Saturday, October 26, 2019
The History of the Darling Theatre Company :: London Theatres Acting Drama Essays
The History of the Darling Theatre Company     This theatre company came into being in 1979 when a famous old London  theatre went bankrupt and the owners of the building attempted to sell  it to property developers. George Darling, a well known stage actor,  launched a campaign to save the theatre and, with the help of many  famous friends in the acting world, created strong public support for  retaining the building as a theatre. However no existing theatre  company was in a position to take over the building and the owners  suggested to George Darling that he use his connections to set up his  own company. After a vigorous fund-raising campaign enough money was  collected to save the theatre and set up the Darling Theatre Company.    The actors and actresses who had helped in the campaign agreed to  appear in Darling productions for a fraction of their normal fees ââ¬â  but were interested only in appearing in theatre classics rather than  commercial productions so the policy of the company from the beginning  was to stage classics for short runs of three to six weeks so that  there would be ten or so new productions each year.    In order to keep costs down the company had as few full-time staff as  possible, hiring directors, designers, technical crews and actors for  each production only, and, by subsidising less popular plays with  successful runs, often of Chekhov (ââ¬ËHeââ¬â¢s the Monet of theatre,ââ¬â¢  George would say, ââ¬Ë everybody loves himââ¬â¢) managed to break even for  the first few years. However in the mid-eighties the company hit a bad  patch and George was obliged to find extra funding to survive. When  his application for an Arts Council subsidy was rejected he turned to  sponsorship and discovered that he was good at persuading wealthy  companies to back his productions. The key to this, he realised early  on, was providing company executives with access to famous actors and  actresses and while there were protests at these ââ¬Ëextra performancesââ¬â¢  George was usually successful in arguing that the company could not  survive otherwise.    BACKGROUND TO THE COMPUTER SYSTEM    Throughout its twenty-five years the companyââ¬â¢s administrative  procedures were primitive and chaotic. George was interested only in  the artistic side of the company and had little or no concern for  practicalities but his personal charm was so great that staff were  prepared to put up with the constant problems caused by poorly-defined  procedures and non-existent communication. Then in the new century  Georgeââ¬â¢s health began to fail and he was frequently not around to  resolve mix-ups and disputes. In addition the regulations governing  theatres and public performances and the hiring of part-time workers    					    
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