I once booked a Cinema Theatre Association Liverpool tour primarily on the strength of seeing On Golden Pond on the big screen at the Philharmonic Hall.
The Philharmonic Hall is a 1937-9 rebuild, replacing a predecessor of 1846-9 which had been burnt down in 1933.
It’s a very fine Art Deco auditorium, designed by Herbert J Rowse whose other distinguished Liverpool designs include India Buildings, Martin’s Bank and the ventilation shafts [see https://www.flickr.com/photos/liverpoolpictorial/7710001254/in/photostream] and other structures for the Mersey Tunnel.
The 1,700-seat auditorium has a continuous rake of stalls seats with horseshoe boxes and a balcony: the suspended ceiling has troughs containing indirect lighting fittings.
It’s the home of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Choir and Youth Orchestra, which together have an outstanding history of performance dating back to the foundation of the Liverpool Philharmonic Society in 1840: http://www.liverpoolphil.com.
The CTA was attracted to this temple of serious music to hear the three-manual Rushworth & Dreaper concert organ, which is fitted with tremulants, a feature commonly found in theatre-organ specifications.
Though lacking the drums, chimes and whistles of a conventional cinema-organ it was clearly intended for use in film presentations as well as for performances across the classical repertoire. Its console is mounted on a revolving lift, and can be played from below stage or in full view of the audience.
Even more unusual, and unmissable if you’re a serious cinema buff, is the seven-ton rising proscenium, now apparently the only example in working order anywhere in the world: http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/Liverpool/PhilharmonicHallLivepool.htm#screen.
This cinema screen, complete with footlights and curtains and fitted with integral sound speakers, rises from the stage-floor in three minutes, uniquely transforming the concert hall into a movie palace before the eyes of the audience.
That’s an experience you can only have at the Philharmonic Hall.
For details of Mike Higginbottom’s lectures on Liverpool architecture, please click here.
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