
| Devon Cinema Gazetteer |
| ILFRACOMBE |

| Alexandra Hall ~ Garrison Theatre Alexandra Theatre |
| Originally built as a market hall in 1900 the building is situated on a steep slope next to Market Street. The hall was vast, able to seat 1400 and had stage facilities installed. Film shows were run here by the Town Council who owned the building and during both World Wars, the building was known as the Garrison Theatre. Films ceased in 1921. In July 1923 Albany Ward leased the building and showed both films and live acts here until 1930 when again the council took over the running of the building. In the 1970s part of the building was gutted to create a roller skating rink, but a smaller and improved theatre venue was created. This was situated in the lower part of the building and the fly tower can still be seen today. The building was finally closed by the council in 1989 and has since been a nightclub. |
| Gaiety Concert Hall |
| This fine looking building opened on 14th May 1910 as a concert hall, on Sea Road. It operated in season with 500 seats and had electric and gas lighting. Films were regularly shown in the first floor hall from about 1911 until 1916. The building remained a theatre until 1963 when concerns over safety resulted in closure to become an amusement arcade. This building is still considered a good surviving example of sea side architecture of the period and is Grade II listed, and externally retains many decorative features. |
| Northfield Picture Hall ~ Picture Theatre Empire ~ Plaza ~ New Cinema |
| This cinema was created in a former Rechabite Temperance Hall of 1905 and situated on the first floor, on Northfield Road. The ground floor was still used by this organisation and was later known as the Artisan. This cinema always struggled as it was rather out of the way, from the sea front and shopping areas. The faded facade suggests that the building would have been quite impressive when it first opened. The cinema was opened on 11th April 1911 and was run by A O Ellis. The Picture Hall closed 20th February 1915. It reopened as Picture Theatre on 22nd July 1915 and again closed on 9th October 1915. Redecorated and run by Mr Summerwill the building reopened as The Empire on 14th February 1916, seating 320. Soon operated by Walter Bayley. |
| It passed to Mr J L Penney in 1923 but in 1925 a fire in the box caused damage to the building costing £500 and the cinema was closed for some months. Ownership passed to S E Reynolds in the late 1920s. The cinema closed again in 1931. On 4th April 1932 the cinema reopened with Morrison sound as the Plaza, but closed the following summer. The cinema was taken over by F G Sanders & K A Barrett and reopened as the New Cinema 7th August 1933, the proscenium width was 20'. After the war British Thompson Houston sound was installed and was run by W L Barrett and PCD Buse with 307 seats. The cinema finally closed 1st October 1951. The building has been disused for a number of years, but is now converted to flats. |
| 1948 programme for the Ilfracombe New cinema. |

