
Aberfeldy cinema shuts for 1 month to create 'bigger and better' events space
The cinema in Aberfeldy has shut for one month to create a 'bigger and better' events space.
The Birks Cinema in Dunkeld Road closed on Monday as construction work on an upgraded creative hub got under way.
The space is used for community events and has a cafe, which will also be closed during the renovations.
Work is expected to last a month, with the cafe reopening on June 30 and the cinema on July 4.
Cinema manager and film programmer Patty Havey, 41, told The Courier what filmgoers can expect from the project.
She said: 'We're planning to host a grand opening at the end of July.
'We'll invite as many people as possible to come and walk through our new space.
'We're going through an upgrade where our mezzanine level is going to turn into a first-floor creative learning space.
'It'll be a larger area with a lot of improvements.
'It'll have audio and visual elements and blackout blinds, so we can show movies and stream rugby up there.
'We'll be able to host lectures, talks, and do a lot more workshops.
'The cafe will also be closed while we fit in a few improvements at the same time.'
The funding for the construction project came from the SSE Griffin and Calliachar community fund.
The grant to improve the activities and programmes at the cinema was from Creative Scotland's multi-year funding.
Patty added: 'We didn't get quite as much as we requested, so we're definitely searching for ways to finish funding that project.'
'We want the cinema to offer more than just film, and do more for young people in Aberfeldy.'
She added the new space will allow for a 'bigger and better' Birks Wilderness Film Festival in March 2026.
In 2023, a fundraiser was launched to save The Birks Cinema from closure due to the 'perfect storm' of online streaming, cost-of-living crisis and good weather.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Courier
20 hours ago
- The Courier
John Swinney commits to removing final Rosyth-Dunkirk ferry obstacles
First Minister John Swinney gave a personal commitment to overcome any remaining obstacles to re-establish Scotland's ferry link between Rosyth and Europe. The SNP leader was asked in Holyrood on Thursday to make sure 'bureaucracy' does not prevent the route reopening as early as next year. Green Mid Scotland and Fife MSP Mark Ruskell raised the ongoing campaign in parliament, urging Mr Swinney to 'take the lead'. Responding, Mr Swinney said: 'I'm very happy be to involved, although I'm confident the transport secretary will be able to do all on this that I could contribute. 'The government would welcome this and we will do everything we can to remove any obstacles that are in the way.' Mr Ruskell welcomed the answer, telling The Courier he hoped bringing the necessary decision makers together could allow a resolution to be identified. We reported previously that the UK Government's new Brexit reset could provide a simple solution to the outstanding border control issues. Dunfermline and Dollar Labour MP Graeme Downie suggested the agreement would remove the requirement for a border control post – necessary due to Brexit – where animals, plants and food arriving from Europe would be inspected. It was estimated installing such a post could cost up to £3 million. But it is believed a simple change in the law could allow facilities in nearby Grangemouth to be used as a temporary border control post until the full effects of the deal become reality and no post is required. The previous ferry link between Rosyth and Zeebrugge ended seven years ago after a fire onboard a vessel. Businessman Derek Sloan, of Ptarmigan Shipping, is the driving force behind the recent proposals to revive the route – known as Project Brave. He secured an agreement for the route between Fife and Dunkirk, but uncertainty over the remaining obstacles, and funding for the new border control post, meant the plan was put on ice. Mr Sloan welcomed the commitment from the first minister, saying: 'It's good that they've finally made a decision to overcome these barriers. 'It's common sense that if we need to use a border control post while the legislation is changed, why would we spend £4 million on a new facility that will be closed down?' It is understood operator DFDS is looking to restart the route as early as next year if the remaining challenges can be solved.


