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The beginning of a new era as the Roundhouse re-opens
It was a dirty hole... but what
a great place!
TORQUIL Norman, the man behind the Roundhouse, allowed himself
a smile of triumph on Tuesday as he saw his personal ten year
dream project finally come to fruitition.
The £30m 1800-seat Chalk Farm venue is set to open on
June 1 with a performance from Argentine company De La Guardas
Fuerzabruta in the main theatre and a new piece of drama entitled
The Foolish Man performed by young stars nurtured by the Roundhouses
youth project in its new wing.
Mr Norman bought the Grade-II listed Victorian railway shed
in 1996 for £6 million after reading about plans to make
it in to an architects museum in the New Journal. The philanthropist,
who made his money through manufacturing toys, set up a trust
to turn the derelict building into a performance venue and provide
a creative arts centre for young people.
Events will include dance, classical, jazz, rock and pop music,
installations, lectures, screenings, theatre and contemporary
circus. A full schedule will be announced later in the spring.
The Roundhouse closed completely for the refit since
2002 was originally built as a railway engine shed in
1846. But in 1856 longer locomotives made the building redundant.
The building has a new roof and its central glass lantern has
been restored allowing natural light into the space for the
first time.
Jimi Hendrix, Otis Redding, The Doors and Pink Floyd all played
to packed crowds in the venues late-1960s heyday. Mr Norman,
who lives in Camden Town ,said: Today marks the culmination
of ten years hard work. We now have an opening date, a fabulous
show and a host of young people ready to occupy our unique Roundhouse
Studios.
A new wing has been added to the original building with a café
and a bar. It includes a separate 150-seated space Studio 42
the name paying homage to Arnold Weskers pioneering
Centre 42 that aimed to bring the world of theatre closer to
the people.
Mr Norman added: People did not think we would reach this
stage and now I am looking forward to seeing the first
show.
by DAN CARRIER and ROISIN GADELRAB
THE re-opening of the Roundhouse as an arts venue has prompted
performers and promoters from its past to recall the venues
glory days.
For Trust chairman Torquil Norman the announcement of an opening
date for the first show in the new Roundhouse has brought back
treasured memories of visits to the Roundhouse with his five
children.
Mr Norman said: I used to visit it regularly in the 1970s
and 1980s.
The venue played host to the leading names of the British rock
scene in the 1960s and 1970s, and even when after
closing in 1984, secret warehpouse style raves made sure the
venue was still linked with entertainment for a generation of
local people.
Mr Norman said he hoped the new training areas, which will give
young people the chance to practise their skills, would produce
the Roundhouses headliners of the future.
But he added the Roundhouse had a much bigger and more important
role.
He said; We just want to give young people a chance to
be creative, to take them away from doing nothing and keep them
off the streets.
And he said the Roundhouse would live up to its previous incarnation
as a cutting edge venue. He said: It was known for being
quite wild and it has a reputation for superb work. Thats
what we aim to continue doing.
Ex-Dr Who actor Sylvester McCoy, who lives in Parliament
Hill, recalls rubbing shoulders with Hollywood greats at the
Roundhouse and describes how he put stellar Richard Burton
and Elizabeth Taylors noses out of joint.
He recalls: I managed to make Burton and Taylor flee from
the stage. They used to have short films and lectures there.
It was really interesting but when Burton and Taylor were at
the height of their fame people would get up and say things
like: Ms Taylor you have lovely long eyelashes.
Burton then got up and said: I believe in the censorship
of the body and not of the word. I asked why, and he said
because thats what I believe. I asked but,
why and Taylor replied: well who would want to see a picture
of your ass ducky?. Then they got up and left the stage.
He had got a job in the box office in 1967 after enduring a
miserable time working in the city.
He said: The Roundhouse was a lifesaver for me. The company
I was working for went bust so I decided to become a hippy.
The Roundhouse had a hippy who could cook and she told
me they needed a hippy who could count for the box office so
I joined up.
DJ and promoter Jeff Dexter went to the Roundhouse
for a flower power happening in 1966 and ended up
running shows and nights there for the next couple of decades.
He said: It was a dirty hole but a great place.
