Now you pretty much know it’s time to get a life when you go
looking for the date for a film listing for the Eltham Hill Gaumont.
Eltham Hill Gaumont, 1998 |
The listing was posted recently by Kath May and advertised
the four films showing for the week beginning September 12.
For those with time on their hands on that Sunday the cinema
was showing for just the one day The Unknown with Dean Jagger and Teenage
Frankenstein with Whit Bissell, Phyllis Coates and Gary Conway.
With titles like that they were of course X rated under the
old Board of Censorship classification and if there was anyone still unsure the
listing carried the warning Adults only.
Now I have never really given it much thought but I suppose
Sunday in the cinema in the 1950s and 60s would be a slow day.
The cinema , circa 1938 |
Most people would have gone on a Friday or Saturday night
and the week would be given over to a more discerning audience, leaving Sunday
for those just over 18 with money left in their pockets and with a taste for
the macabre.
For the rest of the week starting on the Monday and running
for a full six days there was Kirk Douglas and Anthony Quinn in Last Train from
Gun Hill which was an A and Yul Brynner in Escape from Zahrain.
I went looking for the plots of the four films and wish I
hadn’t bothered. Suffice to say that
today I doubt that even the most desperate of TV executives would look to
showing them on even the graveyard slot.
So as a reward and in answer to Kath’s musings of when this
week was I went off and roamed the records.
Film poster, 1957 |
Now the films themselves were no clue.
The Unknown dated from 1956, Teenage Frankenstein from the following
year and Last Train from 1959 which left Escape from Zahrain which was made in
1962.
But given that you can on the internet find a day if you
have the month and the year with just a little bit of fiddling it was possible
to place Sunday September 12 in 1965.
Which just leaves me to record that the Gaumont had opened
on April 14 1938 showing Queen Victoria with Anna Neagle and closed on June 19 1967 with David Niven in Happy Go Lovely
and Dana Andrews in Duel in the Jungle.*
It reopened as a Mecca Bingo Club and the rest as they say
is a down to two fat ladies and a joyful shout of Bingo.
But I wouldn't have done the job properly if I didn't also try to date the second picture of the cinema.
It was showing Will Hay's film Oh Mr Porter which was released in 1937 and so I am guessing it will be the late 1930s.
And that's all I am going to say except to thank Kath for finding and posting the film listing leaving me to go off and watch the paint dry on the back
door.
Picture; the old cinema November 1998 courtesy of David
Simpson and sometime before 1952, cousinadnab taken from Gaumont Eltham Hill, Cinema Treasures, http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/14991
and film poster for Teenage Frankenstein, 1957 which is in the public domain
* Gaumont Eltham Hill, Cinema
Treasures, http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/14991
I am looking for the time when Eltham Hill Gaument showed James Dean in Rebel without cause was Either 1955 or 1956. do you have any ideas Please. Rosemarie
ReplyDeleteSorry no
DeleteIn the 1950s to get into the Gaumont Eltham hill in 1956 it cost 1/3pence 1/9pence 2/3pence = one shilling and three pence etc.
ReplyDeleteCan remember going to The Gaumont to see Psycho Had to put loads of makeup on as I was under age to see it !!!
ReplyDelete