The aim of the Going to the Pictures Project has been to help preserve a part of our local cinema heritage by collecting and recording memories from people who used and worked in the local picture houses from the 1930′s to the 1960′s.
Explore this map of 21 local cinemas within a 3 mile radius of the Plaza, from 1930 to 1960.
If you got in for the ‘Penny Rush’ you had extra money for sweets – Toms early 1930′s matinee memories
“The Essoldo (ice box) on Linacre road (opposite the corpy bus shed) When the Hammer (Dracula) pictures was on us Marsh Lane bucks never missed one of them . There was 4 or 5 of […]
The role of women portrayed on the screen often fell within the stereotypical roles amplified and made up by Hollywood
Flyer for the Boolte Gaumont Cinema which has been kept for over 50 years and scanned especially for the Going to the Pictures Project. The flyer from 1961 is advertising a future presentation of the film ‘Cape Fear’
Cinemas would show episodes of a serial each week which would be left on a cliff hanger, this was a way of having regular cinema patrons return each week
A couple’s first date at the opening of the Plaza Cinema in 1939.
Local film maker Tim Brunsden has followed the Going to the Pictures project development and has created a documentary which tells the story of the project.