Shakespearian Festivals and Theatres
'One thing more,
in reference to this
antient Town, is
observable,' says Dugdale, 'that it gave birth and sepulture to our late famous
Poet Will Shakespere.' (fn. 1) There is evidence that Stratford's principal claim to fame was recognized even as
early as 1630. (fn. 2) Fuller, Aubrey, Rowe, and a number
of lesser known writers record scraps of local Shakespearian tradition, and several travellers and topographers of the late 17th and early 18th centuries
copied out the inscription on the tomb. (fn. 3) In 1756 the
importunities of visitors anxious to see Shakespeare's
mulberry tree in New Place Garden drove the owner,
the Rev. Francis Gastrell, to cut it down, leaving sightseers to content themselves with the souvenirs made
out of the wood by Thomas Sharp, the local watchmaker who purchased it. When Gastrell, in a fit of
pique, caused New Place to be demolished altogether
in 1759 he was forced to leave Stratford 'amidst the
rage and curses of its inhabitants'. (fn. 4) Ten years later,
local pride found expression in the Jubilee of 1769.
The original impulse was due to John Payton, the
landlord of the 'White Lion', a genuine enthusiast and
a friend of the Shakespearian editor, George Alexander
Steevens. (fn. 5) In 1768, when Steevens was staying at the
'White Lion', Payton invited some of his friends among
the leading inhabitants to meet him. The new Town
Hall was then just finished and it was regretted 'that
an open niche had been constructed on the north side
of it without any prospect of obtaining a statue or even
a bust to grace it'. A statue of Shakespeare was suggested as the most fitting adornment and Steevens
offered to persuade Garrick to present one. (fn. 6) The
corporation seconded his endeavours by conferring on
Garrick the freedom of the borough in a box made from
the wood of Shakespeare's mulberry tree. (fn. 7) This led
Garrick not only to present a statue of Shakespeare,
but to come down and organize a Shakespearian
festival at Stratford. (fn. 8)
Garrick's Jubilee has often been described. The
preparations for it occupied the whole summer of 1769
and rivalled even the Middlesex Election in public
interest. (fn. 9) A rotunda almost as large as that at Ranelagh
was erected on the Bancroft. 'Scarcely a house', says
Saunders, 'remained without some alteration and
improvement.' The town was crowded with carpenters,
cooks, and upholsterers, a masquerade warehouse was
opened and sedan chairs, a new sight in Stratford in
1769, were brought from Bath and London. (fn. 10) The
Jubilee lasted from 6 to 8 September. The chief
feature was Garrick's recitation of his Shakespearian
Ode with Arne's music. But the programme also
included serenades, processions, and salvoes of cannon,
a performance of Arne's 'Judith' in the church,
concerts, public breakfasts, and horse-racing on Shottery Meadow, a ball and a masquerade (in which
Boswell figured as a Corsican patriot and Mrs. Crewe
as one of the Witches from Macbeth); fireworks and
transparencies at night; and in fact almost every conceivable attraction except a performance of a Shakespearian play. The procession of Shakespeare's
characters—a principal feature of all such celebrations
in Stratford for the next sixty years—had to be abandoned owing to the weather. Garrick's lavish expenditure involved him in considerable financial loss, which
he only recovered by presenting a stage version of the
Jubilee in the winter season at Drury Lane.
Garrick was therefore unsympathetic to a proposal
that a Shakespeare Jubilee should become an annual
event. Local celebrations, however, were held on the
anniversary of the 'Great Jubilee' for some years afterwards. But these had to be discontinued, apparently
in the later '70's, owing to the great decline in the trades
whose members principally composed the processions.
The foundation of the Shakespeare Lodge of Freemasons, in 1793, was made the occasion of a special
tribute to the poet's memory. (fn. 11) Malone, the first Shakespearian scholar to have access to the local records, (fn. 12)
proposed that a jubilee should be held to mark the
twenty-fifth anniversary of Garrick's famous festival.
