Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

New Empire Cinema (Mumbai)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Town or city
  
Mumbai

Completed
  
1908

Opened
  
1908

Phone
  
022 2207 1286

Country
  
India

Owner
  
Burge Cooper

Renovated
  
1948

Architectural style
  
Art Deco

Address
  
Murzban Road, Azad Maidan Fort, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400001

Similar
  
Sterling Cineplex, Regal Cinema, METRO INOX Cinemas, Eros Cinema - Mumbai, Metro Junction Mall

New Empire was a cinema hall in South Mumbai located in close proximity to the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus. It closed down on 21 March 2014 after being in existence for over a century due to persistent losses suffered by the owners.

Contents

History

New Empire originally opened in 1908 as a live theatre and hosted plays. It was then known as the Empire Theatre. In 1948, it was completely overhauled and reopened as New Empire with a seating capacity of nearly a thousand.

New Empire was one of the oldest single-screen cinema halls in Mumbai and the first in Asia to have a cantilevered balcony. Similar cinema halls that were built in the Art Deco style and opened subsequently in the south Mumbai area were Regal (opened in 1933), Metro (opened in 1938) and Liberty (opened in 1949). The first film it screened was in 1930 – the talkie Vagabond King.

Ownership

It was originally owned by the Bombay Improvement Trust, which used to carry out civic works in the city. The theatre was bought by Mr. Keki Mody in 1935 who is the father-in-law of the current owner Mr. Burge Cooper.

Architectural style

Empire Theatre was built as an elaborate Victorian structure. It was made in the Baroque style by architect Arthur Payne with the interiors done by O’Connor and Gerard. In 1948, it underwent a complete overhaul and was rebuilt in the then-prevalent Art Deco style of architecture.

Current state

New Empire suffered major losses owing to stiff competition from multiplexes. Another reason for the losses was the steep entertainment tax of 45 percent imposed by the Maharashtra government from which the multiplexes were exempt. The cinema suffered losses every month for 7 years with an accumulated loss of nearly Rs. 26 million. It officially closed its operations on 21 March 2014.

References

New Empire Cinema (Mumbai) Wikipedia