Local Government
Greater Geraldton
Region
Midwest
205 Marine Terrace Geraldton
cnr Fitzgerald Street
Soldier's Picture Theatre, Radio Picture Theatre (fmr)
Greater Geraldton
Midwest
Type | Status | Date | Documents | More information |
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Heritage List | Adopted | 15 Dec 2015 |
Type | Status | Date | Documents |
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Type | Status | Date | Grading/Management | More information | |
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Category | Description | ||||
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The King's Picture Theatre Fmr has considerable historic significance as the
oldest remaining cinema building in Geraldton. The place has further
significance for its role in assisting with the rehabilitation of returned First
World War servicemen and for its long association with well known local
business identity, Alfred Wheat from 1921 to 1976. The building is a rare
example of a large structure of corrugated iron construction and although
altered internally and externally, still retains some of its original features
and detailing. Further the place forms part of a "Cinema Precinct",
inclusive of the adjacent 1930s Radio Theatre Building and the modern
Cinemas Complex opposite, which is evidence of the social value of
cinema in the local community as well as the development of the
technology over time.
Located to the rear of the Radio Theatre Fmr, this large building is of two
storey proportion with a later single storey addition addressing Fitzgerald
Street. The original historic hall has walls of horizontally placed corrugated
iron cladding, while the gable roof features four roof vents and two raised
roof sections along the central ridge. The western end of the hall, which
would have comprised the original building frontage, is of brick
construction, including the gable end, with rendered parapet detailing.
The brickwork extends approximately 5 metres along both side walls. To
the rear of the building there is a single and double storey lean to of
timber frame and corrugated iron construction. Several high set windows
to the side walls are boarded up with sheets of corrugated iron. To the
front of the original hall addressing Fitzgerald Street there is a c1960s single
storey brick addition which fronts directly onto the footpath. This addition
features large expanses of shop windows and a curved cantilevered
awning which wraps around the corner of the building. An internal
inspection was not made as part of this assessment however it is
understood that the interior is painted black and that while the stage
structure has been altered from its original form, the original proscenium
arch remains intact with decorative pressed metal around the stage
space featuring an art deco style olive laurel. Further the interior features
"very fine steel roof trusses" which are identified in the "CBD West End
Project Precinct Plan, Design Guidelines and Local Planning Policy" as
warranting retention and reuse in the case of demolition. (p.17 & P.
Griffiths Heritage Report.) A brick toilet block has also been built inside the
hall.
In 1911, the King's Picture Theatre was built by Dick Cardilini to the rear of
Geraldton Town Lot 1 fronting Fitzgerald Street. The first film is believed to
have been screened in 1913 by Daniel Marsh who apparently operated
the first electricity plant in Geraldton as well as a second picture theatre
called Queen's Pictures. Following the First World War the King's Picture
Theatre enterprise was run by a syndicate of Geraldton businessmen and
renamed the Soldiers' Picture Theatre because the profits were used to
assist in the rehabilitation of returned First World War servicemen. By
August 1920, profits from the picture shows also contributed towards the
purchase of premises named "The Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial Institute".
Alfred G. Wheat, a returned soldier himself, arrived in Geraldton in 1921 to
manage the Soldiers' Picture Theatre. In 1927, Wheat acquired the lease
to Soldiers' Picture Theatre and reverted back to the name King's Pictures.
He also purchased Queen's Pictures from the Marsh family, which was
located on the corner of Cathedral Avenue and Foreshore Drive, in order
to acquire the rights to Fox and Paramount films, and both cinemas
continued to operate for a time until Queen's Pictures was eventually
closed with the advent of 'talkies'. In 1930, Wheat renamed King's Pictures,
'Radio Pictures' or 'Radio Theatre' - the new name coming from Wheat's
belief that some time in the future radio would be used in the sound
system of film. In that same year and following the installation of the latest
Raycophone sound gear the first talking picture, "Tanned Legs", was
shown at the cinema which now had additional seating and suspended
flowing curtains. The old Radio Theatre presented both movie shows and
vaudeville acts, while dancing lessons were also conducted there.
Wheat's operation of the old Radio Theatre was carried out in conjunction
with a garage business, known initially as the Radio Service Station and
later as Radio Motors, which also operated on Lot 1 from the late 1920s. In
the mid 1930s plans to redevelop the site were commenced resulting in
the construction of the new Radio Theatre building which opened on 9
April 1937, an Art Deco style building addressing the corner of Marine
Terrace and Fitzgerald Street. Prior to this the final screening at the old
Radio Theatre on Fitzgerald Street was a special four-hour entertainment,
after which the projection equipment was moved to the new building.
The old Radio Theatre buidling was stripped internally and used as a motor
vehicle workshop for Radio Motors, which operated the new service
station and motor vehicle showroom on the ground floor of the new Radio
Theatre building. In 1951, Geraldton Town Lot 1 was subdivided, creating
Lot 19 (later Lot 21), the site of the Radio Motors workshop formerly the old
Radio Theatre, and Lot 20 being the site of the new Radio Theatre building.
While the new Lot 20 was purchased by Goldfields Pictures, the
Wheat family retained Radio Motors, which they continued to operate on
Lot 19 and on rented portions of Lot 20 (the service station and showroom
on the ground floor of the new Radio Theatre). Following the death of
Alfred Wheat in 1956, his son Alwyn continued to run Radio Motors. The
Wheat family's association with the site ended in 1976, when Alwyn Wheat
moved his business operations to another venue in Geraldton. Since that
time the old Radio Theatre building, with its new addition to the street
frontage, has been used as a food hall (the first in Geraldton), a camping
and sports business, for ladies' darts and as an archery centre.
Ref ID No | Ref Name | Ref Source | Ref Date |
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Geraldton Regional Library, Local Studies Department. | |||
DOLA Survey Diagram 16094, approved by Town Planning Board | 13/2/1951. | ||
"Last screening for Geraldton Radio Theatre?", | "Geraldton Guardian" | 28/10/1971 | |
"Brief History of Central Geraldton in 1925", | Bertelson, Ron, | ||
Radio Theatre Building Fmr State Register documentation. | |||
p.28 | "Geraldton Guardian" | 1/12/1999 | |
"Geraldton: 150 years, 150 Lives", | Geraldton Regional Library, | 2001, p.178 | |
"That radio corner era has come to an end", | "Geraldton Guardian" | 26/8/1976 | |
"Geraldton Historical Society Review" | No. 71, 1988. | ||
"Radio Pictures inauguration at King's Theatre", | "Geraldton Guardian and Express" | 7/6/1927 | |
"Radio Theatre, the closing night", | "Geraldton Guardian and Express" | 1/4/1937 | |
pp.8-10. | Wheat. Alwyn, G., (son of Alfred Wheat), article on history of theatres and cinemas in Geraldton, | "Geraldton Historical Society Quarterly Review", | No. 70, 1987, |
Individual Building or Group
Epoch | General | Specific |
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Original Use | SOCIAL\RECREATIONAL | Theatre or Cinema |
Type | General | Specific |
---|---|---|
Roof | METAL | Corrugated Iron |
Wall | BRICK | Common Brick |
General | Specific |
---|---|
SOCIAL & CIVIC ACTIVITIES | Sport, recreation & entertainment |
This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.