THE SHELDONIAN THEATRE
For centuries the public ceremonies of the University were performed in St. Mary's church. With the
Restoration came the wish to have a secular building
where they might be celebrated with suitable dignity
and 'without the sacriledge of those times during the
Rebellion'. (fn. 1) The University approached the City about
a site in March 1663, and by 1664 had successfully
negotiated the lease of some land and of six tenements
in Canditch. (fn. 2) Bishop Sheldon, a former Warden of All
Souls, soon to become Archbishop of Canterbury, was
the inspirer of the project, and when his £1,000 subscription in 1664 failed to attract others he shouldered
the whole cost of £12,200. (fn. 3)
The architect was Christopher Wren, then Savilian
Professor of Astronomy at Oxford. On 29 April 1663
a model of the theatre (costing £10) made to his specifications by the Oxford mason, Mr. Bird, was shown
to the Royal Society, and in the following year the
Vice-Chancellor's Accounts record the payment of
£6 17s. 6d. for a 'Present of Plate for his (i.e. Wren's)
paines about ye theater by appoyntment of ye Delegates'. (fn. 4) His design was in part a reconstruction of the
theatre of Marcellus as illustrated by Serlio in his
Architecture, 1540: it is possible that he intended to
imitate the double-order scheme of the Roman building,
for Wren's son said that the Oxford Theatre would
have been 'executed in a greater and better Style, with
a View to the ancient Roman grandeur' had Wren not
been limited by expense. (fn. 5) The English architect's
original contribution to the Roman-theatre plan was the
roof, and the encircling gallery within, a characteristic
device used later in many of his London churches. (fn. 6)
His ingenious handling of the problem of the roof, a
complicated wooden structure, constructed without
cross beams and supported only by braces and screws
though the ceiling spanned an area of 70 ft. by 80 ft.,
excited contemporary (and later) admiration. It is
described at length by Plot (1676). (fn. 7) Wren owed the
idea to Dr. Wallis, 'the most learned prodigy of
the age', who made a model of this type of roof for the
Royal Society in 1650 and later wrote a mathematical
treatise on it. But Wren first put theory into practice.
The curious round windows of the roof, 'so contrived
that they admit air and exclude rain'; the bivalve
wooden windows of the upper gallery, 'so ingeniously
contrived that notwithstanding their great weight yet
can never sink so as to be brought out of square as 'tis
usual in such windows', also inspired praise. Both sets
may be seen in their original state in Loggan's engravings (1669) of the 'stupendous fabrick'. (fn. 8)
Building operations began with the pulling down of
the houses leased from the city, of a part of the city wall,
and of the 'University's embattled wall that parted
them from the area lying before the Convocation House
door, and on the north side of the Divinity school'. (fn. 9)
By 26 July 1664 work was sufficiently far advanced for
a ceremonial laying of the foundation stone. The ViceChancellor, a number of bishops, the heads of houses
and others descended to the foundations and laid each
a stone 'with the offering of gold &silver on them'. (fn. 10)
From this month the accounts of the undertaking,
hitherto administered by the University, were kept
with meticulous care by Dean Fell, (fn. 11) officially appointed
Treasurer, and give a detailed picture of the progress
of the work during the next five years. (fn. 12)
Thomas Robinson was the master mason. He employed a team of craftsmen and labourers, many of
whom were regularly at work till the end. The traditional nature of the mason's craft is well illustrated by
the number of family groups engaged—Robinson's
three sons, John, Francis, and Thomas, for instance;
there were also several members of the Dewe, Sedman,
Freeman, and Evans families. All were paid 1s. 6d.
per day; their labourers 1s. In the first year the highest
bill paid to Robinson was only £18 odd for a week, but
by 1667 when six days a week were worked instead of
the usual five the bills reached between £23 and £36
a week during May. At that time as many as 41 skilled
masons were at work with 20 labourers. The master
carpenter was Richard Frogley (Plot's 'able carpenter')
who was regularly engaged on University work. He,
too, employed a number of craftsmen, each paid like
himself at 1s. 6d. per day. (fn. 13) It was their crowning task
to construct Wren's elaborate roof. As the building
progressed other local men were engaged—the master
joiner, Robert Minchin, (fn. 14) the glazier Bernard Rawlins, (fn. 15)
the stone-cutter Bird, Samuel Wilkins, brass worker,
John Dewe, master plasterer, and John Showell, iron
worker, while London craftsmen were taken on to
complete the beautification of the building.
