National Picture Theatre, Kingston upon Hull

National Picture Theatre
Cinema in 2006
Map
General information
TypeCinema
AddressBeverley Road
Kingston upon Hull
HU3 1UX
Coordinates53°45′16″N 0°20′53″W / 53.754444°N 0.348056°W / 53.754444; -0.348056
Opened23 December 1914
Destroyed18 March 1941

The National Picture Theatre on Beverley Road in Kingston upon Hull, England, was a cinema which was built in 1914. During the Second World War, the cinema was bombed and mostly destroyed when an air raid took place on the night of 18 March 1941. A film had been showing at the time of the bombing, which was Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator. All 150 people in the cinema at the time escaped and there were no casualties. The interior of the building was completely destroyed but the facade somehow escaped the blast. It still remains to this day alongside fragments of the foyer and vestibule behind it. The cinema is the last remaining civilian bomb ruin still in existence and was Grade II listed in January 2007.[1]

  1. ^ Lloyd, Arthur. "National Picture Theatre, Beverley Road, Kingston upon Hull". The Music Hall and Theatre History Website. Arthur Lloyd. Retrieved 23 November 2015.

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