Excelsior Kinema
Mansford Street and Florida Street,
London,
E2
Mansford Street and Florida Street,
London,
E2
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This used to be a wonderful cinema. The last time I went there was in October 1956 when it was still a decent place. I was sorry to hear how it deteriorated.
Don’t be fooled by the old car. This photo does not date from 1939. It was taken in or after 1960. The film advertised on the poster is “Confessions of a Counterspy”, which dates from that year. I know, as I have a print from the original negative and the title is quite clear. As can be seen, the building is very dilapidated – the X is even missing from EXCELSIOR on the canopy.
A vintage photograph of the Excelsior Cinema in 1939, shortly after it was re-modeled:
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Kevin;Many thanks for filling in this additional historical information on the Excelsior Cinema
The Excelsior did not actually close on 13th August 1961. The final films advertised were indeed “Greyfriars Bobby†and “Ten Who Dared†and the following week full-time bingo was advertised, after which the local paper carried no further adverts. However, the projection equipment remained and the Excelsior later showed Indian films. I went to the cinema some time in 1962, when they had a horror week â€" different films each day – and saw “Night of the Blood Beast†on a Wednesday and “The Spider†and Cat Girl†on a Saturday. I am positive of this because the first ‘X’ film I ever saw was “The Pit & the Pendulum†(released in the UK in November 1961) at the Enfield Savoy, then “The Gargon Terror†and “Manbeast†at the Tottenham Florida, then those at the Excelsior. (Being only 14, gaining admission to 16 rated films made a big impression.) Further corroborating evidence is that in May 1962 the exact same programme of horror films, even down to the days they were showing, popped up at the Canning Town Essoldo. I can only assume that some time before becoming an Indian cinema, they reverted to English films. As I have discovered from researching other cinemas, local halls did not always advertise.
A couple of further comments. The conversion to a cinema came about because the the floor of the baths was badly cracked and beyond economic repair, at least for Oxford House, the charitable trust, which owned the building. They ran the cinema for a few years then sold it to a commercial concern. I never went in the top balcony, but the intermediate one was far from ideal. The back part was satisfactory, but when sitting at the sides, you had to crane your neck to see the screen and this got worse the nearer you got to it. When sitting in the rear stalls, your head was roughly on a level with the feet of the people sitting at the front of this balcony.
The conversion from swimming baths to cinema was rather quaint. The floor of the pool became the stalls, making use of the slope from shallow to deep end to provide the rake. Access was by the original stone steps leading from the old walkway around the pool to the floor of the pool. The walkway itself became an intermediate balcony on three sides of the stalls. Above this was another balcony, the old cast iron observation balcony from its days as a swimming bath. In 1928 Queen Mary attended a live show and film at the Excelsior, but by 1961 it was in a sorry state with greasy carpets, collapsing seats and a patched screen â€" a real life “Smallest Show On Earthâ€. A sad end to a lovely little cinema.