Loading...
Village Squire, 1979-06, Page 15London playwright Peter Colley returns to the Blyth Summer Festival this season with his new play I'll Be Back to Get You Before Midnight, a comedy thriller. would drive inland to visit a theatre. Local people for the most part thought theatre was either something confirmed to the big city or practiced by the local lawyer or housewife in an amateur company. Those who had already discovered the joys of theatre already had two theatres within easy driving distance. the huge and prestigious Stratford Festival, and the Huron Country Playhouse in Grand Bend which had just gottert, off the ground a couple of years earlier but was moving ahead rapidly. But the road had been paved for interest in relevant theatre by the success of The Farm Show of Theatre Passe Muraille. It was the first live professional theatre seen by many Western Ontario people and they were fascinated at seeing people like themselves appear on stage as characters, in seeing their problems and frustrations acted out on the stage. When people learned that the Blyth theatre was providing the same kind of programming, they began to come in. it was this local audience, the audience from a 40 or 50 mile radius of the village, that still provides the bulk of the patrons for the theatre. Local support was . strong from the beginning. The first opening night saw a packed hall as the Blyth village council and the Legion took part in ceremonies that rededicated the Memorial Hall to the memory of the fallen soliders of two world wars. It was a memorable night. Patrons were plagued by the problem that was to be one of the most stubborn in the next few years: heat. The temperature of the building rose as the night wore on. Actors costumes changed color. The old varnish on the seats in the hall became tacky and patrons stuck to their seats. Yet there was a feeling of electricity in the air during the performance and at a reception afterward. There was a feeling that those present were witnessing a historic beginning. The first season had a tiny budget of only 510,000 including a grant of $2500 from the Ontario Arts Council. The professional staff numbered only six. Local amateurs were recruited for the additional roles in The Mousetrap. A local high school student, Mark Battye played the young Harry in Mostly in Clover. Mr. Roy's wife, Anne worked as unpaid administrator and interested people from the community chipped in to help any way they could. This year the staff will number over 30 at the Festival. It's still understaffed in many ways, but the workload is certainly easier than in the old days. The budget, though still small in comparison to many theatres, is now over $110,000. The theatre is able to accomplish more with its money than many theatres because of the skills of Mr. Roy and administrative director Jan Dutton of squeezing the most out of every dollar. Still,. like all theatres it is heavily dependent on private donations and government grants. Some $29,000 must be raised each year from private donors. That first season saw nearly 3000 people attend the theatre. Last year nearly 14,000 people paid their way in. They found things much more comfortable than the hardy audiences of the 1975 season. The sticky seats have long since disappeared after a Local Initiatives Project in the winter of 1975-76 saw Memorial Hall spruced up from top to bottom with new paint and a cleaning up of the woodwork. Last year the improvement so long awaited by audience members and actors alike was added with the installation of air conditioning. The airconditioning was step one of a program to update the facilities of Memorial Hall to make it a first class place to perform theatre as well as watch it. One of the banes of actors has been Modernizing your kitchen? check the quality of these all -wood cabinets by Belvedere BELVEDERE KITCHEN CABINETS Put on a happy face and install these handsome. beautifully matched cabinets All units have the easy to clean surfaces and they carry the Belvedere mark of craftmanship. Ball -Macaulay Clinton 40 Wellington 482-3405 Mirneallrel� BUILDING CEN1RE Hensall 151 Richmond St. S. 262-2418 Seaforth 112 High St. 527-0910 June 1979, Village Squire 13