There’s a seal which has been bobbing about the
Greenock waterfront for the last year or so, according to the builders working
on the construction of The Beacon, Inverclyde’s brand new twenty-first century
arts centre, which is finally open for business. Beacon artistic director Julie
Ellen spotted it the other day as well, and the diners in the building’s bistro
and restaurant are also in with a chance, given the wide-screen view the façade
provides.
One wonders how much too the seal has been watching the landscape change in equally dramatic fashion, as The Beacon Arts Centre gradually took shape. Set alongside a series of more traditional sandstone buildings next to Customhouse Quay and overlooking the River Clyde estuary, The Beacon more resembles a development in somewhere like Reykjavik than a town like Greenock.
The seals too, it seems.
In An Alien Landscape, The Beacon, Greenock, February 1st. For full programme, see www.beaconartscentre.co.uk
The Herald, January 22nd 2013
One wonders how much too the seal has been watching the landscape change in equally dramatic fashion, as The Beacon Arts Centre gradually took shape. Set alongside a series of more traditional sandstone buildings next to Customhouse Quay and overlooking the River Clyde estuary, The Beacon more resembles a development in somewhere like Reykjavik than a town like Greenock.
The Beacon is an initiative which has been a long
time coming, ever since it became clear a decade or so ago that the old
Greenock Arts Guild Theatre was no longer fit for purpose. The Arts Guild had
been converted from a nineteenth century swimming pool in 1949 to accommodate a
thriving amateur dramatics scene, and did so for 65 years. While the building
had served its community well, there were major access issues in what had
become an increasingly moribund facility.
The then management of the Arts Guild looked at
upgrading the existing space, but realised it would be more economically viable
to create something brand new. In partnership with Creative Scotland,
Inverclyde Council and local regeneration agency, Riverside Inverclyde, as well
as Clyde Port, the idea for The Beacon was born. Alex Liddell of LDN
Architects, who were responsible for the design for the Usher Hall’s space-age
bar and box office in Edinburgh, provided the radical vision.
The Beacon was due to open in August 2012, with an
in-house pantomime pencilled in for the centre’s first major production in
December. As it was, building delays meant Ellen and her team didn’t get the
keys until December 22nd.
For Ellen, who took up her post at The Beacon eighteen
months ago after seven years in charge of Playwrights Studio Scotland, it has
been something of a labour of love.
“I always knew there’d be a year before we were in
the new building,” Ellen says, “but I wasn’t expecting it to be quite that
long. I seemed to spend all my time talking about this thing that we were going
to move into called The Beacon, so it’s really brilliant now to be at the stage
where we’re in the building and we can really start our new journey.”
The inside of The Beacon is as striking as its
exterior, not least because of a large portrait of the Queen which hangs at the
top of the stairs. The portrait was previously housed in the old Greenock Arts
Guild space, and is a historical nod to the continuum of the two very different
buildings. There are two auditoria, a 500 seat main space, and a 128 seat
studio theatre. The main stage is one of the largest in the country, and has a
fly tower to accommodate the big-scale ambitions of the sort of community
companies Ellen talks about. The same logic applies to the size of the dressing
rooms.
Beyond the two performance spaces, there are three
large rehearsal rooms in which youth and community groups can hold workshops.
These can be extended into a function room which can accommodate up to 170
guests, while meeting rooms will also be available. All of which provides a
sense of inclusivity that goes beyond The Beacon’s primary function. This is exactly how Ellen likes it.
“Part of me has always had a deep affection for my
time working as an actor at the Byre Theatre in St Andrews,” she says. “I went
there for the summer season shortly after leaving college, went back the next
year, and ended up living there for five years. During that time, I fell in
love with that relationship with a building as a thing that facilitated a
relationship between art and the community, and I really enjoyed that sense of
people owning this thing that was theirs, and which became the real heart of a
community. That’s what I want The Beacon to be, and I think The Beacon is right
for a move to join the national framework of middle-scale touring theatre.”
With this in mind, the first production to grace the
Beacon will be In An Alien Landscape, a new play by Danny Start presented by
Birds of Paradise who open their tour in Greenock. The play is directed by
Ellen in an accidental piece of scheduling which nevertheless makes a pertinent
statement about how she intends to proceed with her tenure.
Beyond its opening night, The Beacon’s diverse inaugural
season will host companies such as Vox Motus and Communicado, Nicola Benedetti
will play a concert in March, as will the Salvation Army Choir, while for four
days in February the Scottish Community Drama Association Festival will take up
residence. Even taking building delays into account, this is no mean feat.
“We really have to use our ambitions for The Beacon
to help grow the ambitions of the people from Greenock Arts Guild who have long
been there, so they can believe that The Beacon is somewhere special that is
for them. People in the area are used to having things taken away from them
rather than having things given to them, and I think there was a lot of
scepticism about whether it would actually happen, even though it was already
happening.
“Then when we got the keys, I wanted to get people
in here as quickly as possible, so we had an open day on the 5th of
January. It was arranged at really short notice, but we stopped counting after
1200 people had come through the door, and I think it would be reasonable to
say that about two thousand were there overall. As soon as I heard the word
‘wow’ being said, I knew things had moved on, so now there’s a real will out
there for The Beacon to succeed. The people really want it.”The seals too, it seems.
In An Alien Landscape, The Beacon, Greenock, February 1st. For full programme, see www.beaconartscentre.co.uk
The Herald, January 22nd 2013
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