The material used was obtained from various places.
For the free-stone, Dr. Fell obtained the lease of a
quarry at Shotover from Squire Brome Whorwood. (fn. 16)
This Headington stone was used for the massive
arcading of the ground story (except on the south side),
which is now 'sadly decayed but still unpatched', (fn. 17) the
smoother Cotswold stone being used for the upper
story and so lending it a lighter look. There is record of
Thomas Robinson's visit to Burford (26 Aug. 1664)
to negotiate purchases from the local quarries, and from
then on supplies of Burford stone came regularly to
Oxford by water, by way of Radcot Bridge and High
Bridge. Thomas Strong, for example, 'one of the great
Cotswold builder-quarrymen who were to raise the
new London', sent supplies in Nov. 1665, and one of
the last bills for Burford stone was paid in Oct. 1668—£20 12s. for 309 ft. at 1s. 4d. the foot. John Ward
was another important supplier, sending stone from
Burford as well as from Barrington Quarry. (fn. 18) There
is no reference to the harder Taynton stone, to be used
so extensively forty years later at Blenheim, or of
Windrush stone, but Mr. Arkell suggests they may
be included in the term 'Burford', used in a generic
sense. There is one reference in the accounts to stone
from Bladon, probably used for paving. (fn. 19)
A variety of districts was drawn on for timber,
partly, no doubt, because of the scarcity of trees in the
county at this date, partly because of the need for
specially selected wood for the great beams of the roof
and for the fine panelling of the interior walls. Bletchington, Buckingham, Bicester, Islip, Holton, are
among the places mentioned, while New College,
Christ Church, and Brasenose supplied material from
their estates.
The lead for the roof (48 fother costing £777 odd
with carriage) came from Derby. (fn. 20)
Though we have the weekly wage bills and the names
of all the workmen, details of the work done are rarely
given. Wood tells us that by the winter of 1664 the
foundations had been brought up level with the surface: (fn. 21) by the following winter Fell's accounts show
that the Oxford smith, John Showell, was already at
work on 'the 14 first windows, ye locketts &uprights'. (fn. 22)
By the summer of '66 the work of decoration had
begun: on 14 Sept. William Bird, the well-known
Oxford mason and stone-cutter, is first mentioned as
carving capitals and keystones. (fn. 23)
'The outside being in a manner completely finished'
in 1667, the middle row of houses in Canditch on the
North side of the Theatre was bought and pulled
down to the end that the new building 'might look
more graceful'. (fn. 24) The Vice-Chancellor and University
also obtained the City's consent 'to make a paire of faire
staires to their new erected Theatre in the street towards Canditch and to wall in soe much of the street
before the said staires as shall be needful to fence in the
sayd stayre case'. (fn. 25) By the autumn the joiners and
wood-carvers were busy on the interior of the building.
The wood-work in the upper gallery and staircases was
done by Oxford men—the Frogleys (Richard, and his
son Arthur, soon to be employed on the Library of
University College), (fn. 26) and John Rainsford. Robert
Minchin was employed specifically on the 'windores
and dores', and so, too, was his son-in-law, John Griffin,
who was paid at the high rate of 2s. a day 'for hanging
dores and casements and setting up windores'. (fn. 27)
But the more elaborate wainscotting and woodcarving was done by two London craftsmen, the
brothers William and Richard Cleer. They and their
servants made frequent journeys down to Oxford, but
mostly their work was done in the London workshop
and sent to Oxford by John Bossom's barge. (fn. 28) William
Cleer's total bill reached £1,347 3s. 2d. The following
items are characteristic of his contribution: wainscotting 12 doors at 40s. a piece and two pair of 'double
wainscotting dores' at £10 on the stair cases; 180 ft.
