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The Castle Theatre

Princess Margaret opens the Redgrave
Theatre

Sir Michael Redgrave (right) studies the model of the new
£250,000 theatre, with Sir Bernard Miles (left), a patron of the new theatre, and
(centre) the architect, Frank Rutter.

The ground-breaking plan of the new
theatre, the Redgrave
(click picture to enlarge)
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The theatre only seated 167. If you want to work out how it was all fitted
in, visit the Pizza Piazza, set back from Castle Street on that same spot. By
1965 plans were afoot to create larger premises. Amounts varying from £10 for a
nominal brick to £25000 were received from numerous individuals, and brick by
brick, seat by seat, the Redgrave theatre was
built, incorporating an 18th century building, now listed, called Brightwell
House.
The Theatre was opened in May 1974 by Princess Margaret,
with 'Romeo and Juliet', the first of many fine productions. The greatest
highlight was the production of Noel Coward's 'Cavalcade’, with a cast of 12
professional actors and 312 local volunteers, forerunner of the way NFRC works
now.
The 90s were increasingly sad years for the
Redgrave, and the slide from repertory eventually resulted in the closure of the theatre.
Ownership passed to Waverley Borough Council, which received bad advice leading
to the disastrous decision to abandon repertory for a hotch-potch of plays,
films and allsorts, running for short periods. Audiences stayed away in droves
and the Redgrave closed in 1998.
At the end of that year, with Ian Mullins, first director of the
Redgrave at the helm, the New Farnham Repertory
Company was formed. In the first year Ian and local professional actor Malcolm
Rennie fought to establish the company, which has since presented summer seasons
in St Andrews Church, in the open air and in a marquee in Farnham's Library Gardens
and Brightwells Gardens. (Past productions) |