Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmunds
Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmunds exterior | |
Address |
Westgate Street Bury St Edmunds England |
---|---|
Coordinates | 52°14′26″N 0°43′02″E / 52.2406°N 0.7172°E |
Owner | Greene King Brewery |
Designation | Listed Building Grade I |
Type | Provincial |
Capacity | 360 |
Construction | |
Opened | 1819 |
Rebuilt | 2007 |
Architect | William Wilkins |
Website | |
www.theatreroyal.org |
The Theatre Royal is a restored Regency theatre in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England. One of eight grade 1 listed theatres in the UK, it is the only working theatre on the National Trust's portfolio of properties.
In addition to putting on contemporary live entertainment, the Theatre’s company is currently running a project to restore the largely forgotten canon of Georgian plays, with the intention of putting on recreation Georgian productions in the restored Theatre.
History
The Theatre Royal was opened by its proprietor and architect William Wilkins on 11 October 1819, and was one of the most elegant, sophisticated and up-to-date playhouses of its age. The fact that it has survived, without significant alteration, into our time is a miracle and it is now one of only three buildings to give the experience of theatre-going in pre-Victorian Britain.
Wilkins was an architect of national repute, responsible for, amongst other buildings, the National Gallery in London and Downing College, Cambridge. As the proprietor of the Norwich circuit, he employed a small company of players to undertake an annual tour of six theatres, Yarmouth, Ipswich, Cambridge, Bury St Edmunds, Colchester and King's Lynn. Each was open for just one or two short seasons during the year. The Bury theatre opened for the Great Fair in early October to mid-November and was only available for special events at other times of the year. At that time, it would certainly have enjoyed large audiences particularly as the local community would not have been able to travel far for entertainment, until the arrival of the railway in the 1840s.
The Norwich comedians were disbanded in 1843 and at Bury there followed more than half a century of economic difficulty and theatrical gloom. This was alleviated briefly in 1892 when the world premiere of Charley's Aunt was staged at the Theatre. The Theatre closed in 1903 but it reopened in 1906 when alterations to the building were made by the architect Bertie Crewe.
Greene King, the local brewery, purchased the freehold, which it still owns, in 1920. However, in 1925, in the face of overwhelming competition from two new cinemas, the Theatre closed once more. Greene King had struggled to keep the Theatre in operation but was now content to use the building as a barrel store. So it remained until the 1960s when a group of local people led by Air Vice Marshal Stanley Vincent raised over £37,000 to restore and re-open the Theatre Royal in 1965. The building was vested in the National Trust in 1975 on a 999-year lease.
The Theatre Royal is now managed as an independent working theatre by the Bury St Edmunds Theatre Management Limited.
Modern Restoration
In September 2005 the Theatre was closed to begin a £5.3million restoration project to restore the building to its original 1819 configuration and decorative scheme. Following an extensive research period, architects Levitt Bernstein, in collaboration with Theatre staff and the National Trust, drew up plans to restore the historic building to as close to its original design as possible.
Previous restorations to the building had removed the original Georgian entrances to the pit as well as its distinctive Georgian forestage. The boxes had also been removed from the dress circle and the seating layout changed throughout the building.
The project restored these aspects to recreate a theatre which could provide further insight into the architecture, stage techniques and repertoire of the 18th and 19th centuries, of which little is known in comparison to theatre of other epochs. In addition to the restoration of the building the Theatre’s artistic team researched and re-discovered many of the lost texts, of the Georgian repertoire.
Under the banner of Restoring the Repertoire© the Theatre Royal aims to produce some of plays of the Georgian period in the restored Theatre.
On 11 September 2007 the Theatre re-opened with a production of the 1829 nautical melodrama, Black-Eyed Susan, written by Douglas Jerrold.
In addition to the restoration of the main building a new modern foyer was constructed to the side of the Theatre to provide a restaurant, additional bar and more toilets for the building.
External links
- Official website
- Theatre Royal information at the National Trust
- A 360 degree tour of the pre-Sept 2007 auditorium