But in the national gloom and distress of 1794 the
suggestion found no response. No further celebrations
were held until 1816, when 'a very respectable committee' organized a ball, public banquets, and a firework display to mark the bicentenary of Shakespeare's
death. (fn. 13)
A proposal to erect a monument and mausoleum to
Shakespeare at Stratford seems to have originated with
Charles Matthews, who submitted it to the audience
after a performance at the Town Hall, (fn. 14) but it came to
nothing. In 1824 the Shakespearean Club, which is
still in existence, was founded at the Falcon Inn. One
of the objects of the club was to arrange periodic
Shakespearian festivals, but the first of these, held in
1826, was such a failure that Saunders compares the
promoters of it to Bottom and his friends in A Midsummer Night's Dream. (fn. 15) A second attempt in the
following year was much more successful. (fn. 16) The programme included the laying of the foundation stone of
a new theatre and the procession, in which the characters were taken by professional actors, was said to
have been watched by 30,000 to 40,000 people. The
club was thereupon encouraged to announce a festival
on Shakespeare's birthday as a triennial event. The
growth of the Shakespeare Club during the first few
years of its life was indeed remarkably rapid. Even by
1826, when Saunders contemptuously described it as
'composed chiefly of the younger tradesmen of the
town', it had 150 members. By 1830 there were 400,
including Saunders himself and the majority of the
corporation and distinguished actors such as Charles
Matthews, Serle, and Macready. In January 1830
the club obtained the official patronage of the corporation (fn. 17) and two months later of George IV himself,
who permitted it henceforth to assume the title of the
Royal Shakespearean Club. By 1827 there was already
a rival club in the town, probably the 'True Blue
Shakespearean Club' at the 'Golden Lion', which
unsuccessfully appealed for corporation patronage in
1830. (fn. 18)
The Royal Gala Festival of 23–7 April 1830 was
more ambitious than any such undertaking since
Garrick's. As in 1769, a wooden rotunda was erected,
this time in the Rother Market, in which banquets and
masquerades were held. Moreover, for the first time
a play was given, with Charles Keen as Richard III.
During the next 30 years, however, though occasional
festivals were held, the only regular celebration of the
Birthday was the annual dinner of the Shakespeare
Club. A revival came with the Tercentenary of 1864,
when a series of Shakespearian performances was given
in the temporary Pavilion on the Paddock in Southern
Lane. (fn. 19) The traditional pageant of Shakespeare's
characters, which the committee refused to provide,
was organized at the last moment by an independent
committee of the inhabitants. (fn. 20)
The early theatrical history of Stratford is to be
sought in the frequent entries of payments to strolling
players in the Elizabethan Chamberlains' Accounts. (fn. 21)
The performance of plays in the Gild Hall was
prohibited by the corporation in 1602 (fn. 22) and in 1612,
when the penalty on the bailiff for licensing the players
was increased from 10s. to £10. (fn. 23) In 1622 the King's
Men were given 6s. 'for not playing in the Hall'. (fn. 24) The
prohibition was still in force in 1665 and extended to
any dramatic performance in the Town Hall, the Gild
Hall, the School, or the Market House. (fn. 25) But that it
was sometimes relaxed appears from a payment made
by the bailiff's orders in 1618 and another 'to the
players at Christtide by Mr. Alderman's appoyntement'
in 1633. (fn. 26) In 1633 also Edward Whiting and Robert
Bradshaw and their company of strolling players, who
were charged at Banbury with performing without
licence, admitted to having played during the past
two years at Stratford and at Sir Thomas Lucy's at
Charlecote. (fn. 27)
The first performance actually recorded of a Shakespearian play in the town is of Othello by James Ward
at the Town Hall in 1746. The proceeds were given
to the renovation of the bust in the church. (fn. 28) Ward
was the grandfather of John Philip Kemble and Mrs.
Siddons, and family connexion may therefore help to
account for the frequent visits of his son-in-law Roger
Kemble's company between 1761 and 1782. (fn. 29)
Kemble performed both at the Town Hall and at 'the
Theatre'. The site of the theatre at this time cannot
be identified, unless it is the same as 'The New Theatre
at the Unicorn' mentioned in 1771. This was no
doubt the large barn adjoining the Unicorn Hotel
near the Clopton bridge, and it may have been for
this theatre that an actor named Marriott obtained a
licence from the County Justices in 1789. (fn. 30) About
1777 there was also a theatre at the 'Woolpack'. (fn. 31) Playbills are extant for 'The Theatre' for 1805, 1806,
1807, and 1818 and for 'The New Theatre' for 1795
and 1812, but it is not clear if there were two separate
buildings. The King's Players from the Theatre Royal,
Cheltenham, had the theatre for a season in 1805 and
it was fitted up 'in the best style of accommodation' by
J. Marshall in 1806. It seems likely that this theatre
was in a timber-framed barn in Chapel Lane on or near
the site of the present Union Club. (fn. 32)
No less than four new theatres were opened in Stratford during the 1820's. The first of them, known as the
New Theatre in Moor Towns End, was opened in
November 1821 by one Linley, who claimed that it was
'decorated in a manner superior to that of any other
opened in this town'. This theatre was a converted barn
still standing next door to the cinema in Greenhill Street
and recently used as a garage. The incongruous classic
front bears witness to Linley's adaptations. (fn. 33) In 1823
it was altered and reopened by Chamberlain, manager
of the Leamington and Walsall theatres, and Douglas,
a former member of Linley's company, was proposing
to take it in 1824. (fn. 34) In the autumn of 1823 Davenport,
manager of the Woodstock Theatre, was refused permission by the mayor to bring a company to Stratford
'as being too soon after the closing of Mr. Chamberlain's
season'. He prevailed, however, in the following spring (fn. 35)
and took the Corporation Tithe Barn in Windsor Street
at a rent of 30s. a week. 'The scene was bad and the
lighting worse', says Saunders, who has left a description of the members of this company which sufficiently
accounts for their ill-success. (fn. 36) Davenport, whose real
name was Carnegie, was a young Scotsman whose
strong accent made him 'utterly unfit to open his mouth
before a Southern audience'. Having had little experience of the stage he was under the domination of one
Melmoth (alias Edwin), a man of bad habits and violent
temper, who had left the Bristol Theatre after knocking
down the manager and once drew his sword on Davenport during a performance. The rest of the cast included Sheares, a former manager of the Theatre at
Southend, 'mutinous and ill-disposed, dirty in person
and of bad principles'; his wife, once an actress of some
reputation, both in England and America, but coarsened
and degraded by her marriage; the young Misses
Hewell, who were totally inexperienced and 'could
not articulate beyond a whisper'; and 'supers' such as
Cleaver, 'a little duck-legged makeweight, without
memory or any other qualifications'. Byrne, the musician, had also some talent in representing 'testy old
men' and 'after his performance in the Act, ran round
and played the fiddle in the orchestra until his resumption of stage character was necessary'. The most capable actor, White, left to join the Worcester Company
after the first few nights. The season at the Henley
Street Theatre, as it was called, lasted about two months;
and at the end of June Davenport disbanded the company at four days' notice, leaving them to make what
they could out of the proceeds of the last two nights.
