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The company was founded in 2000, when entrepreneur Daniel Broch bought the original Everyman Cinema in Hampstead, London, which dated to 1933, which before then was a theatre. Broch led the growth of the company with the acquisition in 2008 of Screen Cinemas to add more locations.
This reduced the seating capacity to 300. It was operated as part of the small independent Screen Cinemas circuit, which had seven cinemas in and around London, including Screen on the Hill in Belsize Park, [4] [5] The Screen on Baker Street and The Screen in Winchester. [6] [7] In 2008, the circuit was sold to the Everyman Media Group. [2]
In 2015, the cinema was one of four purchased from Odeon by Everyman Cinemas. [2] [3] The cinema opened in 1935 and closed on 12 July 2015. It reopened as an Everyman Cinema later in 2015. [4] There is a bus stop named after it (Barnet Everyman, previously Barnet Odeon) served by London Bus Routes 34, 107, 184, 234, 263, 307, 326, 383, 389, and N20
Former cinemas in London (38 P) ... Everyman Cinema, Hampstead; ... Regent Street Cinema; Rio Cinema, Dalston; Ritzy Cinema; Riverside Studios; S.
It was streamlined Art Deco and seated 489. It closed in 1973 and was replaced by a mixed-use development with two basement cinemas, which opened in 1978 as the Sherlock Holmes Centa 1 & 2, later became the Screen on Baker Street and are now the Everyman Baker Street. [69] Other buildings included: Gunnersbury Court, South Acton (1936) – flats
Everyman Cinema may refer to: Everyman Cinemas; Everyman Cinema, Hampstead; Everyman Cinema, Muswell Hill This page was last edited on 22 March 2018, at 18:49 (UTC). ...
Everyman Theatres (1948–1951), ... Everyman Cinema, Hampstead, a cinema in Hampstead, London, formerly the Everyman Theatre (1920–26) Everyman Palace Theatre, ...
Pages in category "Cinema chains in the United Kingdom" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .