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Cinema History

Places > Bedford > Cinemas > Bedford Cinema History Project

The Granada and Granada 2 Cinema
5-9 St Peter's Street, Bedford

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The Granada Cinema

Granada Cinema, Bedford c.1990. Copyright Barry StephensonBy the early nineteen-thirties, there were four smallish cinemas in Bedford, the Empire, the Plaza, the Picturedrome and the Palace. By the end of 1934, the thoroughly modern and luxurious 1750 seat Granada had been constructed in record time in St Peter’s Street, Bedford. The Bedfordshire Times of 14th December 1934 dedicated several columns to the full prospectus of Granada (Bedford) Limited in which the share capital of £50,000 necessary to float the new company was offered as 30,000 6% Cumulative Preference Shares and 20,000 Ordinary Shares, all of £1. Directors included Sydney and Cecil Bernstein (The Bernstein Theatres Ltd.), Ernest Blake (Blake Bros. Theatres Ltd.), Sir Thomas Keens (B. Laporte Ltd.) and Cecil Tingey (John Bull & Co.). These indicated a mix of London professionalism and local business interests. It is revealing to see the connection with the Bernsteins and the chain of nationwide ‘Granada’ and ‘Plaza’ picture houses bringing some London sophistication to the activities of the redoubtable Blake family.

The objects in the Memorandum of Association were:

1)'To erect a high-class Modern Super Cinema Theatre, with seating and standing capacity of approximately 1,750…in a manner comparable with the best cinema theatres in the country….with a frontage to St Peter’s Street of about 120 feet…

2)To take on lease, two existing Cinema Theatres (the Empire and the Palace)

3)To manage the three cinemas in conjunction with each other’.

The building of the theatre, shops, café and kiosk was to be carried out by Bovis Ltd, with a completion date of 17th December [1934]. The prospectus set out in some detail, the layout, construction and equipping of the building: ventilation by the Plenum system, believed to be the ‘most hygienic and satisfactory system yet devised’ and ‘faithful and realistic reproduction of sound’ by ’The Western Electric Wide Range Reproducing System. The cinema would be equipped with an eight rank Wurlitzer cinema organ (a three manual console on a rising platform), plus a ‘Phantom’ grand piano on stage. The prospectus reveals that the stage was intended to be added later, complete with dressing rooms etc. if required for presentation of plays.

The site would include a café-restaurant with separate entrance from St Peter’s Street, to seat approximately 150 patrons and would be run by local grocers Dudeney and Johnson, who already traded in the High Street. At the rear of the building, in Lurke Street, a small car park would be provided. Mentioned too were 4 lock up shops and a kiosk which completed the frontage on St Peter’s for lease to various tenants, contributing some £600 per annum in rents. The whole project including the shops and kiosk cost £48,750.

Ernest Blake and Bernsteins had put Bedford on the map. This building designed by London Architects Benslyn and Morrison with interiors based on designs created by Theodore Komisjarevsky was a long way ahead of other picture houses in planning, equipment and modern technology and would continue to be so for the rest of its 55 years.

The official opening took place on Saturday 15th December 1934 with the Band of His Majesty’s Scots Guards in attendance. The audience included members and officials of the Bedford Town Council, the County Council and chairmen of the nearby Rural District Councils, together with ‘many leading town and county people’. Mr Noel Hobart, previously at the Granada Cinema Tooting, had been appointed manager. A packed programme was selected for the launch, beginning with an opening ceremony introduced by Lord Ampthill followed by a screen novelty, news in sound, a Laurel and Hardy comedy, The Private Life of Oliver the Eighth, an organ recital by Harold Betts and a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture starring William Powell and Myrna Loy, The Thin Man. This programme was also shown for the week of 17th December 1934. Granada pulled out all the stops in marketing its new cinema, issuing the all Hollywood star programmes for the following three weeks. There were continuous performances from 2.00pm daily and adult tickets were priced at 9d and 1/3d for the stalls, circle, 1/6d and lodges 2/- and 2/6d.

