Sunday 15 November 2009

An old Queen Elizabeth Theatre finds her new voice


VANCOUVER - Vancouver’s much maligned Queen Elizabeth Theatre re-opened this week after years of re-construction and decades of controversy. For a Thursday morning sneak peek walkthrough, the wraps came off the theatre’s design revamp (courtesy of Proscenium Architecture and Interiors and Aerocoustics Engineering). On Friday evening Vancouver Civic Theatres hosted a celebration and a short musical test drive.
The changes are significant and visually stunning.
Vancouver had long needed a proper civic auditorium when the Queen E was planned in the 1950s,. In a competition brokered by UBC School of Architecture’s Fred Lasserre, a jury whose leading light was famed Eero Saarinen opted for a design from Montreal based firm ARCOP. This was the first theatre by the team that went on to design Montreal’s Place des Arts and the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, and the design was an attractive one—more than a little influenced by London’s Royal Festival Hall. The late Abraham Rogatnick wrote that the Queen E “lifted this city into the realm of urban sophistication with a suddenness that makes us shake our heads and rub our eyes.”
Unfortunately, not everyone has shared his enthusiasm for the venue. Originally it was intended to be a “multi purpose” hall of about 3,000 seats which would supposedly house everything from orchestra concerts and opera to stage shows and lectures. It didn’t. Space that works for opera doesn’t work for an orchestral program or a recital, let alone a rock concert. And attractive as the space was, most of us hated its sound. Recent acoustician John O’Keefe agrees: “The old acoustic was typical of its age, with a very dry sound and not a very good spacial acoustic; the sound didn’t surround you. It wasn’t loud enough, not intimate enough, not warm enough, and it didn’t respond to the bass.”
From what we could hear Friday, all this may be a thing of the past. Even singing from the midst of the Orchestra section, the combined voices of the Vancouver Welsh Mens’ Chorus and the UBC Opera Ensemble rang out with greater presence and vibrancy.
The acoustic solution was effected in stages. Several seasons ago the dramatic, quasi-expressionist ceiling was taken out, with significant impact on the sound; the mechanical system was made absolutely quiet. Then came the real challenge, making the room narrower in acoustic terms, more in line with the traditional shoe-box concept that seems to consistently produce good listening conditions. The overall aim is clarity, with new reflective surfaces tilted downward and inward.
Wood is everywhere, carpets have been banished except in the far reaches of the balcony, and new bamboo reflectors will redirect sound. In a courteous gesture to the hall’s original incarnation, some of the golden plywood side walls have been retained. As well as creating more leg room, the reduction in seats offers better sound reflection.
Of course it will take performances and productions of all sorts before we find out all there is to know about the Queen E’s personality and her new voice. But for those of us who’ve longed for improvement to a key venue in our cultural treasury, the auguries are very good indeed.

Sunday 8 November 2009

UK theatres bought for £90m Live Nation


Some of the country’s top theatres and playhouses have been bought by the Ambassador Theatre Group (ATG) for £90 million, making ATG one of the largest theatre groups in the UK.
The company, which already owns such venues as Trafalgar Studios and the Savoy Theatre, announced on Tuesday (3 November) that it had completed a deal with Live Nation which means attractions such as the Edinburgh Playhouse and the Apollo Victoria in London are now under its ownership.
ATG has acquired two West End theatres and 14 regional theatres, bringing the number of ATG theatres to 39.
Howard Panter, ATG's Joint CEO and Creative Director, said: "Live Nation Theatres is blessed with some of the world's best producers and productions. Our aim is to help maintain the shows and theatres as vibrant successes. It will be a privilege to operate this additional group of historic venues."
Meanwhile, the booking period for long-running Queen musical We Will Rock You has just been extended to 23 October 2010.
The NST runs London theatre trips to some of the very best shows, including The Lion King, Oliver!, Wicked and Hairspray.

Wednesday 4 November 2009

Official Guide London Theatres


Long running Queen musical We Will Rock You and World War I drama War Horse have extended their booking periods, taking both shows into October 2010.The latest extension from guitar thrashing rock musical We Will Rock You is the 10th time the popular production has lengthened its London engagement since opening at the Dominion theatre in 2002. Since opening, around 4.6 million theatregoers have seen the Ben Elton-penned show which fits 24 of Queen’s greatest hits into a story about a futuristic world where rock music is banned. A transfer from the National Theatre, War Horse is a much newer addition to the London theatre landscape, having opened at the New London theatre earlier this year. Based on a novel by Michael Morpurgo, the family drama tells the story of young Albert’s horse Joey, who is sold to the cavalry by Albert’s drunken father at the beginning of World War I. Joey’s war sees him fighting for both sides, but Albert can’t forget his equine friend and, though still not old enough to enlist, embarks on a terrible mission to find him. The play, which originated at the National Theatre in 2007, uses life-sized puppets alongside human characters to tell the moving story of friendship amid war, and won two Laurence Olivier Awards in 2008.