| Palace Theatre |
| This cinema was built by a group of businessmen on the site of a public house, a useful trick to obtain a drinks licence. The architect was Allen T Hussell, who designed a small but quality building. Situated at 25 High Street in the centre of the town there were 400 seats in the stalls and 100 in the balcony. Opened 10th July 1913 with Sparrow and The Homestead Race. The exterior was made of Bath stone with black and white marble in the foyer. There was a café and tea room above the foyer. The most interesting feature of the facade are the bay windows the central bay giving a fine view of the High Street. There are two smaller bays of triangular shape either side. It is possible that these rather modern looking bay windows may have been part of the later rebuilt cinema. |
| Inside, the auditorium had decorative plaster and hand painted panels by Gustave Roberts of Munich, including a painted central panel on the ceiling. The owners were Palace (Ilfracombe) Ltd. In May 1920 the cinema was taken over by Albany Ward. In March 1921 the building was closed for rebuilding and reopened on 22nd June 1921, Albany Ward was present at the reopening. This would be run along with the Alexandra Hall, where Albany Ward specialised in live shows. The Palace closed in 1926 as Albany Ward had obtained the bigger Scala Theatre further up the road and these were lean years for cinema going. |
| Embassy ~ Pendle Stairway ~ Embassy |
| This building project was quite unusual. The existing building had been the New Christ Church of the Free Church of England, built from the former Great Western Hotel of 1889 at 134 High Street. The church had only been completed in 1939. The rebuilding was allowed to commence in 1948 as the architect Harold Weston ingeniously reused the existing steel work structure of the church and the facade we see today was retained and belonged to the church. The work was carried out by A E Watson (Exeter) Ltd. The steel work was used to create a stalls floor at second floor level across the church, the upper parts of the church's windows were blocked off while the lower part of the windows retained to give light to the first floor. It is believed this ground floor area was the cafe/restaurant. There was also a balcony constructed. You enter the building at street level (ground floor). |
| The cinema opened 11th October 1948 with Spring in Hyde Park and Sing a Song of Sixpence. With only the Scala and New Cinema operating at this time, there would seem to have been room for a further cinema in Ilfracombe, however it was soon in financial difficulties. Who exactly owned and ran the cinema is unclear and perhaps they did not consider the fact that they would be operating their first six months in the winter season, which so soon after the war would have been very slow. The café - restaurant closed January 1949 and the cinema followed on 21st May 1949. The Clifton circuit soon took over the cinema and after refurbishment was reopened on 8th May 1950 with Pinky. There were 443 seats and RCA sound and the café was reopened They would install a wide screen 9' by 15' within the proscenium of 19' during the 1950s but to compete with the Gaumont they would install CinemaScope in 1960 removing the proscenium and the clock that had been set into the proscenium was moved to the back of the auditorium. This allowed for a 11' by 21' screen, with a 22' proscenium. However the seasonal nature of the resort and that Clifton were now operating the former Gaumont resulted in closure for bingo in October 1964. The last show was Nothing but the Best and The Man from Galeston. However a powercut resulted in a full refund for the audience. Bingo commenced on 27th November 1964. The restaurant became a club but later became industrial premises. Happily this closure proved only temporary and come the new season films recommenced on 11th April 1965. |
| In 1983 the resident managers Dennis and Joan Tuffin took over the cinema from the remains of the Clifton circuit and on 20th May 1984 became the Pendle Stairway (to the stars) cinema. They continued to operate the cinema until closure, but with low attendances the cinema had gradually deteriorated, highlighted when the BBC's Watchdog programme identified it as one of the worst cinemas in Britain in 1997. It has to be said that advertising was almost non existent and it was quite possible to walk straight past the cinema without noticing it, as it had no exterior signage. The cinema finally had to close in February 2003 as the cost of urgently needed repairs to the roof and rewiring were too high. Luckily the local community were determined not to lose their last full time cinema and started a campaign to save the cinema. The sum needed for the repairs was £13,000. Local man Roy Filer loaned the campaign £5000 and North Devon District Council matched it. The local campaign soon found the other £3000 and after repairs the cinema could reopen. The Cornish cinema operator Merlin, run by Geoff Greaves purchased the cinema at the beginning of 2006, closing it on 19.01.2006 with King Kong. Then started an ambitious project to convert the cinema into three screens. The odd layout as previously described has resulted in an unconventional subdivision. First to open was a screen in the former balcony area with a new projection box. Then the former rear stalls area was boxed in to create the second screen with the screens projection box set onto the back of the screen wall of the balcony screen, therefore set halfway down the length of the second screen where the ceiling height is greater as it is clear of the balcony above the rear seation. The third screen which occupies the front stalls and stage area has a projection box again set onto the front of the balcony screens front wall, immediately above the projection box for the second screen. The first screen opened on 26th may 2006 with Poseidon, the second screen opening a week later. The former cafe area on the ground floor has been opened up once again to create a spacious foyer area and room for a cafe or eatery. |
| The new screen in the balcony nearly complete and open May 2006 |
| The Embassy in the 1960's with substancial signage Photo: Cinema Theatre Association |
| The front stalls screen has a way to go May 2006 |
| Three hand written screen slides from the Ilfracombe Embassy. Featuring the restaurant and a special forthcoming feature. |
| Two newspaper advertisments the first from 1981 as Embassy and a more up-to-date entry. |
| Landmark |
| The Landmark arts centre on Wilder Road is a very unusual design by London architect Tim Ronalds. Built with £4.5 million, of lottery money, it replaced the Victoria Pavilion an iron and glass structure that had been battered by the North Devon weather into a state of disrepair. Each cone is 22.5 metres high and the structure is made from 300,000 Belgian white bricks. The centre opened in April 1998. The building is run by North Devon Theatres Trust, a charity and contains a 483 seat theatre that converts into a 360 seat cinema to show mostly art house films. |

| Gone but not forgotten: Scala Theatre ~ Gaumont ~ Clifton |
| Designed by Southport architect George E Tonge, the Scala Theatre was by far the finest cinema in Ilfracombe. The building was started by Mr E R Hancock, but with failing health passed to James P Moore just before his death in October 1920. The cinema opened 20th December 1920. But other parts of the building were unfinished. The café upstairs and lounge ballroom downstairs, plus roof garden opened 18th May 1921. A large organ had been installed in March 1921. The facade was grand but somewhat typical of the period. There was a large central entrance with an arch window over the top. To either side was shop units. The foyer featured a grand staircase leading to the café above. The exterior was in Hathern ware. The auditorium could seat about 1000. It was the opening of the Scala that made Albany Ward rebuild the Palace, and in 1923 he further squeezed the Scala management by operating the Alexandra Theatre. The Scala closed 28th February 1925. |
| A 1960s photograph of the Gaumont, not selling itself like the Embassy. Photo: Cinema Theatre Association |
| Albany Ward Theatres took control and reopened the cinema on 13th July 1925. It was closed through the winter but reopened 22nd February 1926 and this is when the Palace closed and the Scala would become Albany Ward's cinema in Ilfracombe. British Acoustic sound would soon be installed. Passing through Provincial Cinematograph Theatres and Gaumont British control the cinema was renamed Gaumont 10th December 1949. CinemaScope was installed within the existing proscenium 23' by 10' but by 1957 the cinema was closed for the winter season. The cinema was taken over by Clifton, who also operated the Embassy and was renamed Clifton 28th June 1964. To help make the cinema pay, a second screen was added in the disused ballroom in the basement, with the kitchen becoming the projection room. 16mm films were projected through the old serving hatch. The first film was Cabaret. During the winters, the main auditorium closed and the 16mm cinema continued year round. By the 1970s bingo was tried in winter months on several nights a week but this ended in 1977, and the cinema would then completely close in winter. Clifton 2 closed 3rd September 1980 with Night Games and Confessions of the David Galaxy Affair. The main cinema finally closed 31th October 1981 with Kentucky Fried Movie and Adventures of a Plumbers Mate. The building was demolished in 1983. The site is now Clifton flats |
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| Clifton 1981, courtesy of Stephen Dutfield |
| Embassy, 1981, courtesy of Stephen Dutfield |
| Link to photographs of the surviving interior taken by Chris Vernon & John Woodcock. www.ilfracom.org.uk/johnwoodcock. Palace%20Book.pdf |