View of the Tuschinski Theatre in Amsterdam.
Story

Abraham Tuschinski's cinema empire in Amsterdam and Rotterdam

How Polish Jewish migrant Tuschinski established several cinemas in the Netherlands

by
Adrian Murphy (opens in new window) (Europeana Foundation)

In the centre of Amsterdam, a beautiful cinema tells a story of Jewish life in the Netherlands in the early 20th century.

The Tuschinski Theatre - now known as Pathé Tuschinski - is now the only remaining venue of the entertainment empire of Abraham Icek Tuschinski who previously had venues in both Amsterdam and Rotterdam.

View of an Art Nouveau building with ornate stonework, tall windows, and intricate green and yellow detailing.

The Tuschinski was opened in 1921. Its interior and exterior are a mix of architectural styles - most often described as part Art Nouveau and part Art Deco.

Abraham Tuschinski was born near Łódź in Poland in 1886. Aged 18, he decided to emigrate to the United States with his wife Mariem Ehrlich. They followed a route taken by many at that time, travelling over land to the Netherlands, intending to cross the ocean on a ship departing from Rotterdam.

However, on their stop-over in Rotterdam, the couple decided to stay in the busy port-city. Abraham became a tailor, and later they both ran a boarding house mostly for Eastern European Jews, Hotel Polski.

Within a decade of settling in Rotterdam, Abraham had opened his first cinema in the city.

He converted a disused seaman's church to the Thalia cinema, which was open for 18 months until it was due to be demolished to make room for construction work.

painting showing a busy city street.

Tuschinski moved this cinema to another location in the city, and within 13 years, he had built four cinemas in Rotterdam - the Cinema Royal, Scala and Olympia joining the Thalia.

Rows of empty red velvet seats in a cinema, with some visible wear on the chairs.
A single vintage wooden cinema seat with beige upholstery.

In 1918, along with his brothers-in-law Tuschinski bought land in Amsterdam on which the Tuschinski Theatre was built. The cinema was palatial, with opulent interiors and stylish settings. Attending the cinema became a full evening's entertainment, and could be accompanied by a visit to the adjacent nightclub, La Gaité.

Two wooden chairs with black and gold striped upholstered seats on a white background.
Black and white sketch of a person wearing a lab coat operating a large machine.

Following his flagship cinema in Amsterdam, Tuschinski opened another luxury cinema - the Grand Theater - in Rotterdam and another cinema in Amsterdam, the Roxy Theatre, as well as another in the town of Schiedam.

Black and white photo of an empty cinema with rows of seats and a balcony, viewed from the stage.

World War II in the Netherlands destroyed Jewish life. During the war, the Amsterdam cinema's name was changed from that of its Jewish founder to the name 'Tivoli'.

During a fire, a firefighter climbs a ladder to a smoky upper window of a building with a sign saying Tivoli.

Abraham Tuschinski and almost his entire family were murdered in the Nazi concentration camps. The city of Rotterdam was destroyed by Nazi German bombardment - none of Tuschinski's cinemas in Rotterdam survived.

However, the Tuschinski cinema in Amsterdam remains with the name of its founder restored. The cinema now hosts blockbuster and arthouse films, as well as special events such as film festivals.