City’s Cauvery Theatre downs its curtains
Celebrating its golden jubilee this year, Cauvery Theatre opened its doors on 11 January, 1974, with the Kannada classic ‘Bangarada Panjara’ starring Rajkumar
Salar News
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Spread over 1.5 acres with ample parking, the theatre had a circular design and a mini-balcony. PHOTO: MOHAMMED ASAD
Bengaluru, 6 May
After five decades of entertaining
audiences, Bengaluru's iconic Cauvery Theatre has screened its final feature.
The single-screen cinema, located on Sankey Road, wasn't just known for the
films it screened; it boasted a large screen, ample parking and affordable
ticket prices.
Celebrating its golden jubilee this
year, Cauvery Theatre opened its doors on 11 January, 1974, with the
Kannada classic ‘Bangarada Panjara’ starring Rajkumar. Prakash Narasimhaiah,
the owner of the theatre, told Salar News “It has been a long ride from the day
I opened this theatre 50 years back. I am a movie lover from the start and that
is what drove me to construct this place.”
Suresh Kumar, the owner of a tea
stall near the theatre, told Salar News “Me and my father have been here for
almost 25 years. When we heard that this theatre was being shut down, we felt
as if we were losing something personal. No matter what is being constructed
here, it would not be the same as the theatre.”
Spread over 1.5 acres with ample
parking, the theatre had a circular design and a mini-balcony. With a width of
70 feet and a height of 30 feet, the screen at Cauvery Theatre was one of the
biggest in Karnataka at one point. Renovations in 1995 reduced seating capacity
from 1,384 to 1,110.
The theatre will be demolished to
make way for a software complex. "The rise of streaming services has dealt
a blow to single-screen theatres," Narasimhaiah said.
"People's viewing habits have
changed, and they prefer to wait for movies to be released online, especially
since the pandemic. My father, late SN Moorthy was the architect of the
theatre'' said Spoorthy Moorthy, son of the theatre’s architect.
The closure
of Cauvery Theatre has left a void in the community. Ramesh K, a
resident of Malleshwaram, said: “Cauvery was a Bengaluru institution. It's a
shame to see it go, but times change. I'll miss the big screen experience.”
Similarly, Anu, a college student living near Koramangala, said,d “I wish they
could have found a way to preserve it.”
Cauvery Theatre has one of the best
movie experiences in the City. “Unlike in multiplexes, in Cauvery Theatre movie
watchers are animated and for every goosebump moment, they will go crazy and
berserk. This we will not get in any multiplex theatre,” said Juhaina Maraiam,
a journalist in the City.
The iconic cinema shut its doors on
20 April, 2024, with the final films being the Hindi movies ‘Bade
Miyan Chote Miyan’ and ‘Maidaan’.
Other than Cauvery Theatre, Kapali
(2017), Pallavi (2012), Tribhuvan (2016), Sagar (2013) and Everest (2023) are
some of the other single-screen theatres that were shut down in the City in
recent times. —Salar News
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