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Regent Street Cinema

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Type
  
Repertory cinema

Renovated
  
2012–2015

Reopened
  
2015

Opened
  
1848

Owner
  
University of Westminster

Capacity
  
187 seats

Closed
  
1980

Years active
  
1848–1980 2015–present

Phone
  
+44 20 7911 5050

Address
  
309 Regent St, Marylebone, London W1B 2UW, UK

Similar
  
Fashion Space Gallery, Marlborough Street Magistrat, Sanderson Hotel, Handel House Museum, Bond Street tube station

Profiles

Regent street cinema


The Regent Street Cinema is a historic repertory cinema located on Regent Street, London. Opened in 1848 and regarded as "the birthplace of British cinema", the cinema featured the first motion picture shown in the United Kingdom. It was closed from 1980 to 2015.

Contents

Description

Originally opened in 1848, the Regent Street Cinema is a repertory cinema located at 309 Regent Street, London and situated in the University of Westminster. The cinema contains 187 seats. The cinema is known for having shown the first screening of moving footage in the United Kingdom. It was also the first in the United Kingdom to show an X-rated film. The cinema is able to screen 16 mm, 35 mm, Super 8 and 4K digital formats. The cinema has been described as "the birthplace of British cinema".

History

The Regent Street Cinema was first opened in 1848 and is housed in the flagship building of the Royal Polytechnic Institution (now University of Westminster). When it was first opened, it was used as a theatre. In late February in 1896, the cinema played a short movie by the Lumière Brothers. It was the first motion picture shown in the United Kingdom. In 1951, La Vie Commence Demain (Life Begins Tomorrow), an X-rated film because of its war imagery, was shown. The cinema was the first cinema in the United Kingdom to show an X-rated film.

Reopening: 1980–2015

Although the cinema continued to screen films for another eighty-four years after the original Lumière Brothers footage, the cinema was closed for thirty-five years; from 1980 to 2015. Throughout most of this time, the cinema was used as a lecture theatre. In 2012, the University of Westminster began a project to restore the building. The restoration project took three years to complete and cost £6.1 million. By February 2014, £4 million was raised through an appeal, but another £2 million was needed. Out of the £6.1 million, £1.5 million was awarded through a Heritage Lottery Fund grant and £2m was donated by the Quintin Hogg Trust. Celebrities, including prior BBC Radio 4 host Sandi Toksvig and filmmaker Asif Kapadia, backed the appeal. It was hoped the cinema would reopen in 2014.

The Art Deco features of the building's 1920 design were restored, along with the 1936 John Compton organ and the dome-like ceiling. Upon reopening, a documentary of the managers of the English rock band The Who, titled Lambert and Stamp, was screened. Shira MacLeod, the director of the Regent Street Cinema, said it is the only cinema in the United Kingdom that can screen films in 16 mm, 35 mm, Super 8 and 4K, allowing the cinema to show films that "have been in archives for many years".

The cinema is a Grade-II listed building.

References

Regent Street Cinema Wikipedia