What a corker of a cinema! Up until we stopped off to check this one out our trip was definitely shaping up to be a bit sub-par but this place was just that little bit of epic we needed to make the many previous failures worthwhile!
The cinema itself (and yeh it is a cinema not a theatre) reminded me very much of Streatham with its largely bingo'd out ground floor yet lovely stack of boxes and epic plasterwork detail once you got up to the circle. The circle here was just huge! almost like two circles in one. Then of course the row of Corinthian columns down each side separating seats from the aisle must be fairly unique too. It definitely stands out from the crowd.
Known as 'Greens Playhouse' after George Green the owner of several other similar cinemas in Scotland it is considered the best surviving example of a John Fairweather designed house. It opened in 1931 and squeezed in 3,116 seats which made it the second biggest cinema in the country at the time.
John Fairweather said of the building
"In this amusement business the public demands progressive change. From silent to talking pictures, from black-and-white to colour photography, from small downtown 300-seaters to 4,000 seaters. Car parks, cafes, dance halls, these things will all become part and parcel of the cinema of the future.
My new cinema at Ayr, besides having a car park, will have a flat roof on which gyroplanes may land. It is my belief that the cinema is definitely establishing itself as the centre of social life in every town”
Sadly after checking the loft we could find little evidence of said gyro planes!
The auditorium was definitely the highlight but there was also a bit to see in the projectionists area even if the projectors themselves appeared to be long gone.. The circle was accessed by a nice staircase but had little in the way of a bar area or anything like that. Getting a photo of the nice stained glass window and staircase was actually surprisingly difficult as it was so cramped at the front of house! One interesting aspect was getting up to the loft via a ladder that popped out to one corner of the proscenium and gave a quite unique vantage point. A few doors were locked but I think we got to all the main areas.
8.5 out of 10 i think. Not quite as good as Streatham mainly because there wasn't an awful lot to see behind the scenes but much better than your average bingo closure!
The cinema itself (and yeh it is a cinema not a theatre) reminded me very much of Streatham with its largely bingo'd out ground floor yet lovely stack of boxes and epic plasterwork detail once you got up to the circle. The circle here was just huge! almost like two circles in one. Then of course the row of Corinthian columns down each side separating seats from the aisle must be fairly unique too. It definitely stands out from the crowd.
Known as 'Greens Playhouse' after George Green the owner of several other similar cinemas in Scotland it is considered the best surviving example of a John Fairweather designed house. It opened in 1931 and squeezed in 3,116 seats which made it the second biggest cinema in the country at the time.
John Fairweather said of the building
"In this amusement business the public demands progressive change. From silent to talking pictures, from black-and-white to colour photography, from small downtown 300-seaters to 4,000 seaters. Car parks, cafes, dance halls, these things will all become part and parcel of the cinema of the future.
My new cinema at Ayr, besides having a car park, will have a flat roof on which gyroplanes may land. It is my belief that the cinema is definitely establishing itself as the centre of social life in every town”
Sadly after checking the loft we could find little evidence of said gyro planes!
The auditorium was definitely the highlight but there was also a bit to see in the projectionists area even if the projectors themselves appeared to be long gone.. The circle was accessed by a nice staircase but had little in the way of a bar area or anything like that. Getting a photo of the nice stained glass window and staircase was actually surprisingly difficult as it was so cramped at the front of house! One interesting aspect was getting up to the loft via a ladder that popped out to one corner of the proscenium and gave a quite unique vantage point. A few doors were locked but I think we got to all the main areas.
8.5 out of 10 i think. Not quite as good as Streatham mainly because there wasn't an awful lot to see behind the scenes but much better than your average bingo closure!
Originally on this site was built in 1911 the Boswell Park Roller Skating Rink. In 1914 it was converted by George Green into the 2,000 seat Boswell Park Pavilion Cinema. Later known as the Boswell Park Picturedrome and the La Scala Cinema, it was demolished after World War I, and a new cinema named the Playhouse was built for George Green in 1923. It was designed by John Fairweather with a seating capacity of 1,700. Sound equipment had just been installed in the Playhouse in September 1929, when the building was destroyed by a fire which started at the stage end.
Architect John Fairweather was employed by George Green to build a new super cinema on the site. It occupied the same plot of land as the previous Playhouse but had a different frontage. The new Green’s Playhouse opened on 8th July 1931 and with 3,104 seats was the 2nd largest cinema to be built in Scotland and the 3rd largest cinema in the UK. Seating was provided for 1,738 in the stalls, 1,320 in the circle and boxes seating 46. The proscenium was 55 feet wide and the stage was 22 feet deep. There were four dressing rooms and the Playhouse was equipped with a café.
The exterior of the building is 102 feet wide and has a central window over the entrance. Inside the auditorium, the decoration has columns along the side-walls and a large dome in the centre of the ceiling, very similar to other Green’s Playhouse Cinemas designed by John Fairweather.
Occasional live shows were held at the Playhouse, but some were not that successful, as when Frank Sinatra and the Billy Ternent Broadcasting Orchestra were booked for two performances on Sunday 12th July 1953 and only a total of 500 tickets were sold for the two shows!
Mecca Ltd. closed Green’s Playhouse as a cinema in the late-1960’s and was converted into a bingo club, which for many years has been operated by Mecca Ltd. The Mecca Bingo Club was closed on 26th February 2023.
On 29th March 1999, Historic Scotland designated Green’s Playhouse a Grade C(s) Listed building. This was up-graded to Grade B in June 2008