Entrance to the Savoy Theatre
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Address | Church Street Monmouth Wales |
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Coordinates | 51°48′46″N 2°42′52″W / 51.81284°N 2.71450°W |
Owner | MacTaggart family |
Capacity | 360 |
Opened | 5 March 1928 |
Website | |
www.monmouth-savoy.co.uk |
The Savoy Theatre is a theatre and cinema in Church Street, Monmouth, south-east Wales, is a town of some 9,000 residents in south east Wales. It is a Grade II* listed building, which was refurbished in 1928 in traditional style, and is reputedly the oldest working theatre site in Wales. It has a capacity of 360 seats and is now run by a charitable trust. It is one of 24 buildings on the Monmouth Heritage Trail.
The building in which the theatre is housed was constructed on the foundations of the earlier Bell Inn, in Monmouth's historic town centre. Originally known as the Assembly Rooms, the theatre was first granted an entertainment licence in 1832. It was refurbished as the Theatre Royal in 1850 under J F Rogers, and later became the town's Corn Exchange. It was briefly a roller skating rink, belonging to the White Swan Hotel, at the end of the 19th century, before reopening in 1910 as Monmouth's first cinema, the "Living Picture Palace and Rinkeries". In 1912, it was renamed the Palace, and later became first the Scala and then the Regent.
In 1927 the building was bought by the Albany Ward theatre group, gutted, and reopened on 5 March 1928 as "The New Picture House". This showed the first "talking pictures" in the town in 1930. It closed as a cinema in the 1960s, later reopening as a bingo hall and again closing in 1983, before reopening for a time to show historic magic lantern slides. It has operated continuously as a cinema since the 1990s.
The Savoy is the oldest working theatre site in Wales and is privately owned by the MacTaggart family, descendants of B. T. Davies who once owned 19 cinemas in South Wales and South West England. It is leased to a charitable trust, the Monmouth Savoy Trust, comprising voluntary enthusiasts who operate the venue for the benefit of the local community. The Trust were instrumental in preventing the theatre from closing in 2010. The venue has no public funding, and costs about £50,000 per year to run.