Durham Dramatic Society
Reference: D/DDS Catalogue Title: Durham Dramatic Society Area: Catalogue Category: Charity and Society Records Description: Durham House Settlement; Margaret Marshall; Miscellaneous
Covering Dates: 1899-2009
Access: open
Catalogue Index
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- Durham Dramatic Society
- Durham Dramatic Society (Ref: D/DDS)
- Durham House Settlement (Ref: D/DDS 2/)
- Miscellaneous (Ref: D/DDS 2/1/1-3)
- Minutes (Ref: D/DDS 2/1/4)
- Financial records (Ref: D/DDS 2/1/5-11)
- Productions (Ref: D/DDS 2/2/1-13)
- Programmes (Ref: D/DDS 2/3/1-10)
- Margaret Marshall (Ref: D/DDS 3/)
- Scrapbooks (Ref: D/DDS 3/1/1-18)
- Miscellaneous (Ref: D/DDS 3/2/1, 3)
- Programmes (Ref: D/DDS 3/2/2, 4, 9)
- Correspondence (Ref: D/DDS 3/2/5, 8)
- Scripts (Ref: D/DDS 3/2/6, 7)
- Miscellaneous (Ref: D/DDS 4/)
- Other Organisations (Ref: D/DDS 4/)
- Programmes from other companies (Ref: D/DDS 4/1-4,19)
- The Little Theatre Guild (Ref: D/DDS 4/20-22)
- The Georgian Theatre Royal (Ref: D/DDS 4/25)
- Anniversaries (Ref: D/DDS 4/23-24)
Catalogue Description
Durham Dramatic SocietyThe first recorded meeting of the Amateur Dramatic Society (the Amateur was dropped later to take advantage of more favourable terms when performing plays by G.B. Shaw), was held on 15 November 1928. Membership was to be open to members of the Health Department of Shire Hall, Old Elvet and also to any gentlemen outside the department. There were thirty members of whom seventeen took acting parts. The annual subscription was 2s.6d., later raised to 5s. with travelling expenses paid from the funds. Rehearsals were held in the Nalgo Club Hut, or a room at the Garden House or in members' homes. For fifty years the booking of seats was organised through Donkins, the tobacconist in the Market Place.
In the early years there were close links with the Shire Hall music society, who provided interval music and also shared in joint productions 1934-1936. Members also took part in the Shakespearean productions of Eric Barber on behalf of the Durham House Settlement.
The Society joined the British Drama League in 1929 and competed regularly in its festivals with considerable success, reaching the National Finals in the 1950s coming second in 1955 with the production 'Ye Gods'. It was during this period that the society had over four hundred members of whom fifty took acting parts. The competitive tradition is successfully maintained by award-winning productions like 'Zoo Story' at Sedgefield Festival in 1991.
In the 1930s a variety of activities developed including the tradition of annual dinners, news bulletins, play reading circle, library (discontinued in 1931), wireless group to listen on Monday evenings to weekly talks on drama and a concert party in October 1939. The war had a decisive effect on the Society.
Initially membership was affected by call up and civil defence requirements, so the monthly social meeting was started in order to retain members. However, the Society's producer, Mrs. Margaret Marshall, was made head of the Durham Area of Voluntary Entertainment Service. This was the start of a very hectic period when plays and concerts were performed on a variety of stages, sometimes under fire and once before an unresponsive audience who turned out to be newly arrived Polish airmen who knew no English. The war years also saw the establishment of a Junior Section in 1944.
Meetings were to be held once a month, prior to the monthly meeting, and to be spent teaching the art of stagecraft. Then, when the standard was good enough they would perform short curtain-raisers before the Society's main plays. This tradition was extended in 1953 when, at the request of the County Drama Organiser, Miss D.P.W. Carr, the Society gave performances of Theatre for Children.
After the war, in 1946, the Society became a limited company. Difficulties with rehearsal and storage led to the purchase of the old British Restaurant in Back Silver Street. [This was built around 1800 and had been used as a printing works with printing machines in the basement and the first floor specially strengthened by two extra pillars in the basement so that rolls of paper could be stored]. This was used as club and rehearsal rooms but difficulties remained with productions. Initially productions were held in St. Margaret's Hall, Crossgate, then in the hall of Whinney Hill School which necessitated sets being taken down each night. From 1968 use of the Assembly Rooms restricted productions to dates outside university terms. The dream of their own theatre met with various setbacks until the proposal to alter the club rooms was accepted. The development of the theatre [see: D/DDS/1/3/106] culminated in the opening of the City Theatre by Mrs Margaret Marshall in November 1986. The first production was 'Seasons Greetings' by Alan Ayckbourn which heralded an active and successful period in the history of the society.
Catalogue Contents
DURHAM HOUSE SETTLEMENT
In the early 1930s, the University of Durham gave Durham House, 3 Queen Street (now known as Owengate) for five years for use as an educational settlement. It was furnished as a result of a grant from the British Association to Residential Settlements.
Evening classes were open to all over 18. In 1933 classes were offered in a wide range of subjects including orchestra, choral singing, Shakespeare and modern drama at a fee of 2s.6d. [12.5p] per course, which could be paid in full, weekly or monthly. Members could use the common room from 10.00 a.m. to 10.00 p.m. and some private coaching was available during the day. The Warden was Eric Barber B.A. who was very interested in dramatic and musical production and paid tribute in 1935 to the support given him by the members of the Durham Dramatic Society.
Organisation
Margaret Marshall, L.R.A. (Eloc), L.G.S.M. (Eloc), A.D.B., 1900 - 1991
M. Marshall trained at Bingley Training College, taught in Durham and Northumberland, returning to Durham when she married Robert Marshall (who served Durham Dramatic Society for forty years as treasurer).
Apart from her private pupils, Mrs Marshall taught speech and drama part-time at Durham High School for Girls, for over thirty years. (Probably her most famous pupil was actress, Wendy Craig).
As a member of the Guild of Adjudicators, she adjudicated over 2,000 plays all over the British Isles for the British Drama League and Scottish Community Drama Association. She also judged in the Sunday Times National Students' Drama Festival. She lectured at Loughborough College and gave 1,460 talks and recitals. She was able to use this experience for the benefit of the Society which she joined in August 1929. She began her career as a producer in an emergency when the previous producer took off with the funds. She was to produce more than 100 full-length plays during her long association with the Society.
During the war, the varied experiences of working for the Voluntary Entertainment Service gave invaluable expertise and great friendship to the members of the society which proved useful in the post-war years.
She came out of retirement to produce the Golden Jubilee production of "Dear Octopus", in 1979. In 1980 the Society paid tribute to her work and enthusiasm with an 80th birthday party. She became president in 1981 and in 1986 she was invited to open the new City Theatre.
Her collection of scrapbooks afford a vivid glimpse into the past history of the society.