Cinema offers another chance to watch historic footage capturing key Newcastle moments

If you live in, work, know and love this region then don’t miss the opportunity to see the upcoming Newcastle on Film screening at Tyneside Cinema on Wednesday, August 31.

The Tyneside Cinema are giving audiences another chance to experience this archive footage of the city after they held several hugely popular screenings with the North-East Film Archive in December last year and January this year.

The building of the new Tyne Bridge to the bustling Quayside Market, shipbuilding success stories to Saturday nights out at the Majestic, Newcastle on Film will take you on an amazing journey through the decades, with over a century of films capturing the sights, sounds, faces, places, changing landscapes and industries, great events and everyday lives of people in Newcastle – all revealed through the work of the North East Film Archive , who will be presenting the screening and sharing this remarkable collection of film footage.

Graham Relton, North-East Film Archive Manager says: " These Newcastle on Film events are a great chance for the people of Newcastle to see themselves and their city reflected on film – how we went to work, how we spent our leisure time, how Newcastle has grown and changed over the last 100 years. The biggest challenge to curating the screenings has been what to leave out; there’s so much fantastic material, but we’ve selected a great range of content – a must for all Geordies and who knows, people might even spot a familiar face."

The journey begins in the earliest days of film making – in 1901 the Newcastle Fire Brigade turned out – but where are they? Shortly after that, thanks to the British Film Institute, there are scenes from a Suffragette Demonstration at Newcastle in 1909, quickly followed by rare early footage of The Hoppings on the Town Moor and highlights from the Newcastle Amateur Cinematographers Association collection.

But it’s not all about the early years of the last century. footage speeds through the 1950s when the Magpies returned with the FA Cup, and when, for families of the time, a classic day out was going to the beach at Whitley Bay. There are Newcastle nightclubs in the 1960s and 1970s, and by the 1980s people’s journeys into work were changing with the arrival of the Metro. Throw in some classic Tyne Tees news pieces featuring famous faces – and there is guaranteed to be something for everyone who loves Newcastle, including a lesson in how to Larn Yersel Geordie from South Shields’ Sheila Graber.

Jonny Tull, programme manager at Tyneside Cinema, says: “Tyneside Cinema are delighted to welcome the North-East Film Archive back to the Tyneside after our sell-out performances of Newcastle on Film last December; it’s a perfect opportunity to celebrate the film heritage of the city. What is so fantastic about screenings is the opportunity to connect local people to film collections made in or about the places they grew up, live and work in today.”

The showings on Wednesday, August 31 at 6.30pm has support from Film Hub North. Tickets are already selling fast and start from £5 to £9. Box Office: tynesidecinema.co.uk or 0191-227-5500. Tyneside Cinema is located on 10 Pilgrim Street, Newcastle.