Enfield Savoy Cinema

By Cathy Jones (2010, updated 2023)

The former Enfield Savoy Cinema is located on Liverpool Road, Enfield.  It was located in the Central Ward of the former Enfield Council which has been part of Burwood Council since 1 January 1949.

The Enfield Savoy was the third theatre in the Enfield area.  The original Enfield Theatre was a galvanised iron walled, open air place situated on Liverpool Road on the site of the current St Joseph’s Catholic Church.  This theatre opened in 1912 and closed in 1916.

The second Enfield Theatre opened at 325 Liverpool Road and was known as the Broadway Picture Palace.  The building was a simple brick structure with a raised section at the rear.  The date of opening is unclear but this closed c.1927 when the Enfield Savoy opened.  This building was later occupied by the British Carpet Company, which has since been demolished.

The third Enfield theatre was opened on 16 November 1927 as the Enfield Cinema. The 1928 Enfield Council valuation book indicates that the cost of the building was £17,000. The theatre had a seating capacity for 1,878.  It was designed by the architectural firm Kaberry & Chard.

By 1932, Western Suburbs Cinemas Ltd had gained control of the theatre.  Western Suburbs Cinemas (WSC) was a company which operated in Sydney’s western suburbs and was managed by (A J) Alf Bezant (d.1950).   The Enfield Savoy, Strathfield Melba and Homebush Theatre were  all WSC cinemas.

In 1938, the cinema was substantially redesigned and the façade and interior rebuilt in Art Deco style under guidance of architect G N Kentworthy (who also designed Cremorne Orpheum). Added to the alterations was the installation of a Christie organ, which was fitted with glass ornamentation and concealed lighting.

The cinema was renamed the Savoy and reopened by the Mayor of Enfield in July 1938. Western Suburbs Cinemas Ltd came under control of Hoyts in 1944.  Enfield Council minutes note that the theatre was used for ANZAC Day and Armistice Day services from 1940 onwards in association with the Enfield-Croydon Park Sub-Branch.

By the late 1950’s, audiences had declined and the theatre had restricted screenings. The last movie shown at the Savoy was ‘Some Like It Hot’ in 1960.

Since 1960, the cinema has been used as a carpet and furniture warehouse and plumbing .

References

Cork, K, 1985, A history of the cinemas of Burwood Municipality

Department of NSW Valuer-General, Valuation List dated 1 October 1928, Assessment 991.

Roe, Kevin, Hoyts Enfield Savoy, viewed at http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/35280

4 comments

  1. My father-in-law, Len Hyde, was an apprenticed projectionist at tne Savoy Enfield, starting in 1936 at the age of 14, along with his close friend Joe Croll. One shot of the projection room shows them as the two younger men to the left side.

    He says he started work at 11 am and didn’t get home till he had rewound all the film used that day, so with shows often ending around 10.45, he would be home around 11.30.

    They also did live shows and he often had to use the spotlight to highlight the stars.

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  2. Great comment Michael. Grew up in Strathfield; went to the Melba there but mostly to the Palatial in Burwood; never knew the Astor, mores the pity, but spent my youth sloogging up and down Enfield Baths with Jack Stutsell yelling at me!

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  3. Any photos of the little miss enfield competition about 1952/53 held at savoy enfield love to see as i was on stage at the judging.

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  4. As a six year old child in 1955, my brother and I went to the Savoy Cinema Saturday afternoon children’s matinee every week for about three years. We lived at 10 Coronation Parade and my father was the dentist at those premises at the time.

    I remember that one week they showed us a totally unsuitable and pretty scary science fiction film called “The Man From Planet X” (1951). It scared the pants off us at the time, even though it would seem very mild these days.

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