REDGRAVE ACTION GROUP

the campaigning arm of the  New Farnham Repertory Company 

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What we’re doing to Save the Redgrave Theatre, & how you can help.

The current threat to demolish the Redgrave and how this came about

Redgrave's story

The purpose of the 
    New Farnham Repertory Company

New season of plays. Events. Fund-raising.

Archive of photos about past seasons of plays

How you can get involved as a volunteer

News of NFRC actors

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Get in touch with Redgrave Action Group, New Farnham Repertory Company, and many local arts groups

otherwise known as the Site Map

 
Introduction to our story...

Farnham is a small market town, near Guildford in the county of Surrey.

 

Farnham was for 600 years the home of the Bishops of Winchester as it was one day’s ride from both Winchester and London. Nowadays, the journey to London takes only an hour.

 

 

Farnham’s beautiful architectural character, mainly Georgian with many enticing coaching yards, has for a long time made it a much sought-after location, both for visiting and inhabiting. Farnham has a fine Norman-cum-Tudor castle, buildings by Edwin Lutyens (principal architect of New Delhi) and a beautiful parish church with the largest tower in Surrey.

The town has a strong cultural heritage that includes William Cobbett (left), author of Rural Rides and founder of the Hansard record of Parliamentary debates, George Sturt, Alfred Lord Tennyson and JM Barrie (Peter Pan). Amongst more recent famous sons of Farnham one can count rugby's Jonny Wilkinson (right), Mike Hawthorne (Britain's first world motor racing champion), and international cricket's Graham Thorpe.

Farnham’s hops were amongst the most prized in the south of England in the 19th century, and these were dried and processed in the town’s maltings, a premises which a century later was developed into an arts centre, the Farnham Maltings.

The arts have always been strongly supported and represented in the town. In the 1990s the Farnham Youth Choir was twice winner of the Sainsbury’s national Choir of the Year competition. The Surrey Institute of Art and Design is the south of England’s foremost academic centre for higher education in the visual arts.

There are around 50 amateur drama clubs, choirs and music ensembles, an operatic society and, in the nearby village of Tilford, an annual Bach festival. Farnham’s own annual music festival has for forty years produced an aural feast of the highest quality.

 

The jewel in Farnham’s cultural crown was, for over fifty years, its professional repertory theatre, as seen at the Castle Theatre and, later, at the Redgrave Theatre.

 

In 1939 the Castle Theatre, housed in a 16th century barn in Castle Street (right) opened for business. It performed plays almost continuously until the construction of a superb new building in 1974. This was the Redgrave Theatre which, together with Brightwell House (above), the Graded II listed building which it adjoined, provided a uniquely fine premises. (For more on this history click here...)

 

Follow this link to find out

what went wrong.

 

or clink one of the links below to move into the main part of the website.

Castle Theatre

 

The story of the  Redgrave Theatre from its beginnings as the Castle Theatre to its closure in 1998.

Ian Mullins

 

Ian Mullins, first director of the Redgrave Theatre appeals for your support.

Click here

 

How the New Farnham Repertory Company plans to run a re-opened Redgrave Theatre

Redgrave boarded up

 

The shocking story of how a thriving theatre was run down, closed and allowed to rot. Click here for the story of Waverley Council.