Arts Guild Theatre (Greenock)

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Greenock Arts Guild
File:ArtsGuildMainEntrance.JPG
Address Campbell Street
Greenock
Scotland
Type Proscenium Arch
Capacity Main Auditorium - 454 raked seats total on two levels (120 circle, 334 stalls, including 5 wheelchair spaces) Wallace Bennett Theatre - 80 seated
Opened Wallace Bennett Theatre (1949) Main Auditorium (1951)
Years active 61

The Arts Guild Theatre is located in Greenock, Scotland. The idea for the theatre was conceived by a group of local drama enthusiasts in 1946.[1] The building contains two theatres, the Wallace Bennett Theatre and the Main Auditorium, and was previously a disused Victorian swimming pool. The Guild is now half receiving house and half producing house featuring performers including Dorothy Paul, Scottish Opera, Dean Park, Frank Pilkington[2] and other acts such as Frankie Boyle and Amy Macdonald.

Location

The theatre is situated on Campbell Street in Greenock, Inverclyde and is close to Greenock town centre.

History

The need for the Arts Guild Theatre was originally thought of by a group of local drama enthusiasts in 1946. This was due to the lack of proper facilities in which cultural and theatrical activities could take place in the Inverclyde area and the group bought the "Old West End Baths" for £1000. The Wallace Bennett theatre was the first of the two theatres located on the first floor of the building and was named after a local amateur actor of the same name, who died in the recent war. (World War II)

The construction of the bottom floor theatre (now named the Main Auditorium) was estimated in 1947 to cost within the region of £18,000.The Scottish Arts Council at the time where impressed with the enthusiasm of the group and proposed to lend £9,000 to aid with its construction.

The Wallace Bennett Theatre was opened to public performances in 1949 and allowed the Arts Guild to gather a local reputation to help it cover the cost of building the Main Auditorium. Construction of the theatre finished in 1951, making it the first theatre to be built within Scotland in 25 years.

In 2004 it was proposed that the Guild should seek funding to redevelop the Campbell Street premises. The estimated cost was £5.5million and in 2006, the Scottish Arts Council agreed to award £2.6 million towards the refurbishment, with the remainder to be raised by the Guild.[3]

Subsequently, however, Inverclyde Council approached the Guild to suggest that they may wish to relocate to a more central site on the waterfront and that that could lever additional support from Riverside Inverclyde. After several months of discussion and a feasibility study, the Guild opted to build a brand new arts centre - The Beacon - on former shipyard and dockland near Customhouse Quay.

New Theatre - The Beacon Arts Centre

The Beacon Arts Centre opened in January 2013. It is located on Custom House Quay by the East India Harbour on the site of the former, Harbourmaster's Office on the Greenock waterfront. It has two performance spaces - a 500-seat main auditorium with one of the largest stages in Scotland, a 130-seat studio theatre, rehearsal/function rooms and a riverside café/bar. The project is jointly funded by Greenock Arts Guild, Creative Scotland, Inverclyde Council, Riverside Inverclyde and the Big Lottery Fund.[4] The initiation of construction was attended by First Minister, Alex Salmond and actress Dorothy Paul. The new arts centre was formally opened on 16 August 2013 by the Patron of Greenock Arts Guild, HRH The Earl of Wessex.

The new name was announced as The Beacon Arts Centre on 25 November 2010 - again by the Earl of Wessex.[5]

The reason the name was chosen was due to the location of the new theatre having an association with a Georgian lamp which sits in front of the Customhouse located near the new building. Originally known as 'The Beacon' it was used as a guiding light for ships mooring at the quayside. Patron, The Earl of Wessex, visited the site of the construction in November 2010 unveiling a commemorative artwork by glass artist Alec Galloway. HRH became patron of Greenock Arts Guild in 2009 but has been involved in theatre throughout his life. In the 1980s he worked as part of two theatrical production companies, including Andrew Lloyd Webber's Really Useful Theatre Company, working on shows such as The Phantom of the Opera, Starlight Express and Cats (musical). An estimated cost of completion is £9.3 million.[6]

In May 2012 the Earl of Wessex made a return visit to be shown round the construction site and top host a fundraising dinner later that evening.

References

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