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The Electric Cinema is a cinema in Notting Hill, London. One of the oldest working film theatres in Britain, it became Britain's first black -owned cinema in 1993, and remained so until it was sold in 2000.
The Electric Cinema, Notting Hill, a cinema in Notting Hill, London; Electric Cinema, York, a former cinema in York, in England This page was last edited on 24 ...
Andrew was for some years manager and programmer at London's Electric Cinema in Notting Hill, and later became the long-serving editor and chief critic of the film section of Time Out magazine. In 1999, he was appointed Programmer of London's National Film Theatre (later renamed BFI Southbank); in 2016 he became consultant Programmer-at-large ...
“This door, until the time of cataloguing, was located at 280 Westbourne Park Road, Notting Hill, London and represented William Thacker's [Hugh Grant] front door in the 1999 Working Title ...
Owusu was part of a consortium, called Black Triangle, that bought the Electric Cinema, Notting Hill, in London's Portobello Road, and he had responsibility for running the cinema, with partners in the consortium representing other branches of the black media: Val McCalla from Voice Communications Group and Neil Kenlock from Choice FM radio. [26]
When it was released in theaters over Memorial Day weekend in 1999, "Notting Hill" grossed around $21.8 million over three days, and $27.7 million over the long weekend, making it the biggest ...
Hugh Grant has some harsh words for his character in Notting Hill.. The actor, 64, took a trip down memory lane with Vanity Fair in a video interview, published on Nov. 14, that saw him watching ...
24 February: The Electric Cinema, Notting Hill opens. 6 May: King Edward VII dies at Buckingham Palace. [44] No later monarch will die in London for at least a century. 14 May–29 October: The Japan–British Exhibition at White City. 28 June: The Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral is consecrated. [10] 18 October