bg Burgas

Former Modern Theater

- Ulitsa Milin Kamak 2 -
In 1913, Alexander Yordanov, the son of a wealthy manufacturer, entered into a partnership with the famous Hadzhipetrov Burgas family. Together they laid the foundations of a building that would shelter the new cinema, called the Modern Theater. The implementation of the project, which should accommodated approximately 500 people, was entrusted to the Italian architect . At the beginning of its existence, the Modern Theater screened a film once per day around two or three days a week, and two screenings on Sundays, but later on, two films per day were screened. After the coup of in 1944, the Modern Theater cinema was renamed the cinema, but since its reopening in 2020 the name Modern Theater is used again.
Cinematographer Diran Hebeyan in the Hristo Smirnenski cinema in the 1960s
On top of the building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Baroque and Neo-Renaissance, you can see an ornamental Lyre harp, which is a common feature for theaters. Underneath it you can see an ovel shaped , which is surrounded by foliage. The beautiful clover shaped , as well as the upper cornice of the contains and is supported by , which are decorated with acanthus foliage. The window frames all end with two that are surrounded by garlands. Underneath the windows, which are placed within the oriel window, you can admire an unusually shaped . Underneath the oriel window, you can see a lovely play of lines, which end up in a volute ones they reach the edge of the bottom. The building contains a lot of , some of which are hold up by a of a lions head.
The interior