Odeon Cinema, Sutton Coldfield
History
The Odeon
The cinema is situated on Maney Corner, at the junction of Holland Road with the A5127 Birmingham Road.
It was built as one of the Odeon Cinemas of Oscar Deutsch. The architect was Cecil Clavering of the Harry Weedon partnership. The style, by the same firm, was first produced for the Odeon, Kingstanding, and further Odeon Cinemas in similar style were built in York, Harrogate and Scarborough. The listing text describes that the foyer, staircase and auditorium are "each defined as a separate block in a complex, carefully massed and expressionistic composition" inspired by the Titania-Palast in Berlin, built in 1928.
The cinema opened on 18 April 1936; the first film shown was First a Girl. It seated 1028 in the stalls and 572 in the balcony. From April 1972 there were three screens: one was viewed from the balcony, and two, each seating 132, were created in the rear stalls below. A fourth screen was created in 1987 in the former front stalls.
The Empire
In 2006, Empire Cinemas took over this and several other Odeon Cinemas, and it was renamed the Empire Cinema. It closed in March 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic; after briefly re-opening later in the year, it closed in November 2020.
In December 2023 it was announced that the cinema had been bought by PDJ Management Ltd; it would be restored and re-opened in 2024 as the Royal Cinema.
References
- ^ Historic England. "Odeon Cinema (1271848)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
- ^ "Royal Cinema" Cinema Treasures. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
- ^ "Sutton Coldfield’s Empire Cinema bought and set to be restored and reopened" Birmingham Live, 22 December 2023. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
External links
- Media related to Empire Cinema, Sutton Coldfield at Wikimedia Commons