Crosby Plaza Cinema celebrates its 70th anniversary
Sep 3 2009
by Laura Sharpe, Liverpool Daily Post
A MERSEYSIDE cinema that has fought for survival for the last 70 years will celebrate its anniversary by showing a film that, like itself, was almost lost to the cutting-room floor of history.
This weekend, audiences at the much-loved Crosby Plaza Cinema will be transported back to when the cinema first opened its doors in 1939.
Cinema staff will be dressed in 1940s costumes for a special screening of the 70-year-old Wizard of Oz.
The film was almost destroyed after it was first shown because of poor reviews, but like the Plaza, it survived and is now an age-old classic.
The Plaza?s colourful history started with the shortest-ever opening.
It opened on September 2, 1939, but closed just hours later because of air raids.
It eventually reopened two weeks later.
Cinema manager Chris Halliday said: ?The Wizard of Oz seemed appropriate as it?s the same age as the Plaza and will look fantastic on the big screen.
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?We want to reflect the history of the Plaza and all our staff will be in costume. We have an original Gone With the Wind trailer, sandbags and Union Jack flags.?
Over the years, the Plaza has had to fight for survival and once stood proudly among four other cinemas across Waterloo and Crosby.
Ironically, despite battling for popularity alongside multiplex cinemas, the Plaza itself played a part in the history of the multiplex.
In 1976, it was one of the first cinemas to become a triplex, after a ?100,000 scheme converted what was then called the Classic Cinema.
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