double-features of recent first-run movies.