2003
1903
1865
2020

'Boom Time' for Theatre Royal - Newspaper Cutting, 1978

Title

'Boom Time' for Theatre Royal - Newspaper Cutting, 1978

Date

9 March 1978

Description

Nottingham Evening Post article about the Theatre Royal's record-breaking box-office success, following its re-opening in 1978.

What's the story?

In the 1970s it was the vision of Nottingham City Council, under the leadership of Councillors Len Maynard and John Carroll, to create innovative and major changes to the Theatre Royal and its surrounding buildings.
With the idea of a Festival Hall complex, which would include a refurbished and modernised Theatre Royal, on the site of the now razed Empire Theatre on South Sherwood Street would stand a new Concert Hall.
In order to enable the Theatre Royal to accommodate new offices, dressing rooms and a large loading bay to enable large-scale work from visiting companies, it was also proposed that the Victorian built County Hotel, immediately adjacent to the Theatre Royal be purchased and demolished.
At a time of austerity in Britain, these proposals were controversial due to the large amounts of money to be spent on the project, as well as the demolition of the County Hotel, a much-loved building in the city.
These arguments spanned most of the 1970s, culminating in 1977/1978 when the Festival Hall plans were rejected, but councillors deciding to continue with the Theatre Royal modernisation.
This continuing drama, worthy of the Theatre Royal stage itself, was regularly played out in the pages of the Nottingham Evening Post, the local daily paper for the city and whose offices at the time were directly opposite the proposed Concert Hall site on Forman Street.
In this article from March 1978, following the re-opening of the Theatre Royal, the paper reports on a ‘BOOM TIME FOR THE ROYAL’, with the claim from Barrie Stead, the Theatre Royal’s Managing Director, that the venue was doing record-breaking business following its re-opening, more than “any other theatre in the country – including the West End”

Type

Newspaper Cutting

Location of item

Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall Nottingham

Rights

Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall Nottingham

Contributor

Researcher: David Longford