Mayfair Theatre
1074 Bank Street,
Ottawa,
ON
K1S 3X3
1074 Bank Street,
Ottawa,
ON
K1S 3X3
7 people favorited this theater
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Theater building was listed for sale, touting redevelopment potential (read: getting rid of the theater). Theater operator says: Not so fast. CBC story here. The web page for the listing appears to have been deleted.
Grand opening ad: Mayfair theatre opening Sat, Dec 3, 1932 – 23 · The Ottawa Citizen (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) · Newspapers.com
Projection booth photo added, credit & courtesy of Linda Pichette, via the Lost Ottawa Facebook page.
Here’s a short video tour I shot of the Mayfair Theatre in Ottawa this year:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-Qz-visCdg
The theater is celebrating its 78th anniversary: View link
Good luck to the new owners.
One of the best small neighborhood theatre’s to see a film. Fond memories from my days of living in Ottawa. Fantastic original interior. A real cinema gem although the exterior could use a bit of an upgrade.
I was totally stoked to hear about the new owners for the theatre big time~ I Have only been to Ottawa twice have managed to make it there on both occasions for Dark Knight, Burn After Readin, Silent Partner along with another Grindhouse film and was really impressed with the layout and preservation that has taken place. Great atmosphere to watch a film ;–)
Good news! Looks like the Mayfair will survive as a cinema after all.
Info is here.
View link
Curtain to rise on new Mayfair
Partners plan ‘state-of-the-art’ upgrades to theatre
Don Butler
Ottawa Citizen
Monday, November 17, 2008
OTTAWA – Facing closing at the end of the month, the Mayfair Theatre has found new life thanks to a self-described “dream team of film-loving investors” with ambitious plans that could even include serving alcohol to film-goers.
The partners – John Yemen, a film scholar and entrepreneur, Paul Gordon, the Mayfair’s current film conservator and part-time projectionist, and filmmakers Lee Demarbre and Ian Driscoll – will announce Tuesday that they have leased the 76-year-old Bank Street cinema for 10 years from its Vancouver owner, Stephen Ng.
The Mayfair will close in December while they refresh the interior and make technical improvements. They plan to reopen with a party and open house on Jan. 2, 2009.
“It’s going to be state of the art by the time we open it,” Mr. Demarbre said in an interview. Among other things, his group plans to install Dolby digital sound and replace the sagging seats. “We want people to be comfortable at the Mayfair,” he said.
Word trickled out in August that Mr. Ng had balked at the cost of needed upgrades and planned to close Ottawa’s oldest surviving movie theatre Nov. 30.
Almost immediately, supporters mobilized to save the theatre, built in 1932. On Oct. 8, city council voted to designate the Mayfair a heritage building, citing its painted ceilings, ornate plaster façades, faux balconies, wrought ironwork and ornamental glass windows.
The heritage designation was key to his group’s ability to lease the theatre, Mr. Demarbre said. “There were apparently people interested in putting condominiums there. We couldn’t compete with that kind of money.”
Despite “big money pressure” for redevelopment on the site, Mr. Demarbre said Mr. Ng is happy the Mayfair will survive. “His desire was to have someone come and run it as a cinema,” he said.
Mr. Demarbre’s group will scrap the Mayfair’s strategy of showing second-run commercial films in favour of more eclectic programming – everything from art house, foreign and Canadian films to midnight screenings and festivals.
The only Ottawa theatre showing similar fare is the Bytowne, a thriving repertory cinema on Rideau Street. “We’d be interested in bringing those types of movies to the south end of Ottawa,” Mr. Demarbre said.
The Bytowne’s owner, Bruce White, is considered the best programmer in Canada, he said. “I don’t think Bruce has anything to worry about from the Mayfair. If anyone can appreciate friendly competition, it’s Bruce White.”
Mr. Demarbre fondly recalls watching Hong Kong filmmaker John Woo’s action classic, The Killer, at the Mayfair. “You’d bring popguns and run up and down the aisle and shoot at each other.”
In recent years, the Mayfair has gotten away from such inspired mayhem, he said. “I’m surprised at the kind of movies they’re showing. It’s very commercial, stuff you can go see at the Rainbow theatre and stuff that’s available on video at almost the same time as it’s playing at the Mayfair. It’s not very inspiring.”
Mr. Demarbre’s group has been inspired by theatres such as the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in Austin, Texas, and Brewvie’s Cinema Pub in Salt Lake City, Utah. Both serve alcohol with their flicks, something Mr. Demarbre said his group is keen to do.
“If they can do it in Utah,” he said, “we can do it here. We want it to be fun to go to the movie theatre. We’ve got to get people out of their seats.”
Mr. Demarbre and his partners have been trying for years to open a repertory cinema in Ottawa. They approached Mr. Ng about the Mayfair several years ago, “but he didn’t bite,” Mr. Demarbre said.
When the Great Canadian Theatre Company moved into its new building at Wellington and Holland, they tried to acquire its old building on Gladstone. They also looked at a theatre-turned-church and a furniture store in the Westboro area.
Recently, out of frustration, they’ve been showing movies the last Saturday of every month at Club Saw in Arts Court.
Here is the heritage designation for this theatre from the city of Ottawa website.
View link
There are also some excellent pictures of the interior. It is an example of a Spanish Morrocan style “atmospheric”..
Some articles about the situation… first one
View link
and
View link
The second one says that at least the city has slapped a heritage designation on the interior.
Still this sonds like it may be at serious risk…
Looks like the Mayfair is closing, probably at the end of November. The theatre needs a major infusion of cash for building repairs and the owner isn’t willing to do them.
Last night I went to the Mayfair for a double bill for the first time a few years, and was reminded of how this unassuming (yet elegant) little gem of a theatre embodies the true spirit of cinema. The Mayfair opened its doors in 1932 as a simple neighborhood theatre, but for those of us acclimatized to the big box megaplexes out in suburbia, it now stands as an ornate little shrine to everything that used to be good about going to the movies. And like any other shrine, a visit to the Mayfair deserves a moment of contemplation before the ceremony begins. For me that involves simply admiring the classical interior design and meditating on how much of cinema’s history has been projected onto the screen, which would include just about every film from the Great Depression through to the War on Terror and beyond. For the true cinephile, this is nothing less than magical.
This is a beautiful classic movie theatre.
Their website is:
http://www.mayfair-movie.com/