Amharclann an Gheata[1] | |
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Former names | Dublin Gate Theatre |
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Address | 1 Cavendish Row,Dublin,Ireland |
Coordinates | 53°21′11″N6°15′44″W / 53.35306°N 6.26222°W /53.35306; -6.26222 |
Public transit | Connolly station LuasGreen Line: O'Connell Street Upper / Parnell |
Owner | The Gate Theatre Trust[2] |
Capacity | 371[3] |
Opened | 1928 |
TheGate Theatre is atheatre on Cavendish Row inDublin, Ireland. It was founded in 1928.
The Gate Theatre was founded in 1928 byHilton Edwards andMicheál MacLiammóir[4] withDaisy Bannard Cogley andGearóid Ó Lochlainn.[5] During their first season, they presented seven plays, including Ibsen'sPeer Gynt, O’Neill's TheHairy Ape and Wilde'sSalomé.[6] They offered Dublin audiences an introduction to the world of European and American theatre as well as classics from the modern and Irish repertoire.[4] It was at the Gate thatOrson Welles,James Mason,Geraldine Fitzgerald andMichael Gambon began their acting careers.
The company played for two seasons at thePeacock Theatre and then moved to the 18th Century Rotunda Annex - the ‘Upper Concert Hall’, the Gate's present home, with Goethe's Faust opening on 17 February 1930.[6]
The newly established Gate Theatre ran into financial difficulties and a meeting was called on 12 December 1930 to announce its closure. In a surprise announcement,Lord Longford offered to buy up the remaining shares, valued at £1,200 and the theatre was saved. Longford and his wifeLady (Christine) Longford worked with Edwards and MacLiammóir at the Gate until 1936, when a split occurred and two separate companies were formed which played at the Gate for six months each. The companies also toured for six months until the death of Lord Longford in 1961.[7]
During this period Edwards and MacLiammóir (Gate Theatre Productions) performed in Dublin'sGaiety Theatre and toured productions to Europe, Egypt and North America.
From the 1980s onwards the Gate, under the directorship ofMichael Colgan, cemented its international relationship, touring plays around the world for audiences from Beijing to New York. The theatre established relationships with contemporary playwrights includingSamuel Beckett,Harold Pinter andBrian Friel. In 1991 the first-ever Beckett Festival was produced, presenting all 19 stage plays over three weeks. The first-ever festival of Pinter's plays followed, along with many premieres and productions of Friel's work[6] including the production ofFaith Healer withRalph Fiennes which won a Tony Award on Broadway.[8] Among other firsts was the production of Chekhov'sThree Sisters in a new version byFrank McGuinness with three real sisters, the award-winningSinéad,Sorcha andNiamh Cusack. The production also featured the veteran star of Irish theatre and father of the three actresses,Cyril Cusack and the Oscar-nominated actressLesley Manville. The production opened in March 1990 and transferred to theRoyal Court Theatre in London later that year.[9]
With the support of funders, the fabric of the building was restored and renovated under the guidance of Ronnie Tallon andScott, Tallon Walker Architects.[10] This included the provision of a new wing, which incorporated a studio space – The Gate Studio – for rehearsals and workshops.
The Gate Theatre is an old building having been completed around 1791.[11] It was not designed with wheelchair access as a priority. There is a wheelchair lift at the back of the building.[12]