in
Kilburn, London, opened in 1937 Gaumont-British acquired General Theatre Corporation in 1928 and acquired control of Provincial Cinematograph Theatres in 1929. Gaumont-British were the first large British cinema chain controlling 180 cinemas by 1928 and up to 300 the following year.
Fox Film Corporation indirectly acquired shares in the company to help with the expansion. Gaumont-British developed or acquired large "super-cinemas". The
New Victoria (later Gaumont and finally Odeon) in
Bradford opened in 1930, the Gaumont in
Manchester opened in 1935, and the
Gaumont State Cinema in
Kilburn, London, opened in 1937. They also took over many smaller cinemas across the country, eventually owning 343 properties. One such property was the
Holderness Hall in Hull, built by the pioneering
William Morton in 1912 and managed by him until 1930, when he could no longer compete. Many of the Gaumont cinemas had a
theatre organ for entertainment before the show, in the intervals, or after the show. The name "Gaumont" was adopted to describe the style of the flat-top organ console case (originally for the Pavilion Theatre,
Shepherd's Bush), for some
Compton organs built from October 1931 to 1934. was a Gaumont until 1986 Cinema exhibition in the UK was characterised by alignments between exhibitors and distributors. After the Odeon and Gaumont takeovers, Rank had access to the product of 20th Century-Fox,
Paramount,
Walt Disney,
Columbia,
Universal,
United Artists,
Samuel Goldwyn,
RKO,
Alexander Korda's
London Films,
Republic Pictures,
British Lion Films, and its own film productions. Rivals
ABC had only
Warner Bros.,
MGM,
Monogram Pictures, and the productions of its parent company
Associated British Picture Corporation (ABPC). Both cinema circuits also took films from smaller distributors. With ample supply of product, Rank maintained the separate Odeon and Gaumont release pattern for many years. Some Odeon cinemas were renamed Gaumont when transferred to Gaumont release. In 1948, Rank merged the management and booking operations of Odeon and Gaumont. As attendances declined during the 1950s, many cinemas on all circuits were closed and eventually the booking power of the Gaumont circuit declined. In January 1959, Rank restructured its exhibition operation and combined the best Gaumonts and the best Odeons in a new Rank release, while the rest were given a new "National" release. In 1961, Paramount objected to Rank consigning its Dean Martin comedy ''
All in a Night's Work'' to the national circuit and henceforth switched its allegiance to the ABC circuit. With the continuing decline in attendance and cinema numbers, the National release died on its feet and henceforth there were two release patterns, Rank and ABC. There was no reason to perpetuate the Gaumont name, and in towns that lost their Odeon, the Gaumont was usually renamed Odeon within a couple of years of the latter's closure. Even so, the Gaumont name continued to linger until, in January 1987, the last Gaumont, in Doncaster, was renamed Odeon. ==Other operations==