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On
5th May 1982, the curtain went up for the first time at the Theatre
Royal in Plymouth...it was a
Gala Performance featuring "a host of stars," including
Leonard Rossiter, Dickie Henderson, Keith Harris and Gene Pitney.
Twenty-one years on, and just look at the theatre now.
With some 400,000 people going to shows at the Theatre Royal each
year, it's now the best attended producing theatre outside London
- not bad, considering the venue is slap bang in the middle of the
country's least populated region.
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| Happy
birthday Theatre Royal! |
The
venue - which is also home to the more intimate Drum Theatre - has,
in its time, staged most of the big touring shows, and played host
to scores of major stage stars.
It's also the regional home of the Birmingham Royal Ballet, which
visits every year.
The Theatre Royal has also earned a reputation for producing some
great shows, which have then moved on to the West End - the most
recent was Cooper, starring Jerome Flynn.
And the stunning, highly successful production of Cats this year
was also co-produced by the Theatre Royal.
At one time, no fewer than six Theatre Royal shows were playing
at the same time in the West End - an achievement unmatched by any
other theatre.
In 2000, the venue won the national award for being the most welcoming
theatre in the UK.
The theatre is celebrating its 21st birthday by staging some big
shows, and by putting on a photographic exhibition of past productions.
It has also built a new production and education centre, TR2, which
had its "debut" with the rehearsals for Cats.
The multi-million pound building, beside the River Plym in Cattedown,
holds workshops and is the home of The Young Company which boasts
600 members.
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| The
three "pods" at TR2 |
Already,
the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden and the Birmingham Royal
Ballet have asked the theatre to manufacture shows for them at TR2.
And the Theatre Royal is planning to set up a modern apprenticeship
programme to train young people in specialist skills, such as prop
making, scenic painting and costuming.
The success of the theatre isn't just good news for Devon's theatre-goers
- it's also good for the local economy. Research suggests that the
theatre is responsible for £18m being spent in Plymouth city
centre each year, indirectly supporting hundreds of jobs.
And this is a vital statistic for the theatre, which receives funding
from Plymouth City Council. It also gets help from the Arts Council.
In fact, when the Arts Council grant was under threat in 1993, a
100,000-strong petition was raised in a high profile campaign -
and the funding was re-instated.
So the Theatre Royal lived to fight another day...and, in its 21
years, it's helped to prove that Devon is anything but a cultural
desert. For that, it deserves a standing ovation!
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