The Playhouse Theatre, as of 2024[update] a community arts centre called the Niamos Centre, is a theatre in Hulme, Manchester, England. It is a grade II listed building. Originally built as the Hulme Hippodrome in 1902, the building has also been known as the Grand Junction Theatre, Junction Picture Theatre, The Playhouse, and the Nia Centre. Between 1955 and 1986 it was used as studios by the BBC and known as the BBC Playhouse.
Address | Warwick Street, Hulme Manchester M15 5EU United Kingdom |
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Coordinates | 53°27′51″N 2°14′58″W / 53.4643°N 2.2494°W |
Construction | |
Opened | 1902[1] |
Architect | J. J. Alley |
Listed Building – Grade II | |
Official name | The Playhouse, Hulme |
Designated | 7 June 1977 |
Reference no. | 1293008 |
History
editHulme Hippodrome (1902–c. 1905)
editThe building was originally known as the Hippodrome (named 1902–1905) and opened on 6 October 1902. The theatre and its larger conjoined Grand Junction Theatre (named 1901–c.1905), were part of the theatrical empire of W. H. Broadhead. The two theatres were reportedly connected by an arcade,[2] though most other researchers dispute this. The combined building of both theatres was the Broadhead's company headquarters for their circuit of 17 theatres across the North West of England. [3] [4]
One researcher suggests that "aqua shows" with a water stage being installed were being considered during construction in 1901 "but did not come to fruition" (p273).[4] There are also a few community stories that the smaller theatre was built in the same year as the larger theatre and not a year later as most accounts report, and that in that first year experiments were held including with animal performances, but the only document found to date to support these stories is one potentially speculative architectural drawing showing entrances for "horses" to a circular performance area.[5]
Grand Junction Theatre (c.1905–1929)
editThe theatre originally seated 1,500 and was used for variety acts, while the larger Grand Junction next door concentrated on staging dramatic productions. Fairly quickly in c.1905 the names and the contents of the two theatres were swapped for commercial reasons: this theatre the (former) Hippodrome became the Grand Junction Theatre and continued with dramatic works, while its more popular variety performances were transferred to use the bigger auditorium next door in the (new) Hulme Hippodrome.[4]
Junction Picture Theatre (1929–1950)
editSome time around 1929 the Grand Junction Theatre was converted into a cinema, renamed as the Junction Picture Theatre, an under-researched era.[4] The entire building with both theatres was bought by Buxton Estates in 1932, reportedly to pay for Broadhead's death duties, with an onward sale to James Brennan in 1938.[4][3]
The Playhouse (1950–1955)
editIn 1950 the cinema was converted back to being used as a theatre, now named The Playhouse. The first performance in the newly converted theatre took place on 22 January 1951, The Happiest Days of Your Life, a farce that had recently been made into a film. It became the new base for the Frank H Fortescue Players repertory company of actors who had played in the Hulme Hippodrome during the 1940s.[6]
BBC Playhouse, studio (1955–1986)
editIn December 1955, the BBC bought The Playhouse from Brennan's Cinemas Limited to be used a fully equipped rehearsal and production studio for radio and television shows, and the connecting doorways in the internal party wall to Hulme Hippodrome were bricked up. James Brennan retained his ownership of Hulme Hippodrome next door for five more years until 1960. The BBC had previously been hiring the Hulme Hippodrome at weekends for mostly radio recordings (1950–1956) and the BBC needed a studio full-time due to moving out of premises overlooking Piccadilly Gardens. The first programme from the Playhouse, a televised revue entitled Call It A Day, was broadcast in 1956.[7]
The Beatles recorded for the BBC programme Teenager's Turn - Here We Go at the Playhouse on 7 March 1962 (broadcast the next day) and again on 11 June 1962 (broadcast on 15 June 1962). The second recording was of five songs, mostly cover versions but including reportedly the first broadcast performance of a Lennon–McCartney song, namely "Ask Me Why".[8]
Other notable artists who recorded at the BBC Playhouse included Ken Dodd, Les Dawson and Jimmy Clitheroe, It was also the base of the BBC Northern Dance Orchestra.[9] The newest BBC Theatre Organ was installed there in 1970, a Wurlitzer, acquired from the Empress Ballroom, Blackpool.[10] It was introduced on 12 November 1970 as a gala performance edition of The Organist Entertains by Robin Richmond, with performances by Ernest Broadbent, Reginald Dixon and Reginald Porter Brown.[11]
