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The back of the building where the ADDRN offices will be located ©Avignon architect
Normandy refers to a bygone era, that of independent rooms and single screens.
This 1,000-seat space was opened in 1952 by a local precursor of the 7e art, Gaëtan Lagrange, who had also launched Paris in Pornichet, and made screenings at Jean-Bart in Saint-Marc-sur-Mer, at Caméo in Plaisance or in the hall of Union Méan Penhoët.
It was his daughter, Michèle, who ran France, rue Jean-Jaurès, launched in 1974.
In the 1970s, the naval city had a profusion of dark rooms. In addition to Normandy, France and Caméo, there was the Athénée (now Les Clubs) and the Trianon (replaced by the Korrigans) on avenue de la République, and finally the Celtic and its 600 seats on rue du Bois Savary.
The golden age of independent cinemas
All swept away by the wave of multiplexes and replaced by real estate projects and other stores (the Les Clubs complex was destroyed in 2003 in favor of the cultural store Forum, then Minifouine).
Last witness of this golden age, France, closed in 2001.
The City had bought the walls in 2014, first to install its art and essay cinema there, finally perpetuated in the Cadou room of the Maison des associations.
The municipality now has make it a community hall.
The Normandy has shut down in the early 80s, replaced by a furniture store, then a Chinese restaurant.
The building was once occupied by members of the Maison du Peuple.
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