Savoy Cinema, Nottingham

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File:Savoy Cinema - geograph.org.uk - 1044339.jpg
General information
Location Lenton, Nottingham
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Completed 1935
Opened 7 November 1935
Design and construction
Architect Reginald William Gaze Cooper

Savoy Cinema is on Derby Road in Nottingham. It is the only surviving pre-Second World War cinema in Nottingham.[1]

History

Savoy Cinema was built in 1935 to designs by the architect Reginald Cooper. [2] It is built in the art-deco style with a curved front.

It was opened on 7 November 1935 by Lenton Picture House Ltd, a consortium of local businessmen. It had seating for 1,242. The first film was Flirtation Walk with Dick Powell.

The interior of the Savoy Cinema was itself used as a setting for part of the, now famous, 1960 film by Alan Sillitoe Saturday Night and Sunday Morning [3]

In 1972 the single auditorium was rebuilt to offer 3 screens.

References

  1. From Modernity to Memorial: The Changing Meanings of the 1930s Cinema in Nottingham. Sarah Stubbings. August 2003
  2. Nottingham Evening Post 10 November 2010
  3. http://www.ciaranbrown.com/snasmlocations.html