The Gaiety Theatre is a theatre on South King Street in Dublin, Ireland, off Grafton Street and close to St. Stephen's Green. It specialises in operatic and musical productions, with occasional dramatic shows.
History
In April 1871, the brothers John and Michael Gunn obtained a 21-year licence to establish "a well-regulated theatre and therein at all times publicly to act, represent or perform any interlude, tragedy, comedy, prelude, opera, burletta, play, farce or pantomime".[citation needed] In favour of the Gunn's licence application was that, unlike the existing theatres, they were not proposing to promote local drama which had acquired something of a reputation with the Dublin Castle administration for stirring up nationalist sentiments.[2][failed verification]
The city centre site was 17 metres wide on King Street and 42 metres deep towards Tangier Lane.[3] The Gunns employed the experienced theatre architect C.J. Phipps.[4] One of the theatres Phipps had recently completed in 1868 in London was the Gaiety and its name and auditorium layout were adopted for the new theatre in Dublin.[5] The audience capacity was 2000 spread over four floors: the 'parterre' or ground floor pit with 21 rows of seats; the dress circle and upper circle comprising: balcony stalls with 7 rows of seats, the first circle with 6 rows of seats, the amphitheater with 2 rows of seats; and the top floor gallery with 9 rows of seats;[3] plus 14 private boxes.[5] Each class of seats was accessed via its own entrance and stairway. There was a smoking balcony, bars on each floor and a tea-room. The design included tip-up seats (an innovative way of increasing the audience capacity) and fire-safety features such as a 4” water main (for firefighting) and stone (not wooden) staircases.[5] Back stage: the theatre was radically different from others in Ireland. From the outset the Gunns decided that their new theatre would be a ‘receiving house’: that is, it would receive touring companies and would not have its own company of actors or a repertory programme:[6] As a receiving house, there was no need for extensive rehearsal spaces, workshops or storage areas.
The Gaiety was extended by theatre architect Frank Matcham in 1883,[9] and, despite several improvements to public spaces and stage changes, it retains several Victorian era features and remains Dublin's longest-established, continuously producing theatre.[10]
Patrick Wall and Louis Elliman bought the theatre in 1936 and ran it for several decades with local actors and actresses. They sold it in 1965, and in the 1960s and the 1970s the theatre was run by Fred O'Donovan and the Eamonn Andrews Studios, until - in the 1980s - Joe Dowling (former artistic director of the Abbey Theatre) became director of the Gaiety.[10] In the 1990s, Groundwork Productions took on the lease and the theatre was eventually bought by the Break for the Border Group. The Gaiety was purchased by music promoters MCD (in turn owned by Denis Desmond and his wife Caroline) in the late 1990s.[11][12] The new owners undertook a refit of the theatre,[8] with the Department of Arts, Sport and Tourism contributing to the restoration fund.[citation needed]
The theatre played host to the 1971 Eurovision Song Contest, the first to be staged in Ireland, during the Gaiety's centenary year.[14]Clodagh Rodgers (a contestant in that particular contest) later presented her RTÉ TV series The Clodagh Rodgers Show from the theatre in the late 1970s.
The Gaiety is known for its annual Christmaspantomime and has hosted a pantomime every year since December 1873,[15][16] though no production was possible in 2020 due to the COVID-19 crisis, with the scheduled panto, The Little Mermaid postponed until 2021.[17] Actor and director Alan Stanford directed both Gaiety productions of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty. Irish entertainer June Rodgers starred in the Gaiety pantomime for years, until she began to headline the equally established Olympia Theatre panto. The Gaiety's pantomimes have included Irish performers that appeal to homegrown audiences, including a number of Fair City actors.[citation needed]
References
^"Venue Hire". gaietytheatre.ie. Gaiety Theatre. Archived from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2019. [A] 1,145 seat auditorium including 16 boxes in the Dress Circle and six boxes in the Grand Circle
^"Matcham, Frank - Works". Dictionary of Irish Architects. Irish Architectural Archive. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
^ ab"Gaiety Theatre". Music Hall and Theatre History. Arthurlloyd.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
^"Ireland's Rich List 2018 - Denis Desmond and Caroline Downey". Independent News & Media. 15 January 2018. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 20 June 2018. Denis Desmond (64) and Caroline Downey (56) own MCD, one of the largest music promoters in Ireland [..] Their interests include the Gaiety and Olympia theatres in Dublin
^Rainey, Lawrence (2018), "Modernism and Popular Culture", in Maude, Ulrika; Nixon, Mark (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Modernist Literature, Bloomsbury, pp. 171–192, doi:10.5040/9781474218610.ch-010, ISBN978-1-4742-1861-0 p.174