The Struggle for a Live Theatre in the Potteries begins by attempting to save the old Gaumont cinema in Hanley against all the odds in a working-class economy. Yet it is from a background of despair and difficulty regarding the future of live theatre in Stoke-on-Trent with the almost daily issues of finance and management at the Theatre Royal that a new assessment had to be made with a fresh vision and a line drawn under the past– that of saving the then closed old Gaumont Cinema in Piccadilly, Hanley, and re-opening it as a refurbished working live touring theatre. It became clear to me and others “that live theatre should be seen in a wider context, encompassing a focus for re-generation and an elevation of the city’s profile to encourage much needed inward investment”. Yet there was a further dimension, it was to do with the appreciation and the involvement in the arts “unless there is a focus of top professional shows presented in a well-equipped, suitable and comfortable environment there would be no future for live theatre in North Staffordshire and little to which our young could aspire”. It is these two fundamental principles that became my driving force to save the Regent and to bring it into use as a live well-equipped theatre.
Two x A4 pages

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