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The Grand Theatre Blackpool

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ONLINE INTERVIEWS

The Grand Theatre:

Want to know more or comment about any aspect of the Grand Theatre?

Now you can. We would like to give you the opportunity to put questions to the manager, staff, the Grand Theatre Academy, visiting actors, producers and other theatremakers, as part of our Online Interviews.


Online Interviews gives YOU the chance to ask the questions that matter, to the Grand Theatre. Please submit your questions and we will post the whole interview on the website. Keep an eye on the website for more Online Interviews. To submit a question, please do so here. We welcome any questions, from choice of shows, production and policy, theatregoer amenities, to stage morality, careers and theatre etiquette! Online interviews are available for press use. For further information please contact Stephen Mercer on 01253 290111 or use the contact form.





INTERVIEW No. 1, JUNE 2006

Our first ‘stage detective’ is critic STEVEN GALE, who posed questions to former Grand Theatre manager Paul Iles

Steven Gale: Does the Grand Theatre know what the public wants?

“How can any theatre know what the public wants? The Grand certainly does not know, but we can, and should, know what we want to give the public. If we base our audience development policy on presenting what we think the public wants that policy is bound to be sterile. This is only trying to follow a trend instead of acting upon its judgement. We should not always book shows merely because they have been successful on a previous occasion, or because they meet the strategic objectives of outside bodies. Many factors come into play, but the art of the theatre is paramount.

“A good theatre tries to be in advance of the public as much as it can. How could it be otherwise? However, as a touring house we have only a certain amount of influence in selecting the shows, from what is available on the touring circuit. I try to find a successful and continuous combination of drama, ballet, opera, musicals, classical concerts, variety, music hall, revue, and other light entertainment. Audience tastes change: what might have been a stable Blackpool public in the 1990s has become more choosey, with more choices of entertainment at other theatres in the North West such as the Lowry in Salford, let alone other media and diversions.

“Since the advent of the National Lottery and the construction of several large new theatres, there has been an oversupply of theatres in relation to good productions. There are often not enough good, popular attractions to fill the touring circuit of large theatres like the Grand for every week of the year. It is competitive to attract the best shows at the time we want them and at the price we can afford. We are a big theatre with a smaller population base than most No.1 theatres in the large cities. It is doubly challenging because the Grand is a managed as a standalone theatre, unlike the theatres run through the circuits of Ambassador Theatre Group and Live Nation. Nevertheless, we are a much more exciting programming proposition than, say, Manchester Palace Theatre or Liverpool Empire because managing the Grand is more about being attuned to Blackpool and Lancashire culture than the London-programmed syndicated theatres can ever be part of their regional communities.

“The public taste is represented by the Grand Theatre board of directors and, because of our running on a shoestring budget with no large public subsidy for 25 years we have developed a strong business sense to balance with our social objectives as a non-profit theatre management. But the Grand is a fantastically intimate space for every kind of live theatre. This is our big advantage. We try to take the pulse of the Blackpool public, through the Friends of the Grand and the volunteers and by meeting, greeting and listening to our theatregoers of all ages.”

Steven Gale: Could you comment about your choice of theatre companies this year?

“A good relationship between the Grand Theatre and the production companies is always vital. For drama, my predecessor Peter Cutchie had affinities with the excellent Hull Truck, Ian Dickens Productions and Compass Theatre Company of Sheffield. We continue a very good relationship with UK Productions, purveyors of pantomimes and musicals such as their forthcoming Beauty and the Beast and Dick Whittington. A successful theatre must develop its rich diet of companies and producers from time to time. Hence, I have introduced Barrie Rutter and Northern Broadsides to Blackpool in The School for Scandal, Henry VI, Edward IV and Richard III and, for autumn 2006, they will be back with two more productions. We had not presented Shakespeare for some years, so it seemed important to redress the omission of classical drama, and we have also had superb productions of The Comedy of Errors from Bell Shakespeare Company of Sydney and, for other classical work, Tartuffe from the Watermill Theatre. Who knows what the future will bring?”

