Regal Marrayatville

275 Kensington Road,
Adelaide, SA 5068

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Uploaded on: May 27, 2021

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Princess  Marrayatville  275 Kensington Road, Adelaide, SA  -  Proscenium 1920s

Princess Marrayatville 275 Kensington Road, Adelaide, SA - Proscenium 1920s

PHOTO - State Library of South Australia.

Located in the Adelaide suburb of Marrayatville, the Regal Cinema is the oldest purpose built cinema operating in Adelaide, South Australia. It has a National Trust Commendation and is on the State Heritage Register.

It started its life on November 24, 1925 as a silent cinema named Princess Theatre. Designed by architect Chris A. Smith, the theatre had panels on the side-walls and each side of the proscenium which contained painted frescos. The opening film was Mary Pickford in “Little Annie Rooney”. It went into receivership three years later.

It was purchased by the Waterman family and renamed Ozone Theatre. In 1941 it was completely renovated in an Art Deco style to the plans of architect F. Kenneth Milne, re-opening on 30th May 1941 with Anna Neagle in “Irene”. The Ozone Theatre seated 1,290 in stalls and circle levels on a stadium plan. There was a crying room and a party room at the rear of the stalls, which still exist today.

Hoyts took over in the 1950’s and it was re-named Chelsea Cinema. In 1963 Hoyts sold it to the local Council but leased it back. In 1971 Wallis Theatres won a tender and operated it until late-2011. It was taken back by the council. Taken over by Republic Theatre, it was re-named and re-opened the Regal Cinema on 23rd February 2012 with Meryl Streep in “The Iron Lady”.

It was intended to add three screens on adjacent land next door but maintain and improve the original, but these seemed to have been put on hold.

The Regal Cinema was taken back by the City of Burnside Council in March 2018 and they will continue to operate it - Bob Parr, Ken Roe.

Contributed by Greg Lynch -

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Comments (1)

Gromit2022
Gromit2022 on April 3, 2022 at 12:36 pm

The cinema operated under the name Hoyts Marryatville Ozone during the period of Hoyts operation. Wallis Theatres renamed it the Chelsea Cinema in 1971 when it took over the management. The name was suggested by Wallis employee Bob Parr,(after the fashionable London suburb of Chelsea), who became the Chelsea Cinema manager for the next 40 years along with his other roles with Wallis Theatres notably cinema programming. Bob Parr OAM died last week (March 31st 2022) sadly after a lifetime of service to the cinema industry and wider community. Vale Bob, you too were a cinema treasure!

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