Plan Your Group Event with Us!
At the Jubilee, we offer a community space that can be booked for a variety of uses, whether you are hosting a community event, hands-on workshop, a friendly get-together, or need a space for a business meeting.
We can offer seating for up to sixty guests and access to audio visual equipment, kitchen facilities and flexible seating options.
Don’t forget our regular film nights bringing cinema to Balsall Common.

Seating Capacity: 60
Where to find us?
You can find us in the the heart Balsall Common village, nestled within its main shopping area and conveniently adjacent to the A452. This central position ensures exceptional accessibility, with Junction 4 of the M6 motorway only 6 miles away and Junction 6 of the M42 just 5 miles distant.
The Jubilee is a spacious and well-equipped Venue for your event

Dimensions of the space
Height: 3.23m
Width: 7.95m
Length: 14.47m
Free parking at the Jubilee
The Jubilee Hall is located next to a free village car park allowing hassle free parking for your event.

Our events
Join us for a variety of exciting events, or book for your own event, there’s always something happening at the Jubilee!
Our Next Film Will Be On Saturday 2d May
A stirring story of music, community, and courage in wartime Britain
Directed by Nicholas Hytner · Written by Alan Bennett
THE HEART OF A TOWN. THE POWER OF A CHOIR. THE SHADOW OF WAR.
As World War I tears through Europe, the Yorkshire mill town of Ramsden finds its choral society nearly emptied of men sent to the front. Desperate to keep the music alive, the committee appoints the brilliant but controversial Dr. Henry Guthrie—a man marked by his time in Germany, his uncompromising standards, and his refusal to bend to public suspicion.
Against a backdrop of grief, conscription, and social tension, Guthrie recruits young local men and wounded soldiers to rebuild the choir. Their chosen work—Edward Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius—becomes a bold act of defiance, unity, and hope.
As the community grapples with loss, forbidden love, and the moral weight of war, the choir discovers that music cannot stop the chaos—but it can offer solace, connection, and the courage to carry on.


























