301:, with shutters over the windows to the auditorium which could be closed in case of fire. Kershaw Kalee II arc film projectors with RCA sound heads and an RCA high-fidelity 6-valve amplifier were installed. Behind the screen were two RCA loudspeakers, where they remained for over 60 years. Modern heating and ventilation systems were also installed. These alterations together with the improved sight lines from the seating raised the standard of the Rex to meet those of its north London competitors.
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Cinema interior designers Mollo & Egan redesigned the auditorium. The original 1910 barrel vaulted ceiling was retained, but decorative Art Deco panels were added along the walls. The auditorium was reversed, with the screen moving to the opposite end. This involved considerable alteration to the
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Advertising from 1938 reassured the public that "If it is good it's on our screen". There was a full programme with a double-bill of two features, a major and minor release, a short and a newsreel, all at the same prices as the chains. Advertising, neglected by the
Coliseum, was embraced by The Rex
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The Rex's programming policy in the late 1930s allowed it to tailor its presentations to its public's tastes. British films were therefore favoured and popular films were presented that had previously gone round the big circuits, allowing patrons to see films they had missed elsewhere or to see a
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Bringing up Baby (enabling parents and carers to enjoy the latest releases with their babies of up to a year old); Film studies programme; Cinememories (free dementia friendly screenings supported by a grant from The Mercer's
Company); school screenings, holiday workshops and charity screenings.
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At the beginning of the Trust's ownership, there were barely funds to run the cinema. The heating was antiquated. So was the projection equipment with its carbon arcs. Programming was another challenge. Contemporary Films had won a quota system against mainstream distributors for newly released
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In addition to a full programme of screenings, the Trust carries on educational and community work including Kids Club (an activity for 5- to 10-year-olds, followed by a film screening); Toddler Time (an activity followed by a 30-minute screening of an animation suitable for 2- to 4-year-olds);
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By 1983, audience patterns were changing and
Contemporary Films considered that the cinema was no longer economically viable. Charles Cooper, owner of Contemporary Films, wanted to sell the cinema and retire. Upon his retirement, the fate of the cinema hung very much in the balance. In 1983, a
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introduced laws to make cinemas safer. As a result, more purpose-built cinemas began to appear from 1910 onwards including this one. The
Phoenix Cinema was built in 1910 by Premier Electric Theatres, however the company went bankrupt before the cinema could be opened. In 1912, the building was
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The front of the cinema was transformed by architects Howes & Jackman with a move to the sleek lines of 1930s art deco architecture. The turrets and decorative plasterwork were removed to give the exterior a more 'modern' look. Glazed black tiles set against cream plaster and a new canopy
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status in recognition of their historic and architectural importance. English
Heritage recognised the importance of the Phoenix's original 1910 barrel-vaulted ceiling and the 1938 Mollo and Egan decorative wall panels and in 2000 the cinema received a Grade II listing. As one of the earliest
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In 2010 there was a renovation to celebrate the cinema's centenary designed by HMDW Architects. This introduced a new café-bar with a balcony, reworked the external signage and foyer, and restored the auditorium's barrel-vaulted ceiling, and Art Deco panels.
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favourite film a second time around. Sunday showings of older films and a standard mid-week change of programme (when the circuits were holding a film for a whole week) provided a rich diet for even the most enthusiastic cinemagoer.
253:. At this time, the typical programme was silent movies accompanied by live music, plus variety acts such as singers, magicians and comedians. But in 1928, British cinema went through a huge transformation when the first sound film,
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purchased by businessmen who had been involved in setting up East Sheen
Picturedrome. They finally opened it as 'The East Finchley Picturedrome' in May 1912 with 428 seats. The first screening was of a film about the
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flooring to create a rake for the seating. The colour scheme, like today, was red, bronze and gold. The number of seats increased to 528. A projection box was built over the foyer to satisfy the requirements of the
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263:, premiered in the Piccadilly Theatre, London. Cinemas across London started the transition to sound and on 22 July 1929 this cinema was the first in the area to show a sound film, screening Al Jolson's
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In 1924, the cinema's name changed to the "Coliseum". In 1925, the cinema was sold to Home
Counties Theatres Ltd, which also owned the Athenaeum Picture Playhouse and the Summerland Cinema, both in
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rejected the proposal. After the consequent public inquiry in April 1984 permission for the office block was granted. Following widespread opposition by local residents (with the patronage of
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The
Phoenix has also appeared in many films, TV series and photo shoots, providing the backdrop for anything from educational videos to fashion shoots to TV series and big feature films.
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style and reopened as the "Rex" in
September 1938. The alterations of 1938 were a response to competition from 1000 seater "picture palaces" being built by chains such as
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The Rex opened as an independent cinema compiling its own programmes, unlike the nearby chain cinemas, whose schedules were decided by their allied production companies.
555:. Following the adventures of a projectionist, the Phoenix was a major star of the film for which the Phoenix's chief projectionist served as a technical adviser.
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purpose-built cinemas in the UK and one of even fewer still operating as a cinema, the
Phoenix is therefore protected from demolition or damaging alterations.
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for planning permission to build an office block on the site occupied by the cinema. The Barnet Planning Committee approved the development but the
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offered a grant to the Trust to purchase the cinema in June 1985. The building and adjoining land were bought by the Trust in December 1985.
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resigned as patrons of the cinema in protest at its hosting of the Seret Film Festival, an Israeli state-sponsored cinema festival.
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which had recently sunk. The natural fall of the land was used for the sloped seating with the screen at the High Road end.
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In 1989 the Trust enlarged the upper foyer by repositioning the stairs and creating a new entrance to the auditorium.
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It is distinctive on East Finchley's high road by its large neon sign on the side of the building. Its patrons are
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stretching across the width of the cinema were accompanied by a neon sign with the new name, The Rex.
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American and UK films, which meant that the Phoenix was able to "claim" every fourth or fifth one.
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The cinema took its current name in 1975 when it was purchased and run by the distribution company
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chose the Phoenix as an early 20th-century cinema for a scene in his 1994 box-office hit,
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and concentrated on independent, foreign and specialist films, as it does today.
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and it was always keeping up with innovations from the larger distributors.
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638:, Gerry Turvey, 2010, published by the Phoenix Cinema Trust. Available for
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The longest film shoot at the cinema so far was for the British comedy
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506:, 2011). It was also featured in Season 4, episode 4 of the TV series
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Among the cinema's biggest dramatic appearances were in TV comedy. In
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For the cinema formerly called the Phoenix Cinema in Oxford, see
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Grade II listed buildings in the London Borough of Barnet
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Francis Coleman: award-winning TV producer and director"
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In 1937, the building was redesigned and rebuilt in an
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The Phoenix Cinema: A Century of Film in East Finchley
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is an independent single-screen community cinema in
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461:Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles
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522:. The Phoenix also appears in the video for the
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319:In 1973 the Rex was acquired by the
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520:Films Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
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380:Mike Leigh
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