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Royal & Derngate website Royal & Derngate is a theatre complex in the Cultural Quarter of Northampton , England, consisting of the Royal Theatre, Derngate Theatre and the Northampton Filmhouse. The Royal was built by theatre architect Charles J. Phipps and opened in 1884.
The Royal opened in 1884, followed 99 years later by the Derngate in 1983, which was built on the site of Northampton's former Derngate bus station. The two theatres merged as one organisation in 1999, closed in 2005 to undergo an 18-month £14.5m redevelopment, and re-opened as Royal & Derngate in 2006.
James Dacre was born in 1984, [2] the son of Paul Dacre, former editor of the Daily Mail. [3] He won a King's Scholarship to Eton [4] where he won the Newcastle Scholarship.He then studied Theology, Religion and Philosophy of Religion [5] at Jesus College, Cambridge [6] where he edited Varsity, the student newspaper [7] and directed at the ADC, taking several productions to the Edinburgh ...
Sansom was the Artistic Director and Chief Executive of the National Theatre of Scotland between 2013 and 2016. [4]Sansom was previously Artistic Director of the Royal & Derngate Theatre in Northampton (2006–13), Associate Director to Alan Ayckbourn at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, in Scarborough (2002–06) and an Arts Council England Trainee Director at the Watford Palace Theatre (1996–7).
The play premiered in January 2024 at the Royal and Derngate, Northampton, where the cast were joined by "the Royal and Derngate community chorus tap-dancing , ribbit-ribbit-frog style, in violently greenish-yellow rain cagoules." [33] In February, it transferred, without the community chorus, to Kiln, London.
Before you jump to conclusions about what's happening over in the royal family's IT department / read into things, People points out that Queen Camilla actually visited a hospice on January 21 ...
The website states: “A selection of messages will be passed onto members of the Royal Family, and may be held in the Royal Archives for posterity.” (PA Graphics)
The rear of 78 Derngate. 78 Derngate is a Grade II* listed Georgian house in the Cultural Quarter of Northampton, England, originally built in 1815. [1] Its interior was extensively remodelled in 1916 and 1917 by the architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh for businessman Wenman Joseph Bassett-Lowke as his first marital home. [2]