Difference between revisions of "The Electric Theatres"

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#REDIRECT[[Electric Theatres]]
In 1911 a theatre called the [[Electric Cinema]] opened in Portobello Road as one of the first repertory cinemas in England, eventually resurrected as a luxury cinema.
 
 
 
The pioneering and influential Electric Theatres (1908) Ltd, which created
 
London’s first true cinema circuit, based its whole policy on the continuous show
 
located within London’s populous districts.9
 
In 1910, at least fifty per cent of the
 
cinemas in the Greater London area operated with a continuous show policy. The
 
 
 
 
 
There were a number of well-established cinema circuits in London by 1914.
 
Particularly prominent, with sixteen cinemas in Greater London by 1910, was
 
Electric Theatres (1908) Ltd. This company was in the vanguard of cinema
 
creation in Britain, and helped fix the name ‘electric theatre’ as a generic term for
 
cinema and the continuous show as the dominant form of exhibition. It was
 
established towards the end of 1907 with £10,000 capital, becoming a public
 
company on 16 September 1908 with capital of £50,000. It was founded by Joseph Jay Bamberger, a New York City stockbroker who had financed
 
nickelodeon construction in that city through the Electric Theatre Company,
 
before noticing on a London business trip that there were no such theatres in a
 
city of eight millions, whereas the far less populous New York City had, so he
 
claimed, 629 (the real figure was probably around 400). The clear intention of the
 
company was ‘to open and operate cinematograph theatres in populous districts’.
 
It instituted a policy of continuous programmes throughout the afternoon and
 
evening, changed twice-weekly, at a uniformly low cost of 3d for adults and 2d
 
for children (later raised to 6d and 3d).20
 
The name ‘electric theatre’ was brought over from the States by Bamberger.
 
 
 
 
 
Electric Theatres (1908) Ltd, in common with most of the London cinema circuits,
 
did not restrict itself to the capital. By 1914, it managed three cinemas in
 
Birmingham, and one each in Southend, Gloucester, Brighton, Norwich and
 
Plymouth. It had established a subsidiary company, Provincial Electric Theatres,
 
by the end of 1908, and the following year expanded overseas by initiating the
 
establishment of permanent cinemas in South Africa through Natal Electric
 
Theatres Ltd. 23
 
 
 
One of the original directors of Electric Theatres
 
(1908) Ltd was variety theatre impresario, [[Frederick Mouillot]], who ran a South African theatre chain.
 
The first Electric Theatre opened in South Africa in Durban on 29 July 1909. The company had at least
 
five cinemas in South Africa, including a Theatre de Luxe in Cape Town, and a cinema in Durban for
 
‘Coloured People Only’ (primarily Indians). Short-term policies including the importing of films worn
 
out through use on the English circuit led to the company’s demise by 1911.
 
 
 
''Not to be confused with a number of other companies known by this name, e.g.  The Electric Theatre [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_Theatre], founded in an abandoned  electricity works building in Guildford, Surrey, England, in 1997 or the Electric Theatre Company[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_Theatre_Company], a non-profit, regional, Equity theatre company located in Scranton, Pennsylvania.''
 
 
 
https://lukemckernan.com/wp-content/uploads/unequal_pleasures.pdf
 
 
 
https://londonist.com/2011/02/cinefile-electric-cinemas-centenary
 
 
 
[[Thelma Gutsche]], 1972. ''The History and Social Significance of Motion Pictures in South Africa 1895-1940''. Cape Town: Howard Timmins: pp. 95-97.
 

Latest revision as of 06:00, 29 July 2019

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