Projectionist's family loans cinema gems to exhibition

Rachel CandlinWest of England
News imageDuncan Steel The cinema façade lit up at night in pink and bluish colours - with the word Palladium across the top of the front entrance in a white triangle. The cinema has an art deco look to it Duncan Steel
The Steel family lived next door to the Palladium in Midsomer Norton, where they all worked

The family of a man who dedicated his working life to a local cinema has said it is honoured to loan his collection of artefacts to a new exhibition.

Ken Steel, who was first employed at the age of 14 at the Palladium in Midsomer Norton, Somerset, to rewind reels at the end of a film, worked his way up to become the owner and manager before the venue closed in 1993.

The Steel family has loaned historic items, including a rare double cinema seat and a section of the original silver screen.

Lights! Camera! Action! : 120 Years of Cinemas and Films in Bath explores the city's cinematic heritage and runs at the Museum of Bath at Work until 29 November.

News imageDuncan Steel A black and white newspaper cutting from 1993 with a photo of Ken and Shirley sitting in the auditorium of the cinemaDuncan Steel
Ken and Shirley Steel ran the Palladium until it closed in 1993

Ashley Steel, whose father died three years ago, said the Palladium was "very much a family cinema" and she and her four siblings grew up in a lean-to stone cottage next door.

"We all went to bed at night and we could hear the cinema through the wall," she said.

"Often, my father would open the doors at 6.45 for a 7 o'clock showing and then come home and say 'we've got no staff', and we would all have to stop what we were doing and go round and do whatever needed to be done, basically."

News imageMuseum of Bath at Work A close up of two green velvet-covered cinema seats with old wooden handles. There is a thin yellow rope hanging over the chair to prevent visitors sitting on it and pink tassels hanging from the corners of the seat back.Museum of Bath at Work
The Steel family have loaned a rare double cinema seat from the Palladium to the exhibition

Ashley says she helped by cleaning toilets, selling tickets, ushering and "throwing noisy people out".

She said another early childhood job was sitting on a high stool watching the two carbon rods of the film projector's light source - which "burnt like cigarettes" - and required constant adjustment.

Ashley's sister, Melinda Dowling, said the cinema was her father's "first love".

"When you go and open those front doors and let people in, it felt a magical moment.

"[My dad] was totally gutted when it closed," she said.

News imageDuncan Steel A wooden picture frame with a section of silver screen with a note explaining that it came from the Palladium and was presented to the Museum of Bath at Work in memory of Ken Steel who worked there from 1944 to 1993Duncan Steel
The exhibition includes a section of the silver screen from the Palladium

The exhibition has been curated by Ann Cullis, a volunteer and trustee at the museum.

She researched the history of cinema and film going back more than a century at the Bath Record Office and on family history websites.

Apart from surviving cinemas, such as the Little Theatre Cinema in Bath, which is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year, and the city's Everyman, Cullis discovered the history of venues that have long since closed.

Three former cinemas - the Electric, the Vaudeville and The Picturedrome - opened within two years of each other between April 1910 and December 1911.

Cullis said: "Once the talkies came in, cinema just really took off and it became the basic leisure activity.

"There were phenomenal queues, literally around the block," she said.

"It was a really lively industry with lots of people working and we found many names of individuals by using census returns," she said.

News imageMichael Denner An old photograph of Michael in black tie standing smiling to camera in a windowless room with a large two-reel projector behind him Michael Denner
Michael Denner worked for Dolby in the 1990s, providing technical support for film premieres, including at the Odeon Leicester Square

Michael Denner, from Calne, in Wiltshire, who has worked in the cinema industry since the 1980s, first worked as a projectionist in Shepton Mallet and Street and said there had been a lot of change since the advent of digital technology.

"The skills of the projectionist are being lost, especially since the loss of 35mm. The modern systems are now basically running automatically.

"There's not even a projectionist who actually programmes the automaton systems; it's more of a theatre manager," he said.

Denner has also been the co-ordinator of the Pilton Palais cinema at Glastonbury Festival since 1982, after being asked personally by the founder, Michael Eavis.

Speaking to the BBC in 2024 he said: "I brought my 16mm projectors and did it in a small marquee.

"When I started doing it back in 1982, I would have no idea that it would progress to this, with state of the art digital cinema - I never dreamed it would get to this," he said.

Cullis added that although the heyday of the cinema had past, the industry was adapting and people still "really value that experience of sharing something in the same space".

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