Our Patch February-March 2016 | Page 14

Our Patch FEBRUARY 2016 LOOKING BACK Simply pop a Golden Ticket in with your recycling Blacks Road and rear of Broadway Cinema c1977 BROADWAY CINEMA Look out for your Golden Tickets or download them. www.wrwa.gov.uk/GoldenTicket A show brought the house down, literally, when the ceiling of the Broadway ABC Cinema collapsed during a Monday matinee on 12 September 1977. It was a sad end to a cinema that was described as ‘the most elegant picture theatre in suburban London’ with salons decorated in cream and gold and plush rose-coloured upholstery. Designed by architect Frank Matcham (The Granville Theatre, Fulham; the Lyric, Hammersmith; and the Shepherds Bush Empire), the H A M M ERS M IT H Broadway Cinema boasted an exclusive local monopoly on the new and costly ‘Kinemacolor’, showing colour films that changed twice weekly, alongside the usual black and white films. The first colour offering, appropriate for the season, was a film of Santa Claus. The cinema attracted audiences to the 1,300 seats which were tempted by the initial low price of 3d for the same quality of seats as those costing one shilling, with continuous performances from 1.30pm to 11pm. There was a full orchestra, and the venue proved popular. In its later years the Broadway Cinema gained a racy reputation for its promotion of adult films. However, the ageing cinema could not compete with the new multi-screen venues. It never re-opened after that ceiling collapse in 1977, and was demolished in 1978 along with other properties on the west side of Queen Caroline Street for the widening of Blacks and Hammersmith Bridge roads. An office block and the Irish Centre now occupy the site of what was once ‘the oldest and naughtiest cinema in Hammersmith’.