capital moulding at 18d. a foot and panelling in the
passage, little staircase, rooms and lobbies; about
30 yds. Bollection work at 10s. a yard in the front
gallery with 'wainscot, dore cases 6 pedestalls to ye
columns, 12 pilasters with their pedestalls at 60s. a
peice, 2 balconyes at £6 10 a peice'. Among his
charges for the 'ovall gallerye' occur: '103 yds. Bollection work, £5 1. 10; 74 yds. modellin (fn. 29) cornish £74;
for ye upper cornish &carving £200. For 22 collumns
at £3 a peice £66. For 2 procters seates &2 dore cases
£70'. He did the wainscotting in the Vice-Chancellor's
gallery and the pit at a cost of £96 and £79 16s. respectively. (fn. 30)
Richard Cleer was the artist-carver. He and his six
assistants carved all the decorative woodwork of the
lower cornice ('304 modillons at 1s. a peice, … 222 ft.
Eggs, Teeth, Archetts, small leaves, & Lace at 2s. a
ft., … 264 flowers at 6d. a peice'), the 16 masque
heads under the upper galleries, the carving over the
'Front outward dores' ('great Raphaell Leaves, Oaken
Leaves, Acorns and Husks at 6s. 6d. per ft.)'; the
shields with arms over the four main doors; 'lace about
ye windows in the upper part of the staircases, the
balconies with 'anticke supporters', the 17 flambeaux
on the two tables, capitals, pedestals, the 'dore-cases'
under the proctors' seats and so on. His total bill
amounted to £288 15s. 9d. Outstanding amongst all
this superb work are the proctor's rostrums, the masterly
Vice-Chancellor's chair, (fn. 31) and 'the Pulpitt in the Pitt',
the latter very elaborately worked with festoons, water
leaves, folding leaves, berries, and beads. (fn. 32) Work such
as this gives him the right to rank as 'probably the leading craftsman in wood before the rise of Grinling
Gibbons'. Mr. Hussey thinks that he may have been
one of 'the originators of the elaborate open-work
carving typical of Charles II's reign'.
The year 1668 was notable for the painting of the
ceiling. Robert Streeter, recently appointed Serjeant
Painter to the Crown (1660–79), (fn. 33) and Pepys' 'famous
history painter' and 'very civil little man', had been
commissioned to paint the canvas. Pepys reports how
he found Dr. Wren and friends inspecting the paintings
and saying that they would be better than Reubens's
ceiling to the Banqueting House, but that he contented
himself with the admission that they 'will certainly be
very noble'. (fn. 34) The sections were sent down by water
and put up by John Wilkins, the London joiner, at a
charge of over £210. (fn. 35) In April, the painter himself,
his son and servants came to Oxford, and we may take
it that the canvas was by then fully completed and in
position. It created a great stir: 'That future ages must
confess they owe To Streeter more than Michael
Angelo' was poetic licence, (fn. 36) but Plot thought it 'well
worthy of examination'. Later opinion was more
critical: in 1687 James II dryly commented 'twas pittie
Varrio did not paint it', and Lord Orford called it 'a
very mean performance'.
