Cinema licence application lodged for former Odeon

The cinema on Magdalen Street first opened its doors in 1924
- Published
Plans to bring back a former city centre cinema have been submitted to a local authority.
The former Odeon on Magdalen Street in Oxford closed in 2023 - just seven months before its 100th anniversary.
A new licensing application to restore the cinema to its former glory has been submitted to Oxford City Council by a company called Roxy Movies (The Oxford Cinema) Limited.
Alejandro Miranda, a Spaniard who is based in Burnham-on-Crouch in Essex, is listed by Companies House as the firm's director and lodged the application.
The company was incorporated last month.
According to the application, the prospective cinema - which is currently abandoned - would play films from 08:30 to 23:30, seven days a week.
The venue could host more than 700 people across its two screens, the application states.
A cafe in the foyer also features in the plans.
The Grade II listed building was built by renowned theatre constructors Frank Matcham & Company.
Its first showing was the silent film The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse on 1 January 1924.
The new application follows the closure of another Odeon cinema in George Street earlier this year.
Oxford currently has four cinemas dotted around the city; the Curzon in the Westgate shopping centre, the Phoenix in Jericho, Ultimate Picture Palace on Cowley Road and Vue in Grenoble Road.
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