Steven Gale: What is it that gives the Grand Theatre its unique atmosphere? 



“When I first ventured into a theatre I was too young to remember its architecture: it was the magic of the transformation scene in Cinderella that haunted me for days. However, I remember being aware of the atmosphere created by crushed velvet and marble as I was led out of the back of the rear stalls of the London Palladium. At the Grand, I am more agog at the cherubs, sweeping curves of indirect light and plaster troughs of the three circles that dive towards the proscenium than I was at my first pantomime. As every performer will vouch, the visual and acoustic qualities of the auditorium, including its furnishings, light and intimacy, are a secret influence upon the success of their performing on this stage.

“It’s sometimes instructive to witness a production in a modern theatre in the south of England, before it comes to Blackpool. The difference in actors’ tone at the Grand is palpable. It’s also to do with the openness of northern audiences. The other contribution to atmosphere is the prevailing friendliness of our box office, bars and front of house staff and, of course, the volunteers of the Friends of the Grand. Their welcome and service is indeed that of a ‘Personality Playhouse’. I was thrilled for them all when the Grand received the award of Entertainment Venue of the Year, 2005, from Blackpool Tourism.”

Steven Gale: The Grand Theatre places great emphasis on glamour. Why is this?

“It’s because Blackpool is a glamorous show town that was built on entertainment, amusement and amazement. This continues today, with the stylish ice shows and magic at the Pleasure Beach, the acrobatics and thrills of the Tower Circus, the opulent spell of the Tower Ballroom, the phenomenal Blackpool Illuminations and the burlesque performances at Funny Girls. During the holiday season from June to October, the Grand Theatre is part of this carnival of extravagant, popular theatre of hedonistic delights.

“Blackpool has always been a very important part of British culture. Yet the town has mysteriously slipped from the sights of many cultural entrepreneurs and condescending critics. This year we have been acknowledged as the National Theatre of Variety. There’s new life in the glamour of show business yet.”

Steven Gale: What happens when one enters the Grand Theatre stage door?

“The Stage Door is the gateway to the magical world behind the scenes. Your bonafides are examined by Trevor Shaw, the Stage Door Keeper. He offers a warm greeting to, among others, strolling thespians, technicians, wardrobe mistresses and stage managers, and when required he can be a face of thunder to Stage Door Johnnies!

“I often think he has the best job at the Grand Theatre. A soul of discretion, he hears all the gossip and intrigue from visiting artistes whilst offering a sympathetic ear and hospitality. With our house managers Stephen Williams and Robbie Pendlebury, Trevor points artistes in the direction of essential post-performance recreation.”

Steven Gale: What exactly is that feeling we get when the lights go down and the curtain goes up?

“There are several answers, but the most important of all has to do with the ‘live’ nature of going to the theatre. Theatre is an event in which the performers are in the presence of the audience, and at the Grand Theatre our most significant function stems from the chemistry of the actor-audience relationship. The experience of being present with the performer is more important than anything else.

“By comparison, no matter how involved we might be with the characters in a film, we are always in the presence of an image, not a person. In a multi-media world, live theatre becomes even more special. But we are also in the presence of other audience members. Eye-contact is made with other patrons and this adds to the electricity that is generated when the stage and auditorium become one space. At the Grand Theatre, because of architect Frank Matcham’s intimate horseshoe layout of circles and private boxes, with no one of 1,100 patrons further than 70 feet from the stage, it not only means we are in the presence of the performers and the fellow audience, it also means that the performers are in our presence, conscious of us and addressing us directly. In Variety performances especially, this leads to spontaneous emotion. This is unpredictable from performance to performance.

“When the curtain goes up, the Grand Theatre becomes a sacred space. We bring people together in a secular community ceremony where the performers are the latter-day priests, with theatregoers participating in their own special Holy Communion! The Grand Theatre might be said to be the procathedral of Blackpool. ”

Steven Gale is an interviewer at literature and book festivals in Bath, Brighton, Cheltenham, Edinburgh and London.