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The Citizens Theatre 21st Anniversary Conspectus, published 1964. The Citizens Theatre to the Present Day, by Tony Paterson, published 1970. Dr Mavor and Mr Bridie, by his son Dr Ronald Mavor, published in 1988. Magic in the Gorbals, A Personal Record of the Citizen's Theatre, by Cordelia Oliver, published 1999.
TAG's original artistic director was Christine Redington, who was at the helm for three years until 1971. Since then a number of high-profile directors have worked for the company, including Ian Wooldridge (1978–84), Ian Brown (1984–88) now at West Yorkshire Playhouse, Alan Lyddiard who left TAG to become artistic director of Northern Stage Ensemble in Newcastle (1988–92), and Tony ...
Bridie was the founder of the Citizens Theatre [13] [14] in Glasgow, in association with joint founders art director Dr Tom Honeyman and cinema magnate George Singleton, who also created the Cosmo, predecessor of today's Glasgow Film Theatre. Many of his plays were staged at the Citizens Theatre between 1943 and 1960.
In 2016 Dominic won his 5th CATS (Critics Awards for Theatre in Scotland) award for Best Director - the most any director has won in the CATS' 14-year history.Awards include Best Director for This Restless House presented by the Citizens Theatre in association with National Theatre of Scotland (2015/16), Crime and Punishment (& Best Production 2013/14), Betrayal (2011/12) Peer Gynt, presented ...
After James Bridie's establishment of the Citizens Theatre in 1942, Scotland finally began to develop a native professional theatre. After the introduction of television during the 1950s, the number of amateur companies in Scotland, in common with the situation elsewhere, began to decline from its peak in the 1940s, but it still remains a ...
January 25, 1991 (Junction of State Route 201 and Knights Run Rd.: Heathsville: 14: Hurstville: Hurstville: September 24, 1992 (Eastern side of Balls Neck Rd., 3,500 feet (1,100 m) south of its junction with Shiloh School Rd.
Mary Stewart is a five-act play written in Scots [1] by the Scottish playwright Robert McLellan and produced in Glasgow in 1951 by the Citizens Theatre. The next production of the play took place in August 2014 at the Edinburgh Fringe, performed by Theatre Alba. [2] Mary Stewart follows the life of the eponymous Mary, Queen of Scots. [3]
Eden Court Theatre, Inverness Theatre Royal in Dumfries, the oldest working theatre in Scotland. Rehearsal room at the Citizens in Glasgow. Theatre in Scotland refers to the history of the performing arts in Scotland, or those written, acted and produced by Scots. Scottish theatre generally falls into the Western theatre tradition, although ...