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New
Farnham Repertory Company:
Our Mission
(continued) |
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
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
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Surely times have moved on?
Isn't repertory is old hat? |
These questions contain an assumption that
things have improved with the passage of time. But look at the facts:
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During 55 years of professional
theatre in Farnham (1941 - 96) there were 6 or 8 performances
every week of the year.
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In the 18 months to Sep 2004 there
was an average of less than ONE professional performance per week
in Farnham. This was made up of
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But repertory is too
traditional, isn't it? |
For “traditional", read “mainstream".
Those aged 30-45 (mainly people with
families) and the over 60s are demographically the two largest groupings
in Waverley (these are the Council's own figures.) Their tastes tend
to be mainstream and the NFRC's choice of programme reflects this.
A theatre must offer audiences
programmes of plays they want to see, including ones they do not realise
they want to see until they see them! It should not be offering
programmes which over-ambitious artistic directors think audiences ought
to want to see. A programme can be both good and popular.
The NFRC has proved in its four
seasons that it knows how to select plays audiences will support. |
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Aren't the days long
gone when directors were expected to direct plays back-to-back or actors
to act in consecutive plays? |
What seems to underlie this question is
an assumption that standards suffer when directors and actors are
working on new material week after week.
They do not, and for this reason: the
mind is a muscle — exercise it and it develops, do the reverse and it
atrophies. Practice, pressure and routine create regular output and high
standards at costs that are the lowest possible. |
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Alright, but surely you
can see that the requisite funding would not be available for repertory
theatre? |
Repertory is coming back:
- The Royal Shakespeare Company and
Chichester now use it
- Dundee, Colchester and Salisbury
are bringing it back increasingly
- Liverpool, Northampton, Bristol
and Sheffield are re-introducing elements of it to suit their
circumstances.
All of these are subsidised houses.
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Don't you think the
costs would be prohibitively high? |
It is widely and wrongly thought in
Farnham that the Redgrave would need £450,000 annual revenue support. This is
not the case. NFRC would look for £150,000.
The NFRC would look to raise £50,000
from fundraising, sponsorship donations and pledges (remember how the
Redgrave was originally funded, with half of it coming brick by brick
and seat by seat from individual donations?).
It would seek a further £100,000 in
revenue funding, principally from Southern Arts (the regional Arts
Council body), Waverley and Farnham Town Council.
A recent report about the arts in
Basingstoke from Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council includes the
following statement.
“There is a mounting evidence
(from the Management Centre) that legacies and private giving
provides a larger pool of funding than either commercial or business
sources or grant making charities."
And here, finally, is a quote from
culture minister, Tessa Jowell, on the value and contribution of cultural
provision to a community:
“Markets have their place, but
theatres, galleries or concert halls also need intelligent public
subsidy if complex culture is to take its place at the heart of
national life."
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Links to related pages:
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