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A talk by Douglas Ditta, 8 January 2003
Our speaker was introduced as an actor of wide experience in theatre, radio
and television who came to the Ipswich Arts Theatre in the early sixties and
later became its General Administrator.
Mr Ditta started with a brief review of the long history of theatre in
Ipswich and reminded us of the original theatre in Tacket Street and the
Mechanics' Institute in 1850, the lecture hall of which eventually became
the Arts Theatre. David Garrick and Charles Dickens were just two of the
famous names associated, respectively, with each. In the early part of the
last century, the lecture hall was sadly neglected then became first a
cinema and later, during the war, a WVS canteen; both these uses were
remembered by some of those present!
The unlikely transformation of the hall into a theatre was an impressive
piece of municipal enterprise. In the fervour of post-war reconstruction,
and inspired by a letter to the press, a public meeting attended by 800
people voiced its determination to have a repertory theatre in the town. An
energetic committee supported by Ipswich Borough Council and ably steered by
the Chief Executive Officer, Tom Hill, led after much hard work to the
opening in 1947 of the Ipswich Arts Theatre - although the name came a
little later. The theatre was not only popular and profitable but entirely
free of the coarseness that seems an inevitable and tedious component of so
many modern productions. The early voices of doom were finally vanquished and
Ipswich was once more clearly on the theatrical map.
Mr Ditta then took us on an anecdotal romp through his years at the Arts
Theatre which included references to the many later-famous names that had
been associated with it. Humour was never very far away even at times of
stress or even alarm, and it was usually - but not always - All Right on the
Night. Even the constraints imposed by the building seemed to inspire rather
than inhibit achievement and it seemed that the Wolsey - and the New Wolsey
- although superior in many ways can never inspire the same feelings as the
old Arts Theatre.
An entertaining evening suffused with happy nostalgia came all too soon to
an end.
KEN WILSON
Still Chewing on the Mint Quarter
No more news at present about developers Helical Retail's talks with
Woolworth's. The whole ambitious scheme for this vast area in the town
centre seems to hinge on Woolworth's willingness
to have their store re-built and to stay on. See the report of the CABE
workshop on pages 6-7. The workshop took this area as an example of what
urban redevelopment could be. A pity that Helical Retail weren't involved in
that exercise.
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