Albany Theatre

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The Albany
Albany Empire
File:Albany Theatre in Deptford.jpg
Address Douglas Way, Deptford, London, SE8 4AG
London
England
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Capacity 300
Website
http://www.thealbany.org.uk

The Albany is a multi-purpose arts centre in Deptford, south-east London.

Facilities include a flexible performance space holding up to 300 seated or 600 standing and a bar, two studio theatres, a performance cafe and rehearsal / meeting rooms. The Albany currently hosts a varied programme of events including music, spoken word, theatre, club nights, and children's shows. Several arts and community organisations are based at the Albany including spoken-word promoters Apples & Snakes and Heart n Soul, who provide opportunities for artists with learning disabilities.

History

The original Albany Institute was opened in 1899 by its namesake, the Duchess of Albany. A daughter-in-law of Queen Victoria, the Duchess was an active patron of the Deptford Fund - a project founded to help women secure employment away from the dangerous local trades in the slaughterhouses. The Fund soon expanded its scope and the Institute was built to house the various activities that supported and involved a local population with high levels of poverty and deprivation.

It was not until the early 1970s that a touring theatre company became resident at the Albany and the organisation began to focus on fusion between community work and the arts.

In the 1970s it hosted fifteen Rock Against Racism gigs and Dire Straits performed there 2 July 1978. On 14 July 1978, the Albany's theatre, then called "Albany Empire", was destroyed by fire, the cause of which has never been established. Plans were put in place for a new purpose-built building incorporating theatre spaces, a cafe, community rooms and offices. This new building on Douglas Way was officially opened by Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1982.[1]

During the 1980s the Albany hosted performances by many well-known artists, including Elvis Costello, Squeeze, Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer,[2] Julian Clary, Courtney Pine and the Jazz Warriors. The building was also home to many social, creative and community organisations.

Cuts in public funding in the 1990s meant the arts programme had to be scaled back. However in 2001 the Royal National Theatre's Art of Regeneration initiative invested heavily in the organisation, enabling refurbishment of the building by Sprunt Architects[3] to be completed and the re-establishment of a programme of performances.

Charles Hayward, an experimental rock musician, organised a series of performances at the theatre under the name "Accidents + Emergencies".[4]

References

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External links