
| Cornwall Cinema Gazetteer |
| NEWQUAY |
| Pavilion Theatre ~ Camelot |
| The Pavilion and Shelter was built by Newquay (Cornwall) Urban District Council in 1912 near the seafront on The Crescent. It also included a lounge and tea rooms at the rear. The venture was part financed by Cornish Riviera Entertainments Ltd. The Pavilion was ran as a cinema from at least 1926 and would probably have been modified. By 1932 Gwyther Eastlake Prance & W Mumford (Sound & Movement Cinemas Ltd) were running the cinema with 750 seats. The proscenium was 30' wide. RCA Photophonic sound was installed. The cinema passed to Albert Jackson Withers of Cardiff in 1942 and became the most important cinema of his Cornwall Circuit. By 1970 the cinema was equipped with CinemaScope, 70mm projection and stereophonic sound and was screening special releases such as the blow up of Beckett in December 1971. The cinema passed to Rank who sold it to Garfield Daniels Ltd by 1980. The cinema closed in 1994, only to reopen specially to premier the film Blue Juice that had been filmed in the area. It then closed for good. The building has been reopened in 2002 as an Australian theme bar, the cladding has now hidden much of the structure. The cinema had been disused since 1994. The twin towers on either side of the entrance block are about all that remains of the original Pavilion. The side view shows a fine window, revealing the original design to be in the style of an Italian villa. |
| The auditorium had been rebuilt in 1970 with 812 seats, due to a fire that gutted the building in June 1968 along with the entrance making a very odd looking structure, positioned on the edge of the cliff. The original entrance was at the side of the building with windows, where a veranda was positioned. Curiously the new bar have inserted windows at the side and created a seating area in the form of a veranda. |
| Picture Theatre ~ Picture House |
| The Picture Theatre was operating as early as 1912, in the Oddfellows Hall, Marcus Hill built in 1878. It was later known as the Picture House. It was operated by Newquay Picture Theatre Ltd and seated 180, and was connected to the operators of the Pavilion cinema. It was later operated by Walter Ellis Slack and closed in 1930. |
| Victoria Theatre |
| The Victoria Theatre, Chapel (Wesley) Hill (off Fore Street) had a 61' by 35' 6" auditorium at first floor level seating 412 and a balcony seating 93. 2 dressing rooms were provided and a projection box was situated in the tower to the right of the building. The ground floor was occupied by Victoria stores. The proscenium was 20' wide.Opened in 1930 by A H Chapman of St Columb Major the operator was Anderton & (Arthur) Rowland of Plymouth. The sound system was BTH: British Thomson Houston. |
| The cinema passed to Gwyther Eastlake Prance (Sound & movement Cinemas Ltd) 14th August 1934 and to Albert Jackson Withers in 1942. CinemaScope was installed around 1958, and was still operating in the early 1970s before going over to bingo which it remains on today. |
| Gone but not forgotten: New Theatre ~ Astor |
| Various plans were submitted for this building by Enid Hosking and by Newquay Entertainments Ltd. The building consisted of a single storey frontage, no projection box and a stadium auditorium seating 611. The theatre was designed for live concerts and stage shows. Revised plans added a cafe within the frontage and a projection box. The entrance was on the right hand front corner, closest to the town. The building had a 36' wide proscenium with 19' 6" deep stage with 6 dressing rooms. The sound system was BTP British Talking Pictures. The building opened 2nd October 1939. The ceiling and esternal roof was barrel shaped. Modernised in 1955 with other Cornish cinemas, the auditorium received grilles on either side of the proscenium that were up lit. There was an unusual combination of up lighter and vents in the form of 'boxes' on the ceiling. These boxes and up lit grilles are identical to those installed on the Helston Flora modernisation, but in a different configuration. For a closer look at these features view the photograph under Helston Flora. The colour scheme had ceiling and walls in apricot, and lights and vents in Arctic Blue, stenciled with snow crystal designs. The coves were pale champagne and the dado cherry red. |
| The theatre was renamed Astor when leased to Duchy Cinemas Ltd. in the late 1950's when CinemaScope was installed. Being quite a way out of the centre of Newquay it struggled and closed in 1978. More recently a not very attractive second storey has been added to the frontage, and was a furniture store, now closed. |
| The modernised interior of the Newquay Astor around 1955 |
| "Roxy" Project |
| In November 1944 F E Bromige prepared plans for a giant cinema to be built in East Street. The exterior design was stunning, and of a similar style as the architects other work of the period. There was a tower to the right of the entrance with verticle inlayed fenilation and the materials were a mix of brick and concrete strips. The auditorium was a streamlined art deco design with a 540 seat circle and stalls for a further 978, total 1518. A large stage was included with 2 dressing rooms. There was room for a ballroom under the circle. Clearly this cinema was never built, which is a shame as Newquay never had a proper purpose built cinema, and as a direct result is lacking any cinema at present. |