Prior to its expansion, the Hyde Park Picture House was one of only two surviving original single-screen cinemas in Leeds, along with the
Cottage Road. This was down from peak numbers of between 60 and 70 in the 1930s. The Picture House retains many original features, including an external
ticket booth, decorated
barrel-vaulted ceiling and balcony adorned with a frieze of plaster festoons, brackets and shields. It is also the only cinema in the world to retain "modesty"
gas lights, designed to avoid complete darkness in the auditorium. The original screen, painted directly on the wall and surrounded by golden
cherubs, remains intact behind its modern successor. The cinema has seen several changes since it opened in 1914, notably a reduction in the capacity of the auditorium from 587 on opening to 275, following the installation of "comfier" seating, with the present seats having been salvaged from the Lounge cinema in Headingley after its closure in 2005. The
Cinemeccanica Victoria 8
projectors also came from the Lounge, while the clock to the right of the screen was taken from the former Gaumont cinema, which occupied the building now used by the
O2 Academy Leeds. The fireplace, which originally sat in the hallway, has been replaced by a kiosk. In 2016 the cinema was awarded an initial
National Lottery grant of
£122,000 to explore conservation work and an expansion of the venue. It was announced that the money would be used to restore the building, including the
terrazzo foyer floor and gas lights; build a cafe/bar so that customers no longer have to queue outside; install disabled toilets and improve
accessibility; add a second screen in the basement; and make the cinema's archives available to the public alongside educational workshops, tours and archival screenings.
Planning permission for the project was approved in June 2018, and a further National Lottery grant of
£2.3 million was confirmed in January 2019. The work, dubbed the Picture House Project, is costed at
£3.6 million and, with additional funding from the
Garfield Weston Foundation and Leeds City Council, was scheduled to begin at the end of February 2020. The
COVID-19 pandemic caused delays to the Picture House Project but, with a £285,600 Capital Kickstart Fund award from the National Lottery Heritage Fund and the UK government's
Culture Recovery Fund, an announcement was made in February 2021 that work would commence in April of the same year. Over two years later, building work was completed, and the cinema reopened on 30th June 2023. The Picture House plays an eclectic programme of films, from
arthouse and independent movies to big new releases. Along with regular
double bills and annual Christmas showings of ''
It's a Wonderful Life'', the cinema also hosts "Bring Your Own Baby (BYOB)" events, for children and their parents or carers, featuring lower volumes,
subtitles and raised light levels. This mixed bill attracts a varied audience of local residents, graduates and students from the city's universities, and "not just
Guardian readers". Actors, such as
Paddy Considine,
Masanobu Ando and
Adam Buxton, have been interviewed at the cinema and
film critic Mark Kermode has hosted several question and answer sessions. Kermode is a "champion" of the Picture House, describing it in his book
The Good, the Bad and the Multiplex, as "a beauty; a proper old-fashioned picture palace" with a clientele that are "enthusiastic, attentive and apparently more interested in films than in their
mobile phones". File:Hyde Park Picture House - screen and surrounds.jpg|Main screen and surround File:Hyde Park Picture House - main screen, front to rear.jpg|View from the front to the rear File:Hyde Park Picture House - balcony.jpg|The balcony File:Hyde Park PH window 10 Sep 2017.jpg|Stained glass window by the staircase File:Hyde Park Picture House - screen 2.jpg|The second screen == Other uses ==