1911–1940s In 1911,
The Christian was released. This was the first film produced by
West's Pictures, which later became part of Greater Union. From 1911 to 1913, a series of mergers resulted in the formation of
The Combine, a powerful alliance between exhibitor Union Theatres and the production and distribution company
Australasian Films. The Combine imported many of its films and was blamed by independent competitors for a drop in the local production of films. In 1928, the company has sold off Australasian Films to John C. Jones, which later on absorbed into
Columbia Pictures in 1935. In 1930, it reentered the theatrical market as the Union Theaters Feature Exchange by distributing features by
British International Pictures. Two years later, the company was renamed to British Empire Films (BEF), which served as the distribution arm of Greater Union. They distributed films of
Cinesound Productions. In 1932, the box-office hit
On Our Selection was produced by
Cinesound Productions, a subsidiary which had been set up the previous year by Greater Union Theatres. In 1936, businessman
Norman Rydge was elected chairman and managing director of Greater Union Theatres after buying a controlling interest. The company returned to profitability within three years. In 1942, Cinesound co-produced
Kokoda Front Line!, the first Australian film to win an Academy Award. A full-length version of a wartime newsreel, it won an Oscar for best documentary. The company also entered its relationship with Buena Vista International for the company's B.E.F. unit to distribute its films. In 1982, the company's film distribution division was renamed to Greater Union Film Distributors after introducing a new logo. Also that year, Greater Union merged its distribution unit with Roadshow Distributors, a
Village Roadshow subsidiary to form a film distribution division consisting of two units, Roadshow Film Distributors, and Greater Union Distributors. The company as a whole merged into Roadshow five years later. In 2004, Amalgamated Holdings Ltd (AHL) suffered a share plunge after writing off more than $70 million on its German cinemas. In 2005, Greater Union dropped its ban against cinemagoers bringing their own snacks and drinks after an investigation by the New South Wales Commissioner for Fair Trading. The same year, the Rydge family expanded its compound on
Point Piper by buying a sixth adjoining property. In 2009, Meredith Hellicar resigned from the company board after being criticised in a judgement by the New South Wales Supreme Court for her part in approving, while chairwoman of
James Hardie, a press release which falsely claimed that a trust for asbestosis victims had been fully funded.
2010s In 2010, Amalgamated bought a chain of cinemas in New Zealand and Fiji from Skycity Entertainment Group. The same year, it also acquired outdoor cinema operator
Moonlight Cinema for $1.75 million from Prime Media Group. In the financial year 2010–2011, Alan Rydge was among the wealthy Australians who donated to a secret fund set up for Sydney politician
Malcolm Turnbull. In 2011, Amalgamated sold its 49 per cent share of a cinema chain in the Middle East. The same year, its operations in Queensland suffered losses due to
severe flooding in 2010–2011. In 2013, the
Featherdale Wildlife Park in Sydney was sold to Moss Capital for an estimated A$15 million. Amalgamated had owned the park since 1996. In 2014, a three-year plan was unveiled to build or redevelop 14 new cinemas. In December 2015, Amalgamated Holdings Ltd changed its name to Event Hospitality and Entertainment Limited. Its
ticker code changed from AHD to EVT on the
Australian Securities Exchange. In November 2016, David Seargeant gave notice that he would step down as managing director and CEO in the second half of 2017. He was replaced by Jane Hastings. In 2017, the company sold its two-thirds interest in a Fiji cinema joint venture. ==See also==