History and Heritage
The Tivoli opened in a converted workshop
on the right of this image in 1912.
A mock up of the Tivoli was created by Malcolm Appleby, retired projectionist, using a photograph taken in 1975 by Keith Morris.
The Tivoli
Mansfield Woodhouse Picture House on Station Street opened as a cinema on August Bank Holiday 1912. It has also been referred to as a theatre.
George Edward Hogg, of Blake Street, was the proprietor. He had begun his working life as a wheelwright and then worked in the pits before taking over a large workshop in Station Street, borrowing £60 from friends to convert it into a cinema. It had gas lighting, seats for 180 people and four exits. George said that the business was satisfactory until the war.
In 1916 he began working in munitions and left his wife and family in charge of the cinema. By 1920 the local authorities had condemned the premises as unsuitable for a cinema and so he set about making structural alterations.
The coal strikes of 1921 and 1926 caused business to fall away but George still went ahead and improved the exits in 1927. By 1928 George’s son Wilfred was recorded as being the proprietor.
The Picture House re-opened as the Tivoli Cinema on 20 February 1933 after refurbishment. The venue had new electric lights installed and was equipped to show films with sound. In total, there were 300 seats with charges of 6d, 8d, 9d and 1/-.
The owners were listed as William Pitchford and Partners, of Langwith, and the proprietor, Wilford Baden Whitehead, of Langwith. The telephone number was Mansfield 93.
The building received further refurbishment in 1946/1947. The architect was Mr J W Shooter. In its later years The Tivoli was operated by the owners of the Regal Cinema, Langwith and the Ritz Cinema, Bull Farm, Mansfield.
In the 1950s Ann Evans had a dress shop in the cinema, where people would recall seeing some of the dresses displayed in the window there. Later, Angus Brown operated a watch repair business from the Tivoli in 1955.
The Tivoli eventually closed on 3 May 1958 due to dwindling attendances.
Mansfield Woodhouse Urban District Council revealed in June 1958 that they had considered purchasing the Tivoli Cinema for use as a civic hall, but decided that the cost was prohibitive.
In 1959 the Tivoli Cinema was converted into a warehouse for storage of footwear, soccer and rugby boots for Ward Brothers Ltd, Mansfield.
The Telephone Directories for 1962 and 1964 show that the Tivoli Salon, Ladies Hairdressers, also occupied part of the building.
The building was later used by Mudford & Co tent contractors and rope and twine dealers in the 1970s. Eason Print took the building over some time after Mudfords vacated it. More recently Key Learning Centres was based there as an educational facility. By 2016 ‘Need2Insure’, and Second Time Around a business which upcycled furniture for good causes were operating from the venue.
Malcolm Appleby, a retired projectionist, used Keith Morris’s 1975 photo and an aerial shot from the 1950s to create a mock-up of how the Tivoli entrance would have looked in its heyday. The canopy stood proud from the building, above the ground floor level and just fringed both side elevations as well and supported the name sign TIVOLI (I wonder if the sign was illuminated for the evening performances?).
Posters were displayed in the recesses and lights topped each of the stone pillars to the left of the cinema. Malcolm explained that there was a flat roofed area at the rear of the building which could only be accessed from the outside which was the projectionist’s room, where highly flammable nitrate film was stored. It was replaced by safety film circa 1950. The projectionists circa 1955/56 were Ron Ward, Lou Burden, John Sewell and Ron Winfield. All four projectionists would work at the same time because of the number of reel changes during the length of a film. Other projectionists through the decades have included Bill Jennings and a Mr Smedley.
Malcolm is also drawing an internal view of the cinema which will be added to this article. He recalls stage curtains that did not meet in the middle and standard lamps and settees sitting along the right hand corridor. An entrance half way up the steps, at the left hand side of the building, regularly witnessed children queuing for the Saturday matinees. They paid just inside the door.
Ann Evans and Angus Brown both operated from
The Tivoli Cinema in the 1950s
Mudford and Co. Ltd photo taken in 1975 by Keith Morris.
EasonPrint operated from the venue in the 1980s and early 1990s
By 2016 the venue was used by Need2Insure and Second Time Around
SOURCES AND CREDITS:
KEITH MORRIS’ PHOTOGRAPH OF MUDFORDS IN 1975 – MALCOLM APPLEBY FOR MAKING THE MOCK UP PICTURE – CHAD NEWSPAPERS – KELLY’S DIRECTORIES – LINNEY’S DIRECTORY – PEOPLE’S MEMORIES – NOTTINGHAM EVENING POST 2 JUNE 1927 – LONDON GAZETTE 15 APRIL 1927 – CENSUS AND MARRIAGE AND DEATH RECORDS ON ANCESTRY –
WOOD’S ALMANAC 1959 – CHAD REPORT 5 FEBRUARY 1959