Glasgow Empire Theatre

Glasgow Empire
Glasgow Palace Empire and the Gaiety
Address 31-35 Sauchiehall Street
Glasgow
{Scotland}
Owner Moss Empires
Capacity 2,100
Construction
Opened 1897
Closed 31 March 1963
Rebuilt 1931
Years active 66
Architect Frank Matcham

Glasgow Empire Theatre, known as the Glasgow Palace Empire until the early 1900s, was a major theatre in Glasgow, Scotland, which opened in 1897 on the site of the Gaiety Theatre at 31-35 Sauchiehall Street. It was one of the leading theatres in the UK chain of theatres owned and developed by Moss Empires under the chairmanship of Sir Edward Moss.

Beginning and reopening

The theatre was designed by the renowned theatre architect Frank Matcham for the Moss Empires theatre chain. Vesta Tilley topped the opening bill. The Gaiety had opened in 1874, staging pantomime, opera, musicals and plays but changed to variety, which Moss Empires developed further.

Expanding westwards towards Renfield Street and after a major Art Deco redesign by Sunderland-based architects W & TR Milburn it re-opened in 1931 with a seating capacity of 2,100. The main attraction on the re-opening was Jack Payne and the BBC Dance Band.[1][2]

Theatre attractions

The Empire presented variety, revues, musicals and dance, including Pavlova, winter circus, pantomimes and ice spectaculars especially those produced by Tom Arnold. Over the years many stars appeared including Lilly Langtry, Laurel and Hardy, Sir Harry Lauder, G. H. Elliott, Tommy Lorne, Evelyn Laye, Will Fyffe, Harry Gordon, Robert Wilson, the Logan family and Andy Stewart. Dance bands included Jack Hylton and Joe Loss. Top quality American artistes were greatly welcomed, including the Andrews Sisters and Billy Eckstine. Fats Waller made his European debut in the Empire in 1938. Tony Bennett, Johnnie Ray, Frankie Laine, Connie Francis, Eartha Kitt, Howard Keel, Guy Mitchell, Mel Tormé and Liberace were joined by Frank Sinatra, Dorothy Lamour, Bob Hope, Judy Garland, Jack Benny and a great favourite Danny Kaye. [3]

Other performers from Britain who became regulars included Nat Gonella, Jimmy Young, Harry Secombe, Max Bygraves, Ken Dodd (who brought the house down), Eddie Cochran, Adam Faith, Cliff Richard, the Springfields and Frankie Vaughan before he headlined at the Alhambra Theatre. Welsh singer Dame Shirley Bassey made her debut at the theatre in 1959 and was initially given a hard time before asking the audience to give her a chance, whereupon the singer finished her set and was warmly applauded.[4]

The Empire was notorious within showbiz circles as "The English comic's grave", if their act was slow or thin. Among those judged this way were Bob Monkhouse, Tommy Cooper, Gregg Jevin, Bernie Winters and Morecambe and Wise. Des O'Connor pretended to faint when the Glasgow audience started jeering his act and was duly dragged off stage. Roy Castle survived because of his versatility.[5]

Comedian Ken Dodd famously disparaged attempts to psychoanalyse humour with the rebuttal, "The trouble with Sigmund Freud is that he never played second house at the Glasgow Empire after both halves of the Old Firm had just lost!"

Final curtain

The final curtain came down on the theatre on 31 March 1963 with a cast that included the Red Army Choir, Duncan Macrae, Robert Wilson, Iain Cuthbertson, Albert Finney, Rikki Fulton and Andy Stewart.[6] The site is now occupied by Empire House, an office and retail development, and 31-35 Sauchiehall Street are occupied by the Body Shop and Dino's restaurant respectively.

References

  1. "The Glasgow Empire story". Retrieved 29 March 2011.
  2. "DSA Architect Biography Report". Dictionary of Scottish Architects. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  3. "The Glasgow Empire Palace Theatre". Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  4. "Dame Shirley Bassey going strongly after tough Scots debut". Daily Record. Retrieved 29 March 2011.
  5. Alan Murphy, Rebecca Ford (2001). Footprint Glasgow Handbook:The Travel Guide. Footprint Handbook Ltd. p. 131. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  6. "Glasgow Empire Theatre". Retrieved 25 May 2011.

Coordinates: 55°51′52″N 4°15′16″W / 55.86444°N 4.25444°W / 55.86444; -4.25444

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.