At one
stage in the history of the theatre in Britain
and Ireland
, the
designation Theatre Royal or Royal
Theatre was an indication that the theatre was granted a Royal
Patent without which theatrical
performances were illegal. There have over the years been four
distinct Dublin
theatres
called the Theatre Royal.
The first Theatre Royal, Dublin
The first Theatre Royal was opened by
John
Ogilby in 1662 in
Smock Alley.
Ogilby, who was the first Irish
Master of the Revels, had previously
run the
New Theatre in
Werburgh Street. This was the first
custom-built theatre in the city. It opened in 1637 but was closed
by the
Puritans in 1641. The
Restoration of the British monarchy in
1661 enabled Ogilby to resume his position as Master of the Revels
and open his new venture.
This
Theatre Royal was essentially under the control of the
administration in Dublin
Castle
and staged mainly pro-Stuart works and Shakespearean classics. In the
18th century, the theatre was managed for a time by the
actor-manager
Thomas Sheridan,
father of playwright and politician
Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
Thomas
Sheridan managed to attract major stars of the London
stage,
including David Garrick and the
Dublin-born Peg Woffington.
The theatre was knocked down and rebuilt in 1735 and closed in
1787.
The second Theatre Royal
In 1820,
Henry
Harris bought a site in
Hawkins
Street and built the 2,000–seater Albany New Theatre on it at a
cost of £50,000, designed by architect
Samuel Beazley. This theatre opened in
January of the following year. In August,
George IV attended a
performance at the Albany and, as a consequence, a patent was
granted. The name of the theatre was changed to the "Theatre Royal"
to reflect its status as a
patent
theatre. The building work was not completed at the time of
opening and early audience figures were so low that a number of
side seating boxes were boarded up. In 1830, Harris retired from
the theatre and a Mr Calcraft took on the lease.
This theatre attracted a number of famous performers, including
Paganini,
Jenny Lind,
Tyrone Power and
Barry Sullivan. By 1851, the theatre
was experiencing financial problems and closed briefly. It reopened
in December under
John
Harris, who had been manager of the rival
Queen's Theatre. The first
production under Harris was a play by Dion Boucicault. Boucicault
and his wife were to make their first Dublin personal appearances
in the Royal in 1861 in his
The Colleen Bawn. This theatre
burned to the ground on
February 9,
1880.
The third Theatre Royal
The third Theatre Royal opened on
December
13,
1897 by the actor-manager
Frederick Mouillot with the assistance of
a group of Dublin businessmen. The theatre was designed by
Frank Matcham and built on the site of the
Leinster Hall theatre, which in turn
had been built on the site of the second Theatre Royal. It had
seating for an audience of 2,011 people.
This new
theatre found itself in competition with the Gaiety
Theatre
, which prompted Mouillot to try to attract as many
big name stars and companies as possible. At first, the
theatre was noted for its
opera and
musical comedy productions. On
April 28,
1904,
Edward VII attended a state
performance at the theatre.
Mouillot died in 1911 and one of his partners,
David Tellford took over the running of the
theatre. As musical comedy went out of fashion in the early years
of the 20th century, the Royal started to stage
music hall shows on a regular basis. In one such
show in 1906, a young
Charlie
Chaplin performed as part of an act called
The Eight Lancashire Lads. In its
final years, the Theatre was also used as a
cinema. It closed on
March
3,
1934 and demolished soon after.
The fourth Theatre Royal
The fourth Theatre Royal opened on
September 23,
1935 in
Hawkins Street. It was a large
art deco building designed for an audience
of 3,700 people seated and 300 standing, and was intended for use
as both theatre and cinema. It also housed the Regal Rooms
Restaurant. The theatre had a resident 25-piece
orchestra under the direction of
Jimmy Campbell and a troupe of
singer-dancers, the Royalettes. From the beginning, the sheer size
of the building made it difficult for the Royal to remain
economically viable. The policy adopted at first to confront this
problem was to book big-name stars from overseas to fill the
building. These included
Gracie
Fields,
George Formby,
Max Wall,
Max Miller and
Jimmy Durante. However these shows
rarely made a profit.
In 1936, the Royal was acquired by
Patrick Wall and Louis
Elliman, who also owned the Gaiety. With the outbreak of the
Second World War, Wall and Elliman
were forced to keep the two theatres going with native talent only.
This led to the emergence of a raft of Irish acts who were to
provide the mainstay of the Royal's output for the remainder of its
existence. These included such Irish household names as
Jimmy O'Dea,
Harry
O'Donovan,
Maureen Potter,
Danny Cummins, ((Mike Nolan)),
Alice Dalgarno,
Noel Purcell,
Micheál MacLiammoir,
Cecil Sheridan,
Jack
Cruise and
Patricia Cahill. In
July 1951
Judy Garland appeared for a
series of sold out performances and was received with tremendous
ovations.
The legendary singer sang from her dressing
room window to hundreds of people who were unable to get tickets
and critics dubbed her "America's Colleen" She drew the largest
crowds up until that time and was only surpassed by the visits to
Ireland
of United
States
President John F. Kennedy and the Pope in the 1960s. Popular
Irish American entertainer
Carmel Quinn also made her singing debut here
during the early 1950s. Under pressure from rising overheads and
the increasing popularity of the cinema and the introduction of
television, the fourth Theatre Royal,
Dublin closed its doors on
June 30,
1962.
References
- Print
- Ryan, Philip B. The Lost Theatres of Dublin. (The
Badger Press, 1998) ISBN 0-9526076-1-1
- Online
External links