The Courier
20 hours ago
- The Courier
Stirling school music tuition facing £200k 'back door' cuts despite council promise
Stirling's school instrumental tuition service budget could be slashed by £200,000, despite a recent council pledge to protect its funding until 2027. Music service staff were told that 'efficiency savings' must be made this financial year at an urgent meeting on Tuesday evening (June 3). Some employees on temporary contracts were also informed that their jobs are on the line. The decision from council education officers to make efficiency savings comes just two months after councillors passed a unanimous motion to safeguard funding for several public services, including music tuition, until May 2027 in a rare show of cross-party unity. Music service staff argue that going down the efficiency savings route is a 'back door' move that avoids scrutiny from elected council members. Late last year, council officers proposed saving money by cutting £250,000 from the music tuition service budget for 2025-26. At the time, staff said the move would effectively end the 60-year-old service. The suggestion proved unpopular with members of the public, as well as many councillors. Teachers, pupils and their parents successfully campaigned against the proposal, launching a petition and staging a 'musical protest' outside council headquarters. Now, music service employees say they feel they are being 'punished' for speaking out. One told The Courier: 'Staff were shocked to be told that education officers require £200,000 of efficiency savings from the music service in this financial year. 'It is only two months since councillors voted unanimously to protect instrumental and vocal teaching in Stirling's schools until 2027. 'It appears that these savings are being brought forward behind the backs of councillors who have no knowledge that their own officers are behaving in this manner.' The Courier understands that one member of Stirling's music service staff currently on a temporary contract has been called to a meeting next week where they will be formally given four weeks' notice. Another temporary employee has been advised that their contract may not be renewed later this year. A staff member said: 'The loss of two staff members would have a devastating effect on the music service, as the remaining instrumental teachers are all part-time and their timetables are at capacity. 'Children receiving instrumental lessons at Stirling, Balfron and McLaren High Schools would be abandoned, as there would be nobody to teach them.' Alexander Stewart, Conservative MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, said: 'Music has long played a central part in Scottish culture and the removal of this service could have a disastrous effect on these children's life chances. 'Also this situation is certainly not in the spirit of the unanimous motion in support of the music service passed by councillors only two months ago, which I welcomed in Parliament. 'So I have written to Stirling Council's Chief Executive requesting an urgent meeting regarding this awful situation and I shall also put a Parliamentary Question to the First Minister asking what urgent assistance can be put in place to ensure that these pupils are not abandoned.' A spokesperson for teaching union EIS said: 'There has been absolutely no consultation on this planned exercise with the EIS, and so this is an unexpected and unwelcome development. 'Any reduction now, following budget cuts being rejected by councillors earlier this year, and an assurance of the status quo being maintained at a subsequent council meeting until 2027, will be a shock for music tutors, students, parents and carers. 'This is a wholly unacceptable move, which will seriously affect the trust employees have in the authority as their employer, and similarly for pupils and parents.' A Stirling Council spokesperson said: 'All council services continually assess service delivery for improvement and to ensure best value. 'Work to identify service delivery transformation which may achieve savings is underway across services, but no savings are being taken forward in relation to music tuition.'


The Courier
a day ago
- The Courier
Craig Revel Horwood: I'll spill Strictly gossip and sing for crowds in Stirling, Dundee and Dunfermline
Known for his choreography skills, it's perhaps predictable that Craig Revel Horwood jokes he's looking forward to 'a Highland fling' in Scotland later this month. But it's not just his dancing that the Strictly Come Dancing judge is showing off on his latest UK tour – it's also his less heralded talent for singing. Revel Horwood is due to round off a 43-date road trip with four Scottish shows on The Courier's doorstep. It all follows the release of his debut album Revelations – Songs Boys Don't Sing, which reached the Top 20 in the UK charts last October. The very fact that he's made an LP at all has raised more than a few eyebrows, but Craig actually started singing as a boy in his native Australia in the 1970s. He initially made his name in the early 2000s as a West End director and choreographer, before going on to mastermind the opening to Manchester's 2002 Commonwealth Games. Since settling into the judge's seat he still occupies when ballroom-based BBC hit Strictly was launched in 2004, he has gone on to make his mark on stage over the past decade in roles such as alcoholic orphanage caretaker Miss Hannigan in a touring version of Annie and as The Wizard Of Oz's iconic Wicked Witch of the West. But it was the approach of one of life's milestones that spurred him into the recording studio. 'My mum wanted me to make an album, and I thought I'd better do one before I'm 60, which I am now, and I'll take it out on the road,' says Craig. 'It's a compilation of a lot of women's songs that I've played before, so all of the material is very character-driven. It's a delve into my life as a musician really, because that's how I started contemplating even dancing.' The former Melbourne drag queen, who moved to London in 1989, plays both the trumpet and the French horn, but reveals it was an instrument forever associated with primary school that set him on his musical journey. 'It started with the recorder, which is how a lot of people start,' he explains. 'Everyone laughs at that, but we had a proper consort of recorders. It was a seven-piece and I played at Sydney Opera House, and we actually found a tape recording of us playing in 1978 so I play that to the audience during my show. 'If that's not worth 36 quid I don't know what is.' Putting on his serious face for a moment, Revel Horwood declares his upcoming Scottish sojourn will provide an intimate insight into what makes him tick, as well as the ups and downs he's experienced since becoming a household name. 'The show is about my love for the music and how it's affected my life,' he adds. 'It's about relationships, too, because we all go through the same emotions, so I'll be talking about that, and heartbreak, and where it can lead. 'Adele has proved how much emotion heartbreak can evoke, not just for singers, but for the audience too. 'I'm also going to be telling a lot of showbiz stories, a lot of Strictly backstage goss. What is Shirley Ballas really like? I'll be delving into that, and why Bruno (Tonioli) left. 'I will answer any question I'm asked, whether it's on Strictly, my personal life, anything – I don't care.' Craig, who's joined on stage by his piano-playing Celebrity Gogglebox sidekick Ben Goddard, outlines what to expect in between the revelatory chat. 'The tour is full of weird and wonderful things, like great songs obviously, with a little bit of dancing, some Shirley Bassey I've got up my sleeve, a little bit of Ursula from The Little Mermaid and the mad characters I've played over the years,' he says. 'I wanted to put something together that was really personal and for people to feel like they're just coming to have a cocktail party with me at my house – I even have a cooking segment. 'I won't have my judging panels and I won't have my judge's hat on. I'm going to be just me.'