Two big days in the history of Bexhill, 75 years apart
and live on Freeview channel 276
On Bank Holiday Monday in August 2010, the De La Warr Pavilion successfully recreated this scene to mark its 75th anniversary, with the help of a freerunning group, top photographer and crowds of visitors.
The Bexhill Observer produced a special edition on August 6, 2010, ahead of the big day to celebrate the milestone.
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Hide AdThe commissioning and building of the De La Warr Pavilion as a centre for culture and entertainment had boosted Bexhill’s profile in the golden age of seaside holidays, before the dark days of the Second World War. The building was then lovingly restored by the pavilion’s charitable trust in 2005.
The 75th birthday party in 2010 exploded in a riot of music, costume and dancing. Around 1,500 people packed along the balconies, jostled on the terrace and some lucky few sat comfortably in deckchairs as top London snapper Sheila Burnett was winched five metres into the air on a cherrypicker to take the shot which re-created the famous 1936 image.
Eastbourne-based freerunning team Urban Shadows wowed crowds with a series of backflips, vaults and controlled tumbles before forming the circular pattern, to match the Daily Mirror Eight in the original picture.
After a weekend in which Pavilion staff counted 10,000 visitors to the Tomoko Takahashi retrospective on show in the galleries, supporters of the building claimed the huge crowds were a reply to criticism it did not connect enough with the local community.
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Hide AdPhotographer Sheila, who marshalled crowds into position, was delighted with the results. She said it could not have gone better.
A choir and orchestra of around 120 people, led by choir leader John Langridge and musician Mike Hatchard, a strong round of applause before DJ Nikki Beatnik kept crowds dancing with a series of 75 songs, taken from each year since the building opened in 1935.
The original brief for the architects who entered the competition to design the De La Warr Pavilion was simple.
“No restrictions as to the style of architecture will be imposed, but buildings must be simple, light in appearance and attractive, suitable for a holiday resort. Heavy stonework is not desirable.”
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Hide AdThis fired the imaginations of several eminent architects of the time but there was one entry which stood out head and shoulders above the rest.
The partnership of Erich Mendelsohn, who had fled Nazi Germany and its persecution of Jews, and BBC interiors architect Serge Chermayeff embraced the ground-breaking Modernist movement – and they were swiftly commissioned to take on the project.
Commentary in a 1934 edition of The Architect’s Journal praised the pair for their ‘masterly handling’ of the designs. The original sketches showed they were true artists, as well as engineers.
Built using cantilevers of welded steel to support the walls, the inherent strength in the fabric of the building allowed Mendelsohn greater aesthetic rein. It was the first of a kind in Britain.
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