The Clapton Cinema |
The Friends of Clapton Cinematograph Theatre (FCCT) have
been campaigning for five years to restore one of Britain’s oldest purpose
built cinemas in Lower Clapton Road to its former glory as a cultural centre
for the whole community.
But now the cinema’s owners St Mary of Zion have submitted a
planning application to the Council to alter the heritage building which lies
in the Clapton Pond conservation area.
Nearly 800 people have signed a petition calling for the
building to be preserved, and eminent cinema historian Dr Nicholas H
iley remarked on the petition site: “Such survivals from the earliest days of cinema are rare and should be preserved as an important part of British social history.”
iley remarked on the petition site: “Such survivals from the earliest days of cinema are rare and should be preserved as an important part of British social history.”
But the Orthodox group which bought the building last May
wants to alter the building’s façade so it resembles the Church of Our Lady
Mary of Zion in Ethiopia’s Axum, where it is claimed the Ten Commandments are
inscribed on the Tablets of Law.
They want to convert the cinema from a nightclub into a
place of worship.
The cinema as it looks now |
“This commitment has now been abandoned, as the planning
application which has been submitted to Hackney Council carves up the
auditorium - an integral part of the former cinema’s historic character,” she
said.
“I don’t know why they want to do the pastiche building,
it’s a bit of a surreal situation, why not go the whole hog and have the Taj
Mahal,” she added.
The cinema dates from 1910, and shut its doors for the last
time in 1979.
It reopened three years later as nightclub Dougies, which
was renamed the Palace Pavillion.
Following a series of street shootings involving patrons of
the club which led to the area being dubbed the “Murder Mile,” its licence was
withdrawn in 2006.
In 2009 MP Diane Abbott presented an early day motion in
Parliament calling for the centre to be dedicated to the late internationally
renowned playwright Harold Pinter, who lived opposite the cinema during his
youth.
Last year the FCCT was in discussion with Mr Ken Edwards,
the former owner of the Palace Pavilion, hoping to buy the building.
But the Royal Bank of Scotland confiscated the building and
sold it to St Mary of Zion last May.
In defiance, 78-year old Mr Edwards barricaded himself in
the building for six weeks, until he was evicted.
http://www.hackneygazette.co.uk
http://www.hackneygazette.co.uk
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