Everyman Media Group plc | |
Type: | Public Limited Company |
Industry: | Entertainment |
Genre: | Cinema, Films, Movies, Restaurant, Bar |
Area Served: | United Kingdom |
Key People: | Alex Scrimgeour (CEO) Adam Kaye (Executive Director)[1] Will Worsdell (FD) |
Services: | Box Office Cinema, Food and Drink |
Owner: | Everyman Media Group plc |
Foundation: | 1933 (Original Everyman theatre) |
Location: | London, England |
Locations: | 45 cinemas |
Everyman Media Group plc (known as Everyman Cinemas) is a cinema company based in London, England.[2]
The company was founded in 2000, when entrepreneur Daniel Broch bought the original Everyman Cinema in Hampstead, London, which dated to 1933, which before then was a theatre. Broch led the growth of the company with the acquisition in 2008 of Screen Cinemas to add more locations. This coincided with Broch selling a majority stake in the enlarged company, though he remains a shareholder.[3]
The group is extending its operating area and has opened cinemas in northern England. The first of these opened in Leeds in April 2013 as part of the Trinity Leeds development in the city centre[4] and a second opened within The Mailbox in Birmingham on 27 February 2015.[5] A further cinema opened in Harrogate in September 2016. In April 2015, the company reached an agreement to buy four cinemas from its larger rival Odeon for £7.1 million.[6]
In August 2013, The Guardian reported that the entire non-management staff of about 100 was employed on zero-hour contracts, earning just above the minimum wage, and without any guaranteed set hours each week.[7]
Everyman Cinemas offer a programme of films and special events, including the Metropolitan Opera from New York and the National Theatre (in selected cinemas), live Q&As, film festivals and seasons.[8] The venues each feature a licensed bar, food, digital projection and surround sound technology.[9]
Cinema | Screens | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
Altrincham | 4 | ||
Baker Street | 2 | ||
Bath | 5 | Former Tivoli Cinema until December 2023 | |
Barnet | 5 | Former Odeon until July 2015 | |
Belsize Park | 1 | ||
Birmingham – The Mailbox | 3 | ||
Bristol – Whiteladies Picture House | 4 | ||
Borough Yards | 2 | Located by Borough Market | |
Broadgate | 3 | ||
Bury St Edmunds | 3 | Opened February 2024[10] | |
3 | |||
Cardiff – Mermaid Quay | 5 | ||
Chelmsford | 6 | ||
Chelsea | 3 | ||
Cheltenham | 5 | Former Tivoli Cinema until December 2023 | |
Clitheroe | 4 | ||
Crystal Palace | 4 | ||
Edinburgh – St James Quarter | 5 | Opened 2 April 2022[11] | |
Egham | 4 | Opened September 2022 | |
Esher | 4 | ||
Gerrards Cross | 3 | ||
Glasgow | 3 | ||
Hampstead | 2 | Additional private screening room | |
Harrogate | 5 | ||
Horsham | 3 | ||
Islington – The Screen On The Green | 1 | ||
King's Cross | 4 | Screen 4 is located in a different building | |
Leeds – Trinity | 5 | ||
Lincoln | 4 | Opened August 2020[12] | |
Liverpool | 4 | ||
Maida Vale | 2 | ||
Manchester St. John's[13] | 3 | ||
Marlow | 2 | Opened September 2023 | |
Muswell Hill | 5 | Former Odeon until June 2015 | |
Newcastle upon Tyne | 4 | ||
Northallerton | 4 | Opened May 2023 | |
Oxted | 3 | ||
Plymouth | 3 | Opened June 2023, located in the Royal William Yard. | |
Reigate | 2 | ||
Salisbury | 4 | Opened June 2023 | |
Stratford-Upon-Avon | 4 | ||
Walton-on-Thames | 2 | ||
Winchester | 2 | ||
Wokingham | 3 | ||
4 | Originally the Odeon Cinema[14] |
In March 2020, Everyman Cinemas and all other cinemas in the UK closed indefinitely due to a national lockdown in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.[15] They started a phased reopening in July 2020.[16]