It was designed to suggest the Roman theatre open
to the sky, and had gilded ropes (in carved wood)
stretched from side to side, supporting a red drapery
which could be unfurled by cherubs to protect the
audience. Each compartment was painted separately
and is a self-contained composition. The subject
symbolizes the Restoration—the triumph of Religion
and the Arts over Envy, Malice, Rapine, and Ignorance. (fn. 37)
The inside painting of the Theatre was done by an
Oxford craftsman, Richard Hawkins, (fn. 38) at a cost of
£235 3s. 1d. In the main, he used only two colours—'stone colour' and 'cedar colour', but 22 wooden
columns and 12 pilasters were 'done like rance with a
high varnish', that is, they were painted to imitate a
Flemish marble of a dingy red colour varied with veins
and spots of blue and white. The '17 flambeauxes were
don over with copper, ye flames gilded'. The note that
the King's arms painted stone colour in oil was 'done
8 times ore' indicates the high quality of the work. (fn. 39)
The bills for the first half of' 69 show that the finishing touches were being put. In the early months
painted pieces and boards of wainscot were arriving by
barge; also 2 'long chests of gold ware and 4 peices of
cloth'; much work was done to make the cellars usable;
Lord Howard's and some of Mr. Selden's marbles
came down by water, were repaired and set up by Bird
(the inclosing walls in which the marbles were set (fn. 40)
with their flaming urns on top must have been built
earlier); the iron railings with their spaced stone plinths
and surmounting heads were completed, William Bird
being the carver; holly sets (on Evelyn's advice) were
planted to keep the curious from damaging the marbles. (fn. 41) So, the 'Theatre, a work of admirable Contrivance &
Magnificence' and 'the first public Performance of the
Surveyor in Architecture' was finished. (fn. 42)
In July came the first Encaenia, vividly described by
Evelyn. The Theatre's dedication was celebrated 'with
the greatest splendour and formalitie'; there was 'a
world of strangers and other companie … from all
parts of the nation'; speeches and music from 11 till
7 o'clock. Wren and Dr. Fell were presented by the
archbishop with gold cups costing £204 7s. and made
curators. (fn. 43)
Repairs and structural alterations to the Theatre are
recorded in the separate 'Theatre Accompt' presented
by the Curators and kept with the Vice-Chancellor's
accounts from 1670 on. Sheldon gave £2,000 (invested by the Curators in land at Lechlade) for repairs,
and the surplus for the encouragement of printing; this
sum was augmented in 1805 by a bequest of £2,000
from Dr. Wills, late Warden of Wadham. (fn. 44) The first
substantial payment relates to £100 paid to 'Mr. Smith'
(i.e. Bernard Schmidt) for the organ in 1671, and over
£225 to Richard Frogley and others for 'building ye
new Print House of ye theatre under the East wall'. (fn. 45)
The Theatre had been designed to house the University Press: the attics were used for book stores, compositors and correctors occupied rooms built under the
galleries and printing presses were put in the basement.
But the printers' business overflowed into the area of
the Theatre, and this unsatisfactory arrangement was
now partly mitigated by the additional building. (fn. 46) In
1680 the 'Prospect' was still further improved by the
purchase of garden ground near the Theatre costing
£100. (fn. 47)
The scare about the safety of the 'roof', described by
Elmes (Wren's biographer) as contrived to annoy Sir
Christopher, led the Vice-Chancellor to commission
William Townesend in 1720 to make a thorough
examination. He reported that the roof was in as good
condition as twenty years earlier, when it was found to
have sunk about two inches in the middle owing to the
shrinkage of the timbers and the great weight of books
laid on it. He prophesied 'that the whole Fabrik …
is … like to remain and continue in such good repair &
condition for one hundred or two hundred years yet
to come'. (fn. 48)
Between 1720 and 1727 much repainting was done
in the Theatre by Witherington, the painter, and a new
organ made by Renatus Harris was installed. (fn. 49) (This
was the organ on which Handel performed his Athalia
accompanied, as Hearne says, by his 'crew of lousy
German fiddlers'.) It was at this time, too, that the
picture of Archbishop Sheldon and Queen Anne 'was
fix'd'. (fn. 50) And perhaps now, also, was completed the
interesting painting of Sir Christopher Wren by
Antonio Varrio, Sir Godfrey Kneller, and Sir James
Thornhill. (fn. 51) It depicts the Professor of Astronomy
seated in front of an open volume showing a design for
the Theatre. In 1737 the beautification of the building
was completed by the erection in the niches of the south
front of two statues of Sheldon and Ormonde, carved out
of white marble at a cost of £223 7s. by Henry Cheere
of Westminster. William Townesend, who put them
in position, was also paid out of the Theatre account a
mysterious £42 18s. for 'other work'. Could this have
been for the statue of Charles II in classical armour,
standing over the north door and of which there is no
direct mention ? (fn. 52)
No further change of moment occurred until the
seventies when several large bills occur in the accounts—notably £373 16s. to Mr. Kettle for painting, gilding, lineing, &c. in 1761–2 (Theatre Account). It is
to Kettle, who was presumably Tilly Kettle (1740–98),
'an ingenious portrait painter in London' that we owe
the present colouring of the interior. The brown
painted woodwork was picked out with gilding and the
'gallery parapets were painted to simulate Sienna and
statuary marble'. (fn. 53) According to Dallaway, Penny, the
Professor of Painting in the Royal Academy restored
Streeter's painting in 1762. (fn. 54) If so, he must have been
commissioned by Kettle, for he does not appear in the
Theatre accounts. In the year 1767–8 sash windows
were substituted for the original ones by Henry Keene
at a cost of £148. (fn. 55)
Large-scale redecoration and repairs appear to have
been done again in the nineties. There is a reference to
a payment of over £195 to an unidentified Mr. Taylor.
