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New
Farnham Repertory Company:
Mission statement |
The
New Farnham Repertory Actors' Company, unlike its
previous incarnation, the New Farnham Repertory
Company, is not a campaigning organisation. That
mantle has passed to the Farnham Theatre
Association.
The contents of this page
do not represent the activities of the new company and will shortly be
moved into the archive section of the website.
Links to related pages
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THE OVERALL AIM
The Redgrave should be reopened as a theatre, with
professional theatre at its core,
and a range of community and other events
integrated into the theatre programme.
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Comment
The
Redgrave's prospects would be severely sabotaged if it was called or
thought of as a multi-use venue. The Maltings is a multi-use venue and
the Redgrave would need to establish its own very clearly defined
identity. It must be thought of from the start as a theatre, because
that, essentially, is what it would be. |
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THE
TIMESCALE
Run by the New Farnham Repertory Company
it would operate as a theatre,
with professional
theatre at its core,
for 34 weeks in the year (about 8 months)
from September to April.
For the remaining 18 weeks (about 4 months)
from May to August, it would operate as
a
community resource.
During the
8 months
period, the emphasis, but not exclusively, would be on professional
theatre.
In the 4 months
period the emphasis, but again not exclusively, would be on community
use. |
Comment
For
professional theatre to succeed, it needs to establish its identity, its
brand image. From 1996-98, the Redgrave offered a mixed bag of plays,
films and dance, all showing briefly. No one knew what it offered or
stood for and it duly failed. There was no brand. The Redgrave brand
used to, and will again, consist of sustained programmes of mainstream theatre — a better and
less loaded word than traditional.
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THE PROGRAMME
The Redgrave would operate, uniquely in this area
of Surrey and Hampshire,
as a repertory theatre. This means a programme of mainstream theatre,
transmitting the culture of our extraordinary past, integrated with contemporary and commercial work.
The programme would
include:
-
full scale classical
productions
(e.g. Henry 4 part 1)
-
adaptations of classics
(e.g. A
Tale of Two Cities)
-
period and modern farce
(e.g.
Charley’s Aunt)
-
the plays of other
nations (e.g.
Our Town)
-
modern contemporary
plays
-
new plays
-
musicals
-
Restoration, 18th, 19th
and early 20th century plays
-
commercial comedy.
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Comment
It is
frequently said, as though it were a self-evident truth, that the
Redgrave could not flourish or even survive, because of the proximity of
the theatres in Guildford, Woking and Basingstoke, not to mention
Aldershot and Farnham's Maltings. This is completely and categorically
wrong. The only known research on this topic, by John Myerscough in the
'90s, reveals that theatres in proximity, provided each has its own
distinctive identity, boost and promote each other ‘s audiences rather
than deplete them.
In this
locality each theatre has a different programme:
Guildford: pre-West End shows + middle scale touring
Woking:
post-West End large scale touring
Basingstoke: part producing, part receiving house
Aldershot: popular shows (Princes Hall) and fringe arts (West End
Centre)
The
Maltings: performance space for workshops, occasional performances
and small-scale local touring.
Only one
piece of what would make a very attractive jigsaw is missing —
repertory, and that, we suggest, is what the Redgrave is ideally
placed to do. It was built for that, was greatly successful when it pursued
that policy ('70s and '80s) and the NFRC's annual seasons, which
started in 2000, were
equally successful: a miniature version of what the Redgrave did in full
before. |
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THE COMPANY
Resident:
9 permanent professional staff, working
in management, administrative and maintenance capacity
Seasonal:
6 professional staff, employed for the 34
weeks of the repertory season.
Acting:
a slowly changing ensemble, with most
actors in several productions. Audiences would then see actors doing
what actors are there to do — perform a number of different roles!
Actors become honorary members of the community and audiences tend to
almost adopt them. A great sense of belonging is created — actors and
audiences belong to the theatre and each other.
Voluntary:
which supplements the resident and acting
companies, as it has already done in the last four seasons, in the
following capacities: - acting - technical - box-office - front-of-house
- administration. The NFRC company has something over 200 volunteers.
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Comment
19, 20, 12
and 11 volunteers acted in the NFRC's four seasons’ worth of productions
to 2004.
Between 50
and 70 volunteers in all capacities were involved in each season
directly.
A version
of this model was in operation during the long successful years at the
Castle and the early days at the Redgrave. It is by far the most
productive and cost effective way of running a theatre.
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Links to related pages:
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