The Odeon cinema building was completed by
Sir Robert McAlpine in 1937 to the design of
Harry Weedon and Andrew Mather on the site of Nevill's
Victorian Turkish baths and the adjoining
Alhambra Theatre a large
music hall dating from the 1850s. The site cost £550,000, and the cinema took seven months to build, at a cost of £232,755, The opening night was Tuesday 2 November 1937; the film shown that night was
The Prisoner of Zenda. The British public debut of
CinemaScope (screen ratio 2.55:1) followed on 19 November 1953 with the quasi-biblical epic,
The Robe. (The first cinema to install
CinemaScope in the UK was the Odeon Tottenham Court Road on 9 June 1953, but it was not open to the public until later). The theatre's chief engineer, Nigel Wolland, was appointed
MBE for services to the film industry in 2007. The theatre's general manager, Chris Hilton, was appointed
MBE for services to the film industry in 2010. After Nigel Wolland's retirement in 2006, Mark Nice was appointed the cinema's chief engineer. Mark Nice was later promoted to the position of Odeon company engineer with Toni Purvis and Michael Mannix assuming the role of Operations Manager Digital. The first
Dolby Cinema system to be installed in the UK is at the Odeon in
Leicester Square. This introduced a combination of
Dolby Vision dual-laser projection system and a
Dolby Atmos sound system. ==Screens 2 – 5==