(He was not one of the carpenters, masons, or painters
usually employed.) Payments of £278 odd to Mr.
Tawney, the regular Theatre carpenter, and of smaller
sums to the painter and plasterer were made in the same
year (1792–3), apparently for work at the Theatre: in
1798–9 more painting was done, and the ornamental
marble was cleaned and repaired. In 1800 it was decided that the Theatre must be re-roofed, as according
to Dallaway it was 'in danger of falling'. (fn. 56) Bodley's
Librarian, writing to Gough on 6 Jan. 1802, reports
that the University's architect, Mr. George Saunders,
was expected in Oxford soon and that he was at
that time preparing in his London home 'a new roof
for our Theatre which we expect will be completely
finished before July'. (fn. 57) Work was in full swing in 1801
as Valentine Cox says the Encaenia that year was held
in the Radcliffe. He has an interesting account of the
operations; of how the roofless building looked like an
ancient amphitheatre, and how the allegorical paintings were successfully 'peeled off' and restored in
'perfect condition'. (fn. 58) He lamented the 'unscrupulous'
removal on the plea of lightening the roof of the 10 or
12 circular windows (richly ornamented and partially
gilded) of the original design. He thought the old roof
more ornamental, and the old cupola more elegant,
with its streaming gilt flambeau, than its larger and
more conspicuous successor. (fn. 59) (The present octagonal
structure was designed by Blore in 1838.) (fn. 60) Dallaway,
on the other hand, admired the new roof, but lamented
the reinstatement of the balustrade and considered a
solid parapet 'would have been more accordant with
good taste'. In contemporary drawings (notably Mackenzie's done in 1820) (fn. 61) the Theatre, bereft of cupola
and round windows, looks comparatively undistinguished.
In 1826 further restoration was undertaken. The
large sum of £705 paid to Dixon, decorative painter, (fn. 62)
must have been for the new gilding and painting of the
Theatre, and for the repair and restoration of the ceiling
which is recorded in Brewer's History. (fn. 63) In 1899, on
the advice of Professor Church, (fn. 64) the paintings, having
been damaged by damp, were once again taken down,
relined, and restored.
At some point in the 19th century it seems that the
stone work of the building was in part refaced, the
upper stage on the east, west, and north side with Bath
stone, and the bay on the south-west corner with Clipsham. (fn. 65) Possibly the work was done in 1838, or in
1868 when the heads of the 'Caesars' (as Max Beerbohm calls them in Zultika Dobson) or of the 'metaphysic sages' in Robert Bridges's possibly more correct
phrase, were restored 'before the most decayed and
choppiest should quite defy a faithful copyist'. By 1919
the thirteen restored heads (the fourteenth was cut out
when the Clarendon was built) were 'rotted worse than
the originals'. (fn. 66)
On T. G. Jackson's advice a new rostrum-staircase
was put in in 1906 by Symm & Co.; (fn. 67) and in 1911
one bay of the west front was refaced and the cornices
of the west and north fronts were repaired. In 1934
electric light was permanently installed after half a
century of debate (the proposal to put it in was rejected in 1880 on the grounds that it was 'not desirable
to increase facilities for musical and other entertainments in the evening'); and in the following year some
major structural alterations were undertaken as a result,
wider exits from the upper gallery and two fireproof
staircases on the north side being added. In 1936
Mr. W. R. J. Dodd agreed to reconstruct the galleries
with steel columns and teak joists at an estimated cost
of £8,250. In 1950 the Minutes of the Curators record
agreement on 'the urgent necessity for renovating the
exterior stonework'.
Elegant and strong in design, marvellously rich in
craftsmanship, the Theatre has admirably served its
purpose for nearly 300 years, and still provides a
dignified and superb setting for ceremonial occasions.