Rosemary Branch Theatre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates: 51°32′15″N 0°5′13″W / 51.53750°N 0.08694°W / 51.53750; -0.08694

Rosemary Branch Theatre
Rosemary Branch 1.jpg
Rosemary Branch
Address2 Shepperton Road, London, N1 3DT
Capacitycirca 60 seats
Website
www.rosemarybranchtheatre.co.uk
1986 "Curtains" theatre programme front

The Rosemary Branch Theatre is a pub theatre located in Islington, London. It has been operating for 35 years.[1][2] It was originally known as the Rosemary Theatre in 1986. In late spring of 1986 the upstairs of the Rosemary Branch was converted into a theatre. The same space has always been used but the technical area was originally between the stage left entrance corridor and the central aisle just adjacent to the entrance. The first production, starring Mark Heath and directed by James Marcus (from London's Burning and others) was "Napoleon Noir", describing the heroic feats of Toussaint L'Ouverture, who in the late 18th century fought to abolish slavery in Saint-Domingue. The next play was the well-received dark comedy "Curtains" by Tom Mallin. This had its premiere at the Edinburgh Festival in 1970 with Nigel Hawthorne as one of a couple made murderous by the introduction of a third party. Lastly, before the Theatre's initial season closed, Cavada Humphrey presented her autobiographical solo performance "Walking Papers"; a powerful and focused work. From 1996 to 2016 it was co-directed by Cleo Sylvestre.[3] The building was previously a Victorian music hall.[3]

Awards won[]

  • Best Fringe Theatre Award (2010), Fringe Report[3]
  • Best Neighbourhood Theatre Silver Award, Smooth FM[3]
  • Most Welcoming Theatre (2013 & 2016), Off West End Theatre Awards[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Tripney, Natasha. "Hidden gems of theatre". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  2. ^ Trueman, Matt. "London's fringe theatre has never been this good". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e "About Us". Rosemary Branch Theatre. Retrieved 21 February 2019.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""