The piece chosen for the last night was The Manager's
Last Kick!
In 1826 the Henley Street theatre was taken by
Francis Raymond, manager of the Leicester and Northampton theatres, who in the following year moved to
the new Shakespearean Theatre erected in Chapel
Lane. (fn. 37) Scowton's Theatre in the Rother Market
was most probably in existence in 1823, and in 1826
its name was changed to Scowton's Royal Pavilion. (fn. 38)
It was used for a circus during the Gala Festival of
1827. Like Raymond, Scowton seems to have been
the manager of a number of provincial theatres (fn. 39) and
his connexion with Stratford may have begun some time
earlier, since in 1825 he was thanking the public 'for
the liberal support he has for many years experienced'.
The Shakespearean Theatre in Chapel Lane is the
only one of the early Stratford theatres with any continuous history. It was built by a company formed in
1826, which included several members of the corporation and of the Shakespeare Club. (fn. 40) The site, purchased from the landlord of the Shakespeare Inn, was
at the west end of what are now the public gardens of
New Place. The foundation stone was laid at the
Gala Festival on 23 April 1827, and the theatre was
opened, with a performance of As You Like It, on 12
December following. It was leased by the proprietors
for seven years to Francis Raymond, who was entitled
to use it as a theatre for not more than three months in
each year. For the first three years the new venture
was a success. Madame de Vestris appeared here in
1828 and Charles Kean during the Gala Festival of
1830, in which Raymond was one of the moving
spirits, though it seems to have marked the beginning
of his financial misfortunes. In 1831 his lease became
forfeit and in the following year he went bankrupt.
For the next few years the theatre was let by the season
and kept open more or less regularly; the lessee in 1837
being C. W. Elliston, probably a son of the famous
manager of Drury Lane. In 1844 the building having
become delapidated, it was extensively repaired and
reopened as the New Royal Shakespearean Rooms, and
the Company of Proprietors was reorganized soon afterwards. After 1846 the County Court sat at the theatre, (fn. 41)
though it was still used from time to time for its
original purpose. Jakeman and Morgan were the
lessees between 1849 and 1862, and in 1869 it was
refitted for the last time and opened by Alfred Walmisley as the Theatre Royal. Three years later it was
bought by Halliwell Phillipps, who demolished it and
threw the site into the New Place Gardens. The last
performance, of Hamlet, took place on 30 April
1872.
The Shakespeare Memorial Association was founded
in 1874 by Charles Edward Flower, to whose efforts
was mainly due the erection of the first Memorial
Theatre, opened in 1879. It was burnt down in 1926
and the present theatre, on the same site, was completed
from the designs of Miss Elizabeth Scott, and opened
in 1932. (fn. 42)
So far as the evidence of extant play-bills goes,
Shakespeare was more often performed in Stratford
during the later 18th century than at any time before
the opening of the Memorial Theatre in 1879. The
lesser theatres of the 1820's confined themselves for
the most part to melodrama and farce, (fn. 43) with an
occasional comedy of Goldsmith or Sheridan. The
Shakespearean Theatre began by attempting to live
up to its name, but with each season Raymond con
formed increasingly to the current taste. (fn. 44) After his
time Shakespeare was quite often played here, but
usually on the occasion of the visit of some eminent
actor. Among Shakespeare's plays the tragedies were
always the most popular and about half the recorded
performances, 1761–1862 (fn. 45) , were of Hamlet or Othello.
The Merchant of Venice and the Merry Wives of
Windsor seem also to have been favourites, but the
romantic comedies were rarely presented.