The Hayden Orpheum Picture Palace, also known and originally as the Cremorne Orpheum Theatre, is a heritage-listed cinema located at 380 Military Road, in the northern Sydney suburb of Cremorne in the North Sydney Council local government area of New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by George Newton Kenworthy and built in 1935 by F. T. Eastment and Sons. It was added as a Heritage Item to the North Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2013 on 2 August 2013.[1]
The architect, George Newton Kenworthy, is known for his work in the Art Deco style, and most particularly his designs for theatres and cinemas including the Enfield Savoy Theatre (alterations 1938), the Majestic Theatre in Port Macquarie (1936), and the Regent Theatre in Mudgee (1935).[2][3]
^Roe, Ken. "Hoyts Savoy Theatre in Sydney, AU - Cinema Treasures". cinematreasures.org. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
^"New Information Regarding Regent Theatre Architect". Revive The Regent Theatre. Revive The Regent Theatre Mudgee Inc. 20 November 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
and 12 Related for: Hayden Orpheum Picture Palace information
February 2020. It premiered in Sydney on 20 February 2020 at the HaydenOrpheumPicturePalace and in Melbourne on 23 February 2020 at the Village Rivoli....
merging Film Booking Offices and Keith-Albee-Orpheum to form the new motion picture business Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO), with Sarnoff as chairman. Kennedy...
country. In May 1941, she appeared in a revue, Hollywood Revels, at the Orpheum Theatre. A critic from the Los Angeles Times who reviewed it said the "dancing...
a stage production of Gounod's operatic adaptation from the Creighton Orpheum Theater; directed by Leon Major; directed for television by Michael Farrell...
touring schedule, they found time to record their major-label debut, A Picture of Nectar, at White Crow Studios, in Burlington VT. Released the following...
Carltheater on 14 September 1886, and as Das Brautpaar vor Gericht at Danzer's Orpheum on 5 October 1901. Beginning in 1878 Richard D'Oyly Carte's opera companies...
Pantages, arguably America's first "movie palace" Other notable theaters past and present: Moore, Orpheum, Music Hall, Fifth Avenue Fraternal lodges...