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Chain logos. Ward Anderson was a cinema chain in Ireland until 2013. [1] It was the largest chain in Ireland and operated cinemas throughout Ireland and Northern Ireland.It was not a single company but was a group of companies such as Provincial Cinemas Ltd., the Dublin Cinema Group, the Green Group, and so on, owned by its founders, half brothers Leo Ward (born 1919) and Kevin Anderson (born ...
The Ward family were allocated 12 cinemas in their Irish Multiplex Cinemas group, including the Savoy and Screen cinemas in Dublin. [ 16 ] Paul Anderson is the son of Kevin Anderson who is one of the co-founders of Ward Anderson .
Irish Multiplex Cinemas (or the IMC Cinema Group) is a cinema chain in Ireland. It operates cinemas throughout Ireland and Northern Ireland. It was part of the Ward Anderson company until 2013, when it was split between IMC and Omniplex Cinema Group. [1] The typical cinema owned by IMC has between five and ten screens.
Pages in category "Former cinema chains in the Republic of Ireland" ... Ward Anderson This page was last edited on 4 November 2024, at 17:30 (UTC). ...
Ireland has a relatively high rate of cinema attendance, and had the highest rate in Europe in 2017. [17] There are several cinema chains operating in Ireland. Among them are ODEON Cinemas (formerly UCI/Storm Cinemas), Omniplex, IMC Cinemas (Both Omniplex and IMC are owned by the Ward Anderson group), Cineworld, Vue and Movies@Cinemas.
Rank/Odeon previously ran cinemas in Ireland (including the flagship, the Savoy Cinema in O'Connell Street) until 1982, when they were purchased by Ward Anderson. In April 2008, Entertainment Enterprises announced that it purchased the Irish assets of Storm Cinemas, and as with the existing UCI chain, would be contracting the running of the ...
Irish Multiplex Cinemas, a chain of cinemas in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland owned by Ward Anderson; Islamabad Metropolitan Corporation, the municipal authority governing Islamabad; Irish Medical Council, the Irish regulatory body for the medical professions; Indy's Music Channel, television station in Indianapolis, Indiana
However, in 1994 it was given a new lease of life when it reopened under the ownership of Ward Anderson. Notable screenings upon reopening included Titanic, however, attendances were poor, most notably when a reissue of the 1935 film The Informer was screened to as few as two people per show. On 27 September 1999, after 45 years, the cinema closed.