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Lighthouse is an arts centre in Poole, Dorset, England.According to Arts Council England it is the largest arts centre in the United Kingdom outside London. [1]It has a 669-seat theatre, a 1,500 seat concert hall, a 130-seat studio, a 103-seat cinema, a large gallery for photography and art, a restaurant and four function rooms.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... move to sidebar hide. Lighthouse Theatre may refer to: Lighthouse (arts centre, Poole) Lighthouse Theatre ...
The theatre was built in 1935 as part of the New Deal's Works Progress Administration (WPA) programme. [2] It was designed by architect Aymar Embury II, who also designed the Cape May Point State Park Lighthouse and the New Jersey State Capitol Annex. [3] From 2010–2017, the venue was leased by the Downtown Performing Arts Center (DPAC).
The playwright hopes to bring "Pilot Island & Her Keepers," which dramatizes stories of their lives, to a Door County theater as early as next year.
The Tempest, 1964 The Merchant of Venice, 2008 Marie Bushell as Rosalind in As You Like It in 2017. Brownsea Open Air Theatre (commonly abbreviated BOAT) is an open-air Shakespearean theatre company based in Poole, Dorset that have performed large theatrical productions since 1964. [1]
By taking the new name and the $300,000 investment scheduled over the next five years, it would be providing three arts-related scholarships each year, a summer theater program, upgrade in the lighting and sound, and co-sponsor additional events at the center. In 2015, the name was changed to the Investors Bank Performing Arts Center. [3]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Dorset 1881 12 m (39 ft) ... Happisburgh Lighthouse Trust (from 1990) 114-1668: Hartland Point Lighthouse:
The Royal Manor Theatre Company (RMTC) were established in 1947 as the Portland Dramatic Society (PDS), a group of local residents who wished to return live theatre to Portland after World War II. The society originally used a variety of local venues across Portland and Weymouth , and occupied the Masonic Hall at Victoria Square between 1957-64.