The last BBC production in the theatre took place on 25 August 1986.[2] Meantime the Playhouse had been designated as a Grade II (two) heritage listed building on 8 June 1997, the same day as the conjoined Hulme Hippodrome.[12]
On 2 April 2002, a radio programme in the series Palace of Laughter was broadcast on Radio 4 with interviews of various people who had played at the Playhouse in the BBC years.[9]
The Nia Centre (1991–1997)
editWith funding provided by North West Arts and by the Association of Greater Manchester Authorities (AGMA) Grants Committee and reportedly other groups, the building was subsequently bought and converted into an arts centre for African and Caribbean cultures, called the Nia Centre (1991–1997), holding at this point a 900-seat theatre licence including the circle.[13] It claimed to be "the first large-scale, black-led arts centre in Europe".[14] The Nia Centre's first event was in the week of 2 May 1991 and on that date featured a performance by Nina Simone.[15]
The £1.3 million funding for the Nia Centre included capital works as well as revenue, and the use of the stage and fly-tower was substantially changed to create new rooms and offices behind and above 'the iron' safety curtain, which became permanently lowered becoming a new wall with a cafe-bar behind and rooms above. Some audience sight lines were also reportedly reduced.[16] The architects were Mills Beaumont Leavey and Tim Ronalds.[17]
A summary of an evaluation of the Nia Centre looked at:
- "the little-documented failure in the 1990s of the Nia Centre, the UK's first black arts centre which opened in Hulme, Manchester in 1991. [This] exploration raises a number of key ethical challenges: How in the aftermath of the Nia's collapse and in the almost complete absence of archival records, is the historian to mediate what inevitably are multiple truths coming from different perspectives?"[14]
Fountain Gate Chapel
editIn 2012 The Playhouse was used by the evangelical Fountain Gate Chapel,[18] and in 2017 the building was sold at auction to a new owner, a local property company.
Niamos Centre
editAs of 2024[update], the building is tenanted by Niamos Ltd, a non-profit community organisation, and known as the Niamos Centre.[19]
The building
editThe building is grade II listed and located on Chichester Road, Hulme.[19]
See also
editReferences
editCitations
edit- ^ a b Rudyard & Wyke 1994, p. 36
- ^ a b Rudyard & Wyke 1994, p. 37
- ^ a b Cutts, Randle S. (2014). The Bread and Butter Tour - a theatrical journey through the North West. Manchester, UK: (self-published).
- ^ a b c d e Garlick, Victoria (2014). Quick, Clean, Smart & Bright. PhD thesis, University of Manchester.
- ^ "Archive and local collections - Architectural plans | Manchester City Council". manchester.gov.uk. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
- ^ "News item". Manchester Evening News. 5 July 1950.
- ^ ""BBC Buys Hulme Playhouse for Use as Studio"". Manchester Guardian. 25 November 1955.
- ^ Stanley, Bob (2022). Let's Do It: The birth of pop. Faber.
- ^ a b Palace of Laughter, episode 3/6 "Manchester Playhouse", tx 2 April 2002, BBC Radio 4, Producer: Libby Cross. BBC Programme Index; www.genome.ch.bbc.co.uk
- ^ Tony Nuttall. The Playhouse Theatre, Manchester
- ^ 'Gala Performance of The Organist Entertains', BBC Radio 2, 12 November 1970
- ^ "Advice Report 47098: Hulme Hippodrome and The Playhouse". English Heritage. 7 November 2013.
- ^ Rudyard & Wyke 1994, p. 43
- ^ a b Cochrane, Claire (2016) Facing the Face of the Other: The Case of the Nia Centre. In: Theatre History and Historiography Ethics, Evidence and Truth. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, UK, pp. 121–146.
- ^ "Nina at the NIA". Visit Manchester. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
- ^ "Hulme Playhouse Theatre - Building | Architects of Greater Manchester".
- ^ "The Nia Culture Centre scheme design drawings for the conversion of the Playhouse Theatre, Hulme, into the Nia Centre". Manchester Libraries. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
- ^ Glendinning, Amy (15 March 2012). "Church stages rescue bid for historic Nia Centre in Hulme". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
- ^ a b "History of the Nia Centre". NIAMOS. 6 October 1902. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
Bibliography
edit- Rudyard, Nigel; Wyke, Terry (1994), Manchester Theatres, Bibliography of North West England, ISBN 978-0-947969-18-9