The Granada was launched with considerable publicity locally and nationally.  Promotions listed all the novel features: a café/restaurant, the mighty Wurlitzer organ, a modern ventilation system, talkie projection, earphones for the deaf, a free cloakroom, public call box and a car park. Gratuities were described as embarrassing and therefore not to be expected or accepted by the staff. In keeping with the Bernstein philosophy, the experience of going to the Granada was more than just seeing a film.

The Ideal Kinema and Studio, a supplement to Kinematograph Weekly 17th January 1935, extolled the architectural and decorative detail and in Architecture Illustrated March 1935, there are images showing details of the exterior and interior. A publicity brochure published for the opening ceremony gave extensive statistics about the impressive number of bricks, miles of cable and yards of carpet used in the cinema and highlighted the fact that the build was accomplished 3 months ahead of schedule, gave work to 190 local men and that most suppliers were from Britain and its Empire. Local businesses were proud to be associated with the new glamorous venue. The Bedford Corporation Electricity Service claiming that without its services ‘this wonder theatre would not be possible’. Over 40 people were employed, front of house staff wearing the Granada uniform of royal blue with maroon and gold trim.

From the enthusiastic launch in December 1934 to its eventual demise in 1991, the Granada was not only a cinema screen but also a venue for stage acts and concerts. Organ concerts were broadcast by the BBC, the first took place on March 13th 1936 and many of the best known organists played at the Granada. During the Second World War, in July 1943 the cinema hosted Holidays-at-home concerts on Sunday afternoons. One featured the ten and a half year old ‘phenomenon Miss Petula Clarke who took command of the vast stage for ten minutes giving impressions of various accents. Sunday opening for cinemas was a perennial battle. Earlier in 1940 the Bedfordshire County Council Stage Plays and Cinematograph Licensing Committee granted permission to the Granada and Plaza cinemas to open on Sundays between 5.00pm and 10.30pm to show films with certain restrictions. Between 5-5.30 music only was allowed.

Cinemascope, with stereophonic sound was introduced in October 1954 and then in 1968 extensive alterations were made to the cinema when the second largest screen in the country (over three times larger than the original) was installed to show the new generation of 70mm films. Six rows of seats were removed, the organ relocated and new sound technology introduced. Seat prices went up! The first 70mm film was Dr Doolittle in July 1968. There was a gala opening attended by the Mayor and local celebrity singer Cleo (now Dame) Lane. Birds and a monkey were borrowed from a local zoo. That same year, Granada Theatres Limited took over the cinema.

Granada managers in the 60s were keen to market new films with ingenious promotions. Events included a turkey plucking contest for Crooks in Cloisters with an appearance by actor Melvyn Hayes. There was a sheep shearing contest on stage in 1965, to accompany a Western - one animal escaped into the stalls. A big campaign was arranged in the same year for the film of Mary Poppins with live penguins in a pool in the foyer, a chimp’s tea party at the Saturday children’s matinee and a fashion parade in the restaurant.  Usherette Margaret Davies swam in a 1000 gallon fish tank in the foyer to promote the James Bond film Thunderball.  Other stunts included staff appearing in ape skins in the Market Square overnight to promote Planet of the Apes. To publicise The Sand Pebble, staff disguised as coolies pulled a rickshaw from London to Bedford. Local businesses were happy to promote forthcoming films where there was a particular tie-in.

Like the Empire, the Granada ran children’s matinees. By the early 60s, 1200 were entertained on Saturday mornings with stage shows, films, organ recitals and competitions. You could become a Granadier or an Empire Ranger with treats on your birthday.

During the 1950s and 60s there were regular pop stage shows featuring leading stars of the era. Notably in February 1963, Helen Shapiro was supported by a new group called the Beatles. Dave Allen compèred. The following year, the Granada staged a specially written pantomime Once Upon a Fairy Tale starring Millie. By 1968 the ‘beat boom’ was on its way out and many of the acts had made too many appearances! By now the cinema was owned by Granada Theatres Ltd.

