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Credits roll for picture palace; Larry Neild talks to the campaigners fighting to save a 90-year-old cinema from the bulldozers.


Byline: Larry Neild

IT REALLY is The End for Liverpool's first purpose-built cinema, which was thriving at the very dawn of an era of the great picture palaces.

The final curtain came down at the Bedford Hall cinema almost half a century ago, but now the hidden screen gem finally faces the bulldozer.

With its impressive carved stone facade, the old picture house is looking worse for wear in a Walton side street.

Inside, many of the original features remain intact, with the cinema's once vast auditorium used as a furniture emporium.

Despite its sorry state, the old Bedford has attracted the attention of the Cinema Theatre Association, which hails the place as iconic i·con·ic  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or having the character of an icon.

2. Having a conventional formulaic style. Used of certain memorial statues and busts.
 in cinematic history, one of just five of its generation still standing in the UK.

Catherine Fitzpatrick lives in Walton, and remembers going to The Bedford on many occasions when she was younger.

"It was a lovely cinema and I still remember going to see Calamity Jane Calamity Jane (kəlăm`ĭtē jān`), c.1852–1903, American frontier character, b. Princeton, Mo. Her real name was Martha Jane Canary, and the origin of her nickname is obscure.  with Doris Day Doris Mary Ann von Kappelhoff (born April 3, 1924)[1] is an American singer, actress, and animal welfare advocate known as Doris Day. A vivacious blonde with a wholesome image, Day was one of the most prolific actresses of the 1950s and 1960s. . Everyone joined in the singing, it was so wonderful.

"Another time, I was leaving and got to the end of the row of seats and knelt down to bless myself. I forget I was in the cinema and thought it was in the church.

"I suppose it depends on what is going to be built on the site if the cinema is pulled I down. It has been closed I as a picture palace for so I long now."

The owner of the I building, Mr F Bell, wants I to demolish the Bedford I and replace it with nine three-storey townhouses and a three-storey block of apartments.

Planning managers recommended the scheme should be given the go-ahead. But after protests from preservationists, the council's planning committee planning committee n (in local government) → comité m de planificación  deferred a decision. They plan to visit Walton on December 4 to see the building before making a final decision.

English Heritage English Heritage is a non-departmental public body of the United Kingdom government (Department for Culture, Media and Sport) with a broad remit of managing the historic environment of England. It was set up under the terms of the National Heritage Act 1983.  has recently refused to list the building to give it protection from demolition, though the government's Department for Communities and Local Government is currently considering an appeal against this refusal.

A report to planning councillors reveals that the cinema is only one of five built in the UK in 1910 which have their frontages intact.

The cinema is unique in the country because of its own ornate waiting room, added as an extension in 1924.

The Cinema Theatre Association has posted details of the threat to the cinema on its website in the hope of generating support to save the building.

The association tells the council: "Bedford Hall is an important and very rare purpose-built cinema. The building is in good original condition with the street frontage entirely intact. It is of great architectural, social and historical merit."

Records at Liverpool Central Library Liverpool Central Library is the largest of the 24 libraries in Liverpool, UK. The Liverpool Central Library can be found in the centre of Liverpool. Buildings  report that, despite its opening date listed as 1910, it opened as a cinema on Boxing Day 1908 as Liverpool's first purpose built cinema.

Florence Gersten, of the Save Our Cities Campaign, said: "This is yet another example of a historic building facing demolition. It is a beautiful and rare example of early cinema architecture and deserves to be preserved. The outside is perfectly preserved and many of the internal features survive to this day."

Merseyside cinema historian Harold Ackroyd Harold Ackroyd VC, MC (18 July, 1877—11 August, 1917) was an English recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. , in his book The Dream Palaces of Liverpool, reveals that the cinema showed silent movies until 1930 when a sound system was added. It was opened by cinema entrepreneur John F Wood, who formed the Bedford Cinemas company and ran a chain of Merseyside picture houses.

It closed on May 23,1959, one of the early victims of the television era.

larryneild@dailypost.co.uk

CAPTION(S):

The Bedford, in Walton, as pictured in Harold Ackroyd's book, The Picture Palaces of Liverpool; Owners want to replace the building with houses
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Publication:Daily Post (Liverpool, England)
Date:Nov 22, 2007
Words:626
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