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Curtains come down on Delhi's Regal cinema

Last Updated 30 March 2017, 18:41 IST
After entertaining film lovers for more than eight decades, the Regal Theatre is signing off in style with a housefull last show of Raj Kapoor’s 1964 movie Sangam on Thursday night. Built in the pre-independent era, Regal once hosted prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, his daughter Indira Gandhi and megastar Amitabh Bachchan.

The cinema hall, which opened in 1932, will stop operating as a single screen from Friday but the staff is treating the last day at work just like another day. “All shows are booked for today. But we have a few tickets left for the front-stall of the evening show of Raj Kapoor’s Mera Naam Joker. We don’t know if any of them will be left in a few hours from now,” said manager Roop Ghai.

He says it was a difficult moment for the Regal family but it was something that could not have been avoided. “Yes, it is the end of an era but this is how it is.” Ghai is not sure about the future of the 15-odd people employed at the theatre but hopes that the owners retain the old staff once Regal returns as a multiplex.

Ticket rates unchanged
Despite it being the last day, the manager says they kept the rates of the tickets unchanged.
“No, we have not hiked the prices. They are the same. The front-stall for Rs 80, the rear-stall for Rs 100, the balcony for Rs 120 and the box for Rs 200,” Ghai said.

Amar Singh Varma is busy settling accounts of the employees while attending to customers’ calls just as diligently as he has been doing for more than four decades of his service as an accountant.

When asked what films he has watched in the theatre, a misty-eyed Varma says, “I am a huge fan of Raj Kapoor and I don’t like watching films that are being made today. I don’t call them films. Tonight, I will watch Sangam, which is the last show.”

One would expect for a theatre as old and loved as the Regal to go out with some pomp and show. But the atmosphere is quiet and no special arrangements have been made for the final day.

“We are just going to have an intimate lunch with the staff and it will be our ‘bidaai’ (farewell),” Varma added. He, however, wishes that they had a grand celebration, but that is something the owner should have thought about.
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(Published 30 March 2017, 18:41 IST)

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