
| Devon Cinema Gazetteer |
| BIDEFORD |
| Bijou |
| By World War I Mr H Gale was operating a cinema on Lower Gunstone. The Bijou cinema was situated on the first floor of the building and could seat 400. This cinema was short lived as it closed before the war was out. The upstairs is now a nightclub |
| Palladium |
| This delightful fruit and veg shop is an unlikely cinema entrance, however the shop surround could be visualised as the entrance to a cinema, with perhaps a paybox just inside. The shop is situated in the foyer with a snooker club (still called Palladium) in the auditorium to the rear (opposite the Bijou). Situated on Mill Street, this cinema appears to have opened toward the end of World War I and was run by H G Brain. By 1923 this small cinema had been taken over by Norman Robertson. Mr Norman soon acquired the large Palace and closed the Palladium in late 1920s. |
| College Theatre |
| In 1991 film shows commenced in this building on the Bideford College campus using 16mm. The shows were part time as the theatre is also used for live shows and the building is open to the general public. The 16mm equipment was soon replaced by 35mm. In 1998 the equipment failed and the cinema operation ceased. At this time the theatre received a grant from District Council of £12,000 allowed new projectors and retractable seating for 181 to be installed, reopening May 1999, as a full time cinema, with some live shows. Soon afterwards the cinema operation was again in trouble and in 2001 was taken over by the newly formed Bideford Film Society, who now run the film shows part time. This was made possible by a grant from the Bridge Trust and Town Council. They play the National Anthem at the end of the evening. |
| Gone but not forgotten: Palace Theatre |
| Situated in Bridgeland Street this building had originally been a school. It had been run as a music hall by J E Squire for a number of years, seating about 700. Squire & Son certainly had a licence for cinema in the early 1920s. The building had an elaborate Victorian Gothic facade. In 1928 Norman Robertson who was running the Palladium, formed Palace Theatre (Bideford) Limited and took over the Palace. The stage was 20' deep and the proscenium 22' wide. BTH Sound was installed. By 1938 Bideford Entertainments Ltd, under Maurice Prince who built the Strand cinema were in control, but the cinema remained under Palace Theatre (Bideford) Ltd ownership up to closure. Whether it was Norman Robertson or Maurice Prince that modernised the Palace is unclear, however during the 1930s a modern stone facade replaced the Gothic exterior, and there may also have also been improvements to the inside. In the 1950s the cinema licence noted that no children should be admitted to the balcony. The cinema ceased operating in 1961. |
| Gone but not forgotten: Strand |
| The Strand Cinema was built by Maurice Prince as a sister cinema to his Regal, Barnstaple. With less competition the Strand was smaller and a less decorative building, but a fine example of late 1930s small town super cinema. Built on the site of a sports ground on Kingsley Road the famous architect David E Nye FIAA of Westminster was the designer. He had been responsible for such cinemas as the Embassy Fareham and the Rex Berkhampstead. The brick facade was caped by a strip of decorative faience. At the very top centre was a flag pole, below which was the sign. Below the sign were three small square windows and below these three larger windows for the circle lounge, and at the base below the canopy four sets of double doors. The two towers are set slightly out from the main facade and had display cases at their base. Above this was a column of faience leading to small square windows high up on the frontage. Smart if slightly plain the facade benefited from a location set back from the road with a driveway and raised flower beds in front. |
| Exterior views of derelict Bideford Strand. (Pictures courtesy of Darron Keeling, Torquay) |
| The foyer was wide but not deep with a central entrance to stalls with pay boxes either side and then stairs to circle, all on the back wall. The foyer was plain except for a delightful frieze featuring fish, bubbles and underwater plants. There was a large trough light fitting in the ceiling. The auditorium had a 40' wide proscenium and decorative coving in three layers ending above the exit doors. The side walls are plain except for plaster flower patterns running across the walls with three colour tones rising up the walls. There were at least 4 sets of tabs and possibly a further 4 festoons, although some may have been fake. The cinema was opened by Mayor H W Greenwood Esq on 21.07.1938, owned by Bideford Amusements Ltd. The programme included Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo, Don Donald - Walt Disney Cartoon and the main feature, Prisoner of Zenda. The sound system was BTH and the building had its own cloakroom. The cinema could seat around 800. In 1970s the cinema was purchased along with the Regal Barnstaple by Stratford on Avon Picture House Co. Ltd, and was associated with the Clifton Circuit in some way. The cinema closed 2.5.1981 with The Mirror Cracked. James Robertson took a 21 year lease on the Strand and Regal cinemas and the Strand reopened on 24.05.1981 with Way of the Dragon and Fist of Fury. But within a year it closed again. In 1984 Mr G Potter tried to make the cinema pay but without success. By 1988 it became a nightclub, which also closed very soon after and the building lay derelict for a number of years. Somehow it had its roof removed and so was soon in need of demolition, which took place in 1991. However a few light fittings were saved and were installed in the foyer of the Rebel cinema, Bude. |
| 1979 programme for Strand Bideford |
| Newspaper adverts first from April 1981 noting closure and May 1981 re-opening the cinema. |
| Strand, open 1981, courtesy of Stephen Dutfield |