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Tour offers residents a final show at Hong Kong’s State Theatre before heritage revamp

  • Immersive 30-minute tour will feature more than 100 artefacts including film handbills from the 1950s, old tickets for midnight screenings and staff uniforms
  • The iconic North Point venue will be restored into a landmark for culture and arts by 2026, as part of a multibillion-dollar redevelopment project

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The tour will run during April. Photo: Felix Wong

Hongkongers will get a chance this month to look back at the glory days of the iconic State Theatre complex in North Point before it is revitalised under a multibillion-dollar redevelopment plan.

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An immersive tour of the 1,400-seat venue, noted for a unique parabolic concrete truss on its roof, will feature more than 100 artefacts including film handbills from the 1950s, old tickets for midnight screenings, staff uniforms and the sales brochure of the complex, which includes residential and commercial units.

The 68-year-old theatre closed in 1997 after a fire broke out two years earlier and was eventually turned into a snooker hall. It was classified as a grade one historical building in 2017 and will be restored into a landmark for culture and arts by 2026, as part of a redevelopment project by New World Development, which acquired the full site in October 2020.

Posters of old showings will be on view. Photo: Felix Wong
Posters of old showings will be on view. Photo: Felix Wong

“I hope the public will experience the glorious past of the State Theatre firsthand through this immersive event,” said Adrian Cheng Chi-kong, chief executive officer and executive vice-chairman of New World Development. “Its history may have faded through time, but its story is far from over.”

The 30-minute tour will be hosted by Culture for Tomorrow, a non-profit organisation founded by Cheng. Tours will run daily from 10am to 8pm until the end of April.

The theatre ended up being using as a snooker hall.  Photo: Felix Wong
The theatre ended up being using as a snooker hall. Photo: Felix Wong

Because public gatherings are capped at four people under social-distancing rules, the tour is exclusively for members – but residents are welcome to join the non-profit group.

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