Mr Dexter, who lives in Fortune Green, staged nights called
Middle Earth, UFO and Implosion at the venue, and booked the
biggest names in rock.
He continued: You name them, I booked them. The music
business in London was different then there were few
big venues and the Roundhouse could hold a lot of people.
And he revealed how every band got the same fee except
for three of them.
He said: The going rate was £20, except for The
Who and Pink Floyd, who got £43 each because of the cost
of hiring a van for them, and the Rolling Stones, who took every
thing and then gave me 10 per cent back.
But perhaps his favourite memory was standing on stage with
Jimi Hendrix: I met him when he moved to London in 1966,
and I was thrilled when he agreed to play at the Roundhouse
and I am thrilled tosee it reopening again.
Pictured right: A letter confirming the Rolling Stones
appearance at the Roundhouse in 1971.
Playwright and broadcaster Ned Sherrin would regularly produce
shows at the Roundhouse and remembers how the rock and
roll vibe of the place disrupted some of his rehearsals.
He recalls: We did a production of Leiber and Stollers
Only in America in 1979 or 1980.
We had a terrible time getting the set built because the
people working there had just discovered cocaine so we had to
stay up all night to make
sure the building carried on.
Childrens theatre guru Anna Scher used to take her
students from her successful Islington-based childrens
drama company to rehearse at the Roundhouse in the 1970s.
She said: It was useful to get a feeling of what it meant
to be on a big stage.
There was always a feeling of excitement about working
there, because of the big names who we knew had appeared there
before.
It was a wonderful place to work. It is a place that holds
so many special memories, I am just pleased to find out its
going to be opened to create some more.
How Weskers shed came alive
by GERALD ISAAMAN
Playwright Sir Arnold Wesker originally bought the derelict
old engine shed, then known as the Roundhouse in 1962 after
the TUC passed Resolution 42 calling on the trade union movement
to back the arts. Hence the creation of Centre 42 with Wesker
at the helm.
But raising funds was always dire, as Wesker (pictured), then
living in Bishops Road, Highgate, records in his autobiography
As Much As I Dare, published in 1994, in which he tells how
writers block halted the creation of his play The Old
Ones.
I was failing to raise the money required to establish,
at The Roundhouse in Chalk Farm, Centre 42, the arts project
to which I had given, on and off, the previous nine years of
my life, Wesker recalls.
The unions whose Resolution 42 on the 1960 TUC
agenda had inspired the organisation had abandoned us;
the Arts Council expressed fear of us; Robert Maxwell was our
not very diligent treasurer; Jennie Lee, who had been on our
board, was now Britains first Minister of the Arts and
seemed to be sabotaging our efforts. Not the most tranquil years
of my life.
He also tells the saga of how he tried to persuade the novelist
and playwright JB Priestley and his wife, Jacquetta Hawkes,
to back the Centre 42 appeal, a fever preventing him from having
lunch with them at their flat in the Albany, Piccadilly.
I was flat on my back, too ill to keep the date,
he reports. Instead we invited them to Bishops Road, promising
that Dusty (Weskers wife) would bring lunch up into my
bedroom. They graciously agreed.
There they sat, poor dears, in front of the window, food
on their laps, eating and conversing with this wild-eyed young
colleague rendered prone with pain caused by he knew not what,
confusing their sympathies between this hurt and his dream to
convert the Roundhouse in Chalk Farm into a pulsating centre
for art aimed at a popular audience.
None of us could know I was delirious from toxic poisoning,
though JB might have guessed when I asked him: Tell me,
JB Ive calculated that if there are 75,000 English-speaking
amateur companies around the world paying £10 per performance,
and if only a third of them perform just one of my five plays
in the course of five years, Id earn £250,000 a
year for amateur rights alone, which would do nicely, but am
I right?
I mean what are your earnings from amateur
royalties? I think he smiled a canny Yorkshiremans
smile and gave a canny Yorkshiremans reply.
Not bad, not bad, aye, lad, not bad.
Wesker adds: I never made anything resembling that amount
of money from my amateur royalties, not even up to this day
30 years and 28 days later, though Ive no doubt JB did,
for he was an intelligent man with a popular touch which seems
to have eluded me. He signed the appeal. |
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