Cecil Massey

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Cecil A. Massey
Nationality British
Buildings New Wimbledon Theatre (1919)
Phoenix Theatre (1930)
Granada, Tooting (1931)

Cecil Aubrey Massey was an English theatre and cinema architect. Massey was a pupil of Bertie Crewe.

His major works include the New Wimbledon Theatre, released in 1919 together with architect Roy Young, it is a Grade II listed Edwardian situated on The Broadway, Wimbledon, London, in the London Borough of Merton; the Grade II listed Phoenix Theatre, designed together with Giles Gilbert Scott and Bertie Crewe, and released in 1930, it is a West End theatre in the London Borough of Camden, located on Charing Cross Road, at the corner with Flitcroft Street, and with the entrance is in Phoenix Street; the Art Deco style with four Corinthian style pillars over the entrance, located in Tooting, an area in the borough of Wandsworth, London, released in 1931, it was one of the great luxurious cinemas built in the 1930s; and the now demolished Rex Cinema, Station Approach, which was released in 1936 in the town of Hayes in the London Borough of Hillingdon, West London.[1]

References

  1. Hayes and Coney Hall walk notes, Twentieth Century Society, 2007

External links


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