Ryde’s cinemas of the 1920s and 1930s

Martin, M. & Wilson, D. for Ryde Library & Information Services, April 1999

Cinema came to Ryde in October 1910. It had arrived in Sydney as early as 1896 but took some years to establish itself. The first purposebuilt picture theatre in the city opened in 1909 and by 1911 there were 14 fulltime cinema venues operating in the city. By 1915 there were 97 in the suburbs.

Ryde's first exhibitor was bootmaker Charles Starr who ran the Ryde Picture Palace on the corner of Blaxland Road and Tucker Street, next door to his Ryde Boot Palace. It was an open-air theatre with a Wunderlich pressed metal facade. A few years later a grocer from Drummoyne named Gus Bowe began screening "Gus Bowe's Pictures" in the Kramer Hall on the corner of Wharf Road and Meriton Street Gladesville. This venue was later named the Gladesville Theatre. Around 1915 blacksmith Walter Chick began showing pictures in a tin shed called the Eastwood Picture Palace in Railway Parade Eastwood.

These films were silent. Musicians were engaged to provide accompaniment to the action on the screen. At the Ryde Picture Palace Mr Pope played the piano and Mr Wilson (Starr's partner) played the cornet. At "Chick's Pictures" there was a pianist and a violin player. They kept the audience pacified during frequent technical breakdowns and fire in the projection room caused by highly flammable nitrate film.

New exhibitors came onto the scene in the 1920s. Percy Crane began "Crane's Pictures" in the Eastwood Masonic Hall in 1924 and late in the same year the Theatre Royal opened in West Ryde on the corner of Anthony Road and West Parade. The Gladesville Palace Theatre DeLuxe opened in early 1926 in Jordan Street, built by prominent local builder James Park.

Serious business & the Talkies

Picture shows had become serious business in Ryde by the 1920s and a tussle for audience market share emerged between some of the exhibitors. Gus Bowe was at the centre of this competition. In 1922 he bought land in Ryedale Road West Ryde near Wattle Street. In 1923 he bought land on the corner of Pope and Devlin Streets Ryde and in 1925 he bought land on the corner of Osgathorpe and Victoria Roads Gladesville. He built on the West Ryde land but exhibited there only briefly. Then he engaged architect C Reynolds Winter to design the Victory Theatre on his Gladesville land and this cinema opened in April 1926. Bowe was also showing pictures in the Ryde Town Hall and still screening at the Gladesville Theatre at this time.

In the meantime James Park bought land on the corner of Argyle Avenue and Blaxland Road Ryde where he built another theatre which he called the Palace, not so "deluxe" as his Gladesville venture. He sold this theatre soon after completion in early 1926 to Henry Thomson of Coogee, owner of the West Ryde Theatre Royal. Thomson later equipped the Palace with soundondisc to accompany film and renamed this cinema the Ritz. He had negotiated a financial arrangement with Gus Bowe whereby Bowe agreed to retire as an exhibitor from Ryde for a certain time.

The Gladesville Palace was the first theatre in that suburb to become a "talkie house" and soon became Gladesville's dominant cinema. The lease had been taken over by Gladesville Theatres Pty Ltd in 1934. This company had bought the Victory from Gus Bowe in 1928 and at the same time took over the lease of the Gladesville Theatre. They retained the licence on the Victory to deter competition but kept the venue closed.

Plush seats, prosceniums & "the shack"

In 1927 Percy Crane moved his pictures from the Masonic Hall to a grand new cinema in Rowe Street called the Duke of York Theatre. It was designed by prominent local architects C R Summerhayes & Son and furnished by Bebarfalds Ltd. Crane's motto was "good pictures, good seats, good music, and good personal service". The theatre boasted an orchestra and a Christie organ and spelt the end of Chick's Pictures.

In Ryde, Henry Thomson's Ritz had been destroyed by fire on New Year's Eve 1930. Although Thomson soon announced plans to rebuild, Gus Bowe seized the opportunity to reenter the industry. He built Ryde's most architecturally ambitious cinema on the land he owned near the tram terminus. This theatre, designed by architects McCredie & Evans, was called the Rialto and opened in December 1932. The exterior brickwork incorporated reds, greens, whites and orange and the concrete roofing tiles were blue and green. Large columns topped with gargoyles flanked the floodlit entrance and a second row of gates were topped with seahorses. The interior of the theatre also boasted unusual decorative features as well as state of the art seating and sound.

In 1931 both the Duke of York and the Theatre Royal introduced the latest soundonfilm technology. Improvements in lighting, proscenium decor, plush seating and carpeting continued to be made throughout the decade in these theatres as well as at the Rialto and the Gladesville Palace. These innovations, together with refreshment sellers, uniformed usherettes and managers in evening dress, all combined to create the special atmosphere that was at the heart of the cinemavisiting experience in those years.

Meanwhile in January 1938 North Ryde got its first licensed cinema, the Khartoum. From the beginning the Khartoum was different from its betterupholstered rivals. It was openair, built mostly of corrugated iron and featured woodchopping contests in the interval. Whereas the Duke of York was "scientifically heated", at the Khartoum (or "the shack" as it was fondly known by its patrons) heating was provided by 44 gallon drums filled with paper, wood, coke and coal.

One challenge to the Khartoum appeared in 1966 in the form of the North Ryde DriveIn in Waterloo Road but the greater threat to cinemas everywhere in 1956 was the arrival of television. One by one Ryde's cinemas closed: the Theatre Royal in 1958, the Rialto in 1960, the Khartoum in 1966 and the Palace in 1967. In Eastwood the former Duke of York had become the Odeon and managed to hang on until January 1973. In 1986 the North Ryde DriveIn closed. Today the only buildings surviving from the heyday of Ryde cinemas are the former Gladesville Theatre, the ill fated Ritz and the erstwhile Victory.

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