Stephen Joseph Theatre
Stephen Joseph Theatre | |
Address |
Westborough Scarborough, North Yorkshire England |
---|---|
Coordinates | 54°16′50″N 0°24′21″W / 54.280556°N 0.405833°WCoordinates: 54°16′50″N 0°24′21″W / 54.280556°N 0.405833°W |
Owner | Scarborough Theatre Development Trust |
Capacity |
404-seat (main house) 165-seat (studio/cinema) |
Production | Visiting and own productions |
Opened | 30 April 1996 |
Website | |
www.sjt.uk.com |
The Stephen Joseph Theatre is a theatre in the round in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England that was founded by Stephen Joseph and was the first theatre in the round in Britain.
In 1955, Joseph established a tiny theatre in the round on the first floor of the Public Library.[1]
The theatre flourished and in 1976 moved to a supposedly temporary home on the ground floor of the former Scarborough Boys' High School.
However, a permanent home proved difficult to find and it was not until late 1988 and the closure of the local Odeon cinema by Rank Leisure that the theatre's long-standing Artistic Director, Alan Ayckbourn, found a suitable venue.
The new theatre, known simply as the Stephen Joseph Theatre, opened in 1996 and comprises two auditoria: The Round, a 404-seat theatre in the round, and The McCarthy, a 165-seat end-on stage/cinema. The building also contains a restaurant, shop, and full front-of-house and backstage facilities.
The Round boasts two important technical innovations: the stage lift, facilitating speedy set changes, and the trampoline, a Canadian invention which allows technicians particularly easy access to the lighting grid.
It is also the place where the image used for the cover of Richard Hawley's album Coles Corner was taken.