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A Registered Charity for
the benefit of the local community with
Trustees drawn from local people with an active
interest in the theatre, and is supported by
Tendring District Council
The Theatre
stages a varied programme of
entertainment throughout the Winter
Season and will be presenting an
all-new winter show, ‘WINTER
SPECIAL’ produced and directed by John
Warwick of AJ Associates. During
December 2008. Regular
ART
EXHIBITIONS are staged in the
Theatre's Foyer. There is a LICENSED
BAR and facilities for the
disabled. All areas are available
for hire.
Run largely on
volunteer staff, the Theatre is truly at
the heart of the Tendring community,
successfully staging a broad variety of
professional and amateur productions,
regularly playing to full houses.
Appearances by well known artistes such as
Roy Hudd, Joe Brown, and Marty Wilde are
shared with rising stars or complete
unknowns from the amateur stage, and the
Theatre’s own youth group, the West Cliff
Stage Foundation. The Stage Door Bar is the
meeting place for many of the local
community groups and the very successful
Friends fundraising events.
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The West Cliff Theatre in Clacton-on-Sea, England, dates
back to 1894 when Bert Graham, a 21-year-old civil servant, set
up a concert party on a patch of waste ground in Agate Road. In
1899, along with Bernard Russell and Will Bentley, Graham moved
the concert party to the West Cliff Gardens.
Bernard Russell died in 1910, but Graham and Bentley
continued the concert party. In 1912 they signed up a new
romantic baritone by the name of Stanley Holloway. He stayed
with the company for three years.
In 1928, Graham and Bentley built a new theatre on the site
of their concert party, the theatre which still stands in
Clacton-on-Sea today as the West Cliff Theatre. In 1934, Graham
and Bentley sold the theatre and it was bought by Will Hammer,
who already owned several seaside theatres. In 1934 he also
founded the film company Hammer Film Productions, which was
later to gain worldwide fame as the producer of many horror
films.
After the Second World War, the theatre, under Hammer,
continued to put on summer shows. The 1947 show, Victory
Vanities starred Nosmo King and a young up-and-coming comedian,
appearing in his first-ever summer season, one Frankie
Howerd.
Will Hammer died in 1957 and there was much doubt over
whether the theatre would continue. Eventually, Clacton Council
bought the theatre and continued to put on shows. In 1973,
Francis Golightly took over the responsibility for staging the
summer shows. He was responsible for unearthing some major new
talent who went on to star in the West End - names such as
Ruthie Henshall, Alex Bourne and Gary Wilmot.
In 1985, a local group of theatre enthusiasts took over the
day-to-day running of the theatre and in 1995 bought the
freehold of the theatre from the council. The West Cliff
(Tendring) Trust is now solely responsible For putting on the
shows at the theatre and still maintain the tradition of
putting on a summer show. Last year (2006), the show starred
Jimmy Cricket while this year 2007, Bernie Clifton will be
back.
As well as the summer show the Trust put on year-round
entertainment with one-off variety shows, plays, children's
shows, dance and other shows. There is also a thriving youth
section, the West Cliff Stage Foundation, which puts on
performances during the year, but is also a valuable means of
training youngsters for the theatre.
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