Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Grand old Labia turning 70

It’s been a singular cinema for 30 years

- BIANCA COLEMAN bianca.coleman@inl.co.za

ORIGINALLY an Italian Embassy ballroom, The Labia Theatre was opened by Princess Labia in May 1949 for the staging of live performanc­es. Since 1989 it’s been in the care of Ludi and Ann Kraus, who have lovingly nurtured it as the last surviving independen­t cinema in Cape Town.

There is no other place quite like it, with its old-fashioned carved wooden features in the lobby where the ticket booth takes centre stage, and red velvet seats in Screen 1; where there once was one, there are now four screens.

You get your popcorn in noisy brown paper bags, and you can have vodka in your Slush Puppie, and you can watch the best of art house cinema along with selected big blockbuste­rs –

Bohemian Rhapsody is still going strong with four screenings daily – now all shown using modern digital projection.

The transforma­tion from projectors and reels of film to digital was just part of the cinema’s upgrading – which is ongoing while retaining its yesteryear charm. A coat of stylish dark blue paint and the establishm­ent of the courtyard in front, where plants flourish, make The Labia not only a haven for film lovers, but a place to step away from the frenetic city on its doorstep, where you can simply have a cup of coffee or a glass of wine.

Celebratin­g its 30th anniversar­y this year, The Labia Theatre screens, as it always has, independen­t movies, foreign films, historical cinema and other alternativ­e and art circuit films. You can attend festivals from documentar­ies to horror, and new releases.

The programme is curated by Ludi, who has been in the business on and off for more than 50 years. He admits he rarely gets to see films before booking them, and even when they are on circuit only gets to snatch bits and pieces. It’s his decades of experience which guide him: “I go largely according to gut feel, and thanks to the internet, I can research reviews.”

Audiences also factor into Kraus’s decision-making and he’s pleased to see how younger people are attracted.

“It’s great to see them looking at older stuff. Here they get the old-fashioned values of the old bioscope days and the magic of cinema. Malls are so cold, impersonal, and expensive.”

All movies are R50 (with discounts available), and there are some fabulous meal and movie specials in conjunctio­n with nearby restaurant­s. For example, at Societi Bistro, you can get two pastas and two movie tickets for R110 (Mondays and Tuesdays). Making The Labia affordable is important to Kraus, who says he’d rather fill the cinemas with people paying less than have a sprinkling of patrons at a higher price.

“People are stressed about money and I think one must have sympathy for that and the economy,” he says.

Kraus grew up and went to school in Windhoek, living there until his military training in Pretoria.

“My dad, out of the blue, wanted to build a drive-in; had he only done that we would have been multimilli­onaires! But he was persuaded to build a cinema, so he did that in 1961,” he recalls.

“I remember the opening, and the challenges of someone not knowing anything about running a cinema. “Anyway, it survived and I was very involved.” In school holidays Kraus would manage the cinema, and later, while studying law at university – his other career – he would carry out admin like advertisin­g and booking films, and sending editorial to various newspapers in different languages.

“I got into importing foreign language films. I became a travelling showman, showing them at The Baxter or (now) Artscape. I felt I needed a home for the films. In 1987 I heard The Labia was for sale, and two years later I managed to get hold of it.”

It’s at 68 Orange Street, Gardens, 021 424 5927. Website: www.thelabia. co.za

 ?? Bianca Coleman ?? THE Labia was opened in 1949.|
Bianca Coleman THE Labia was opened in 1949.|
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