Eventually the stage shows, promotional stunts and the conversion of the restaurant into Granada 2 seating 209 patrons, in July 1974 were not enough to compete with changing tastes, not least from bigger and better televisions in the home. Audience numbers were falling. The Granada management denied having problems but did admit that holiday time showings and certain blockbuster films were becoming the main attractions.

In the 1980s articles started appearing in the local newspapers about plans to develop and change the Granada. An application for a bingo licence had been fought off after objections from Mecca and Ladbrokes, the Bedfordshire Journal reported in December 1982. In June 1986, the Bedfordshire Times noted that an application for the Granada to develop as a night club, a bar and two cinema screens, had been denied after objections from Chris Sweeting, a local night club owner. That same year yet another bingo licence application was rejected. Then at the beginning of 1989, the Bedford Herald announced that the Granada had been sold for more than £1 million but that the new owners Simkel Developments and City and County Developments had offered to keep the cinema functioning, programmed by Cannon until a new cinema opened. By April 1989, Bedfordshire on Sunday was reporting on secret negotiations by North Bedfordshire Borough Council to acquire the Granada site from the developers. The council had plans to convert the building into a theatre. The discussions came to nothing and when the vote was taken by the council in August 1989, by a narrow majority, the owners were given permission to demolish the cinema and develop the site.

The final screening at the Granada was Exorcist 3. The cinema closed its doors on December 2nd 1990 and the contents of the cinema were auctioned: the Wurlitzer organ had previously been sold in the late 1970s. Some items were recycled: 300 of the seats were sold to the Bowen West Theatre. Local businessman Brian Howard bid successfully for the massive 23 foot foyer chandelier. After demolition, the site was left as an unsurfaced car park for some years until a supermarket chain took it over. It is slightly bizarre nowadays to enter this new building and remember how vast the Granada seemed, even though the store occupies almost the same footprint.

Plaque marking the site of the Granada cinema in St Peter's St. BedfordDuring its existence, the Granada meant different things to different people: articles regretting its loss and questioning why it could not have been saved appeared for some years after it had gone. Money for development was beginning to be short in the 1990s: there appeared to be no other viable use for a building designed as a cinema. Sadly this cinema was not then deemed to be worthy of being listed. Even the façade was not able to be preserved of this vibrant, glamorous and very human construction. Now all that survives is a plaque in St Peter's Street, ‘Here stood the Granada Cinema, a flagship of the Granada Circuit 15th December 1934 - 5th December 1990’.
© Graham Trundley 2013


Sources

Books and Magazines (available at Bedford Library)

  • The Final Curtain - the death knell tolls for Bedfordshire's Granada, Bedfordshire Life, March 1989 p.12
  • Catalogue of The art deco furnishings, equipment, fixtures and fittings of the St Peter's Street cinema Bedford. Sale by tender by Wilson Peacock (viewing Tuesday 11th and Saturday 15th December 1990).
  • David Simpson. Granada Management 2- Bedford, The Mercia Bioscope Nov. 2006 pp.1-12
  • John D. Squires. Bedford Cinema's Golden Jubilee [Granada], Northamptonshire and Bedfordshire Life, Dec. 1984 pp.26-28
  • John D. Squires. Fifty Years of the Granada Cinema, Bedford, Bedfordshire Magazine, vol. 19 pp.275-278
  • R. Wildman. Death of a Supercinema: the Granada Bedford, Bedfordshire Magazine, vol. 23 pp.39-40 (Summer 1991)

Newspapers (available at Bedford Library)

  • Local newspaper and magazine cuttings, Bedford: Cinemas, at Bedford Library
  • Doug Bowker. The Last Picture Show, Ampthill and Flitwick Times, 13th December 1984 p.7
  • The Granada: arrangements for the opening ceremony, Bedfordshire Times and Independent, Friday 14th December 1934 p.13
  • Granada Opened, Bedfordshire Times and Independent, Friday 21st December 1934 p.10

Images


Page last updated: 25th February 2014