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  • Brewhouse Theatre calls in administrators
  • More than 50 staff to lose their jobs
  • Closure of the charity-run centre blamed on funding cuts
  • Ticket holders for cancelled shows may lose out

8:57am

THIS live article has now finished.

For the latest updates on the Brewhouse closure, click here .

9:58pm

There was a huge turnout at the candlelit vigil outside the Brewhouse this evening (Thursday) where people shared their memories of the much loved theatre.

Jacky Lacy who worked on the bar at the Brewhouse said: “We lost our jobs today. It was a shock, we didn’t know anything about it, it was very sudden I feel lost. Everybody knew everybody else. It wasn’t so big that you were anonymous but it has got to grow. It is just a shame that the powers that be feel we are not worth keeping on.”

Trustee Stephen Martin-Scott said: “I think it is a hugely sad day for Taunton and it is really regrettable that no one seems to have stood up to the plate to address the clear issues that have been demonstrated to the local authorities and the Arts Council for the last five years. Everybody just thought the problems would go away.”

Viv Phillips said: “Our daughter was the box office and front of house manager. We are devastated, not only for her but everybody. We hope it will reopen. It is being outshone by Yeovil.”

5:15pm

12:28pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Bazinga says

Yes, I also heard the Cricket Ground have shown large interest in the site for a Car Park. Only time will tell.

5:14pm

4:28pm Thu 21 Feb 13

St. Austell says

The Brewhouse in Taunton has been no more than as disaster waiting to happen. It is so small that it has
never been able to accommodate any large concert, unlike days of old when the venue was the old cinema
in Corporation Street, so most of what has been on offer has been mediocre at best: international celebrities just aren't interested in the Taunton venue. The fact that it has attracted 55 staff for a 352 seat theatre can not done anything other than contribute to the disaster. The upshot is that Taunton is little better than when it was branded "Cider City" in the days when entertainment centred upon fights in
Station Road and a dances in the Empire Room at the rear of the Trust Forte County Hotel.

4:09pm

lynda

LYNDA Bellingham, actress and presenter on ITV show Loose Women has expressed her sadness at the closure of the Brewhouse where she performed in its first ever show, Alan Ayckbourn's The Norman Conquest.

Lynda, who performed at the theatre alongside David Jason back in 1977, told the County Gazette: “I remember the Brewhouse very well. We were playing in a wonderful play at the time.

“Actually I remember the week because I bought a brand new bright yellow VW beetle and drove it back to London very carefully to run it in and then on the Sunday someone drove the wrong way down a one way street and I was driving my lovely new car the right way! It was a write off!

 “I am sad that the theatre is to close. There are so few local theatres anymore and they perform such a vital part of community life not to mention employment for actors. Times are changing and not always for the better.”

2:05pm

THIS notice was placed on the door of The Brewhouse today.

12:51pm

FULL statement from administrators BDO LLP:

BDO LLP business restructuring partners, Simon Girling and Graham Randall were appointed Joint Administrators over The Brewhouse Theatre and Arts Centre on February 21, 2013.

The Brewhouse, based in Taunton, Somerset, is a 352 seat theatre venue offering various programmes including drama, dance, comedy, music, workshops and art exhibitions.

Due to financial constraints, the business has ceased to trade and all 48 employees have been made redundant prior to the administrators’ appointment.

Simon Girling, BDO business restructuring partner, said:

“We appreciate that this will be a sad day for Taunton and the surrounding area, as the Brewhouse was a well-respected cultural venue.

"Unfortunately, the economic climate has significantly affected the business, and the facilities themselves meant The Brewhouse was overlooked by the biggest shows and theatre companies.

“As Administrators, our first step will be to investigate any and all options which would allow theatre to continue at the Brewhouse in the immediate future.

"This could potentially involve granting a license to a third party or a community organisation to operate the Brewhouse for a specified period.

“BDO, with Savills, will also immediately commence the search for a purchaser for the Brewhouse lease in order to secure the long term future of the theatre.

“Ticketholders for future shows should refer to the Brewhouse website www.thebrewhouse.net for further information.”

12:45pm

MARK Thomas's gig, which was due to be held at The Brewhouse tomorrow night, will go ahead at the new venue of Junction 24, near Bridgwater, it has been confirmed.

Tickets for the original show remain valid, although the performance will not start until 8.45pm, to allow time for people to travel to North Petherton from The Brewhouse.

12:23pm

TICKET holders for cancelled shows will NOT receive automatic refunds, the administrators of the Brewhouse have said.

In a message posted in the window of the venue, BDO LLP say:

CLOSURE OF THE THEATRE

The theatre, cafe, workspaces and restaurant have been closed to the public, and no further shows or performances will take place until further notice. The Joint Administrators have been appointed to explore all available options to the venue.

TICKETHOLDERS

Due to the Company's insolvency, any payments made to the Company for advance ticket purchases cannot be refunded. Ticketholders may rank as unsecured creditors against the Company for the value of tickets purchased.

In order that the Administrators may collate all such claims against the Company on a timely basis, please would ticketholders forward copies of all tickets purchased plus their payment receipt and their full contact details to the Administrators.

Ticketholders may wish to contact their credit card provider in order to explore the possibility of a refund.

 

To write to BDO LLP, write to:

 

BDO LLP, Bridgewater House, Finzels Reach, Counterslip, Bristol, BS1 6BX

12:04pm

12:03pm

SPEAKING today, Max Hebditch, chairman of the Taunton Cultural Consortium, said: “This is a terrible loss.

"Art, music and theatre are the soul of any town – especially in this time of recession. They are what make Taunton attractive to the new businesses we need.

"They work with our new museums, county cricket ground and improved public spaces to make Taunton a new regional centre.”

10:57am

10:03am Thu 21 Feb 13

CappoKid says

Sad day for whats left of Taunton, not much of a County town to write about, there really is nothing left to close. Most of the high St shops and old nightclub haven't been open for years. We moved here 12 years ago and it was a bustling little County Town, but slowly over the years its fallen badly by the wayside. There is going to be nothing left soon to visit or see. The Council have spent 3 million turning Castle Green into an open space that they haven't used and people are parking there again, what a waste of money and left The Brewhouse underfunded, they should be ashamed of themselves. Will the last person to leave please switch the lights out!!...

10:56am

ARTS lovers in Taunton have left angry messages bemoaning the closure of the Brewhouse on hoardings outside the neighbouring Edwardo's restaurant, which has also been closed.

One example reads:

GF

10:33am

WRITING in today's Somerset County Gazette, Brewhouse founder-chairman Cllr John Meikle has called for volunteers to come forward to help reopen the popular town centre venue.

Read his call to arms here .

10:24am

Here's how some of Somerset's other arts venues have responded to The Brewhouse's closure.

Tacchi-Morris Arts Centre director Charlie Dearden said: “It is a great loss for Taunton and the many people and groups that use the facility, as well as those who have lost their jobs.

“When you remember what a prominent role it played last year in Taunton’s jubilee celebrations it is very sad.

“Arts funding is a huge issue in Somerset, as it is across the whole country, and it is a regrettable that the arts, culture and creative industry has been so badly hit by the cuts.”

 

Ray Tew, (pictured above) chair of Minehead's Regal Theatre: "The Brewhouse is a major venue in the county town of Somerset.

"I hope this will be a wake-up call to all those in a position of influence to really consider what's important in terms of cultural life in this country.

"We have to look for a way forward to make this important historical venue survive."

 

Bridgwater Arts Centre board member and trustee Carol Bovett said: “All of us are shocked and saddened to hear that The Brewhouse is closing.

“We understand how difficult coping with a lack of funds is in any business, particularly the arts and among our patrons, but even though this is a sad sign of the country’s economic situation we endeavour to keep going.”

 

 

10:21am

STAFF at the Brewhouse have made their view on its closure clear by posting these messages on the outside of the building:

 

fsa

10:13am

8:51am Thu 21 Feb 13

Taunton John says

I blame the Brew House Management. The theater worked very well in the days of volunteers. They only had five or six paid staff. Finding funding for 55 staff in such a small venue was never going to go well. What were they thinking of?

11:40pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Caresabouttaunton says

Why don't TDBC reinstate Castle Green to a car park? The income generated could subsidise the theatre and the reinstatement of this previously shoppers car-park will help the letting of the nearby (soon-to-close) HMV store

9:50am

Robert Miles, of the Brewhouse

 

BREWHOUSE chief executive and artistic director Robert Miles blames the theatre’s demise on “years of underfunding”.

Writing in The Brewhouse Bulletin in today's County Gazettte, Mr Miles warns that county council grant cuts which, in turn, have deterred handouts from the Arts Council, mean venues across Somerset are struggling to survive.

He writes: “Our boarded-up building in the centre of the county town will be the most visible sign of the disintegration of the cultural landscape in our beautiful county.”

He adds that the Brewhouse’s closure will hit the local economy – he believes the centre generated £4million of spending in the town every year through customers using restaurants, cafes, shops, hotels and car parks in the area.

Mr Miles pays tribute to the many talented people who have appeared at the Brewhouse over the years.

He adds: “The team here were genuinely the best in the country – not just good at their jobs but passionate about their work and lovely genuine people.

“The Brewhouse has a fantastic reputation in the industry for punching above its weight and I cannot praise our staff and volunteers highly enough.”

Mr Miles is hopeful that, in the future, Taunton will get “the bigger theatre and arts centre it deserves and needs”.

9:45am

Patch Jobson, marketing and events manager of the venue Junction 24 near North Petherton. 

9:26am

AN OFFER of an alternative venue for shows due to be staged at The Brewhouse has come forward from Junction 24 near North Petherton.

With an arena that can hold 1,600 people seated and 2,500 standing, the venue has more than enough capacity to act as a replacement.

Junction 24’s marketing and events manager, Patch Jobson, said: “We don’t want The Brewhouse to close at all – it is one of the most important venues in Somerset – but if they can’t carry on here, we would like to offer our space.

“We are not doing this for financial gain – we are doing it to see if we can somehow keep it open. If we do lose the theatre it will be a very sad day.

“We all work together – everyone brings their own thing to the region. It’s a jigsaw puzzle and if we lose one piece, it makes it harder for the rest of us.

“We have already sent out emails to producers of the shows due to go ahead and I have been on the phone since 7am today to tell someone there is an offer on the table.”

Mr Jobson is urging someone from or representing The Brewhouse to get in touch with him as soon as possible.

He is contactable by emailing patch@junction24ltd.co.uk or by calling 01278-662200 and asking for his mobile number.

8:20am

8:11am

7:53am



 

7:49am

MANY people in Taunton are waking up to the news that the town's Brewhouse Theatre has closed its doors following a funding crisis.

Administrators have been called in to the Coal Orchard venue and more than 50 staff at the theatre have been made redundant.

A candlelit vigil has been organised outside the Brewhouse at 7pm this evening (Thursday) for supporters to reflect on the closure and discuss options.

There have already been calls from many people for the centre to be reopened, either to be run by volunteers or for authorities to increase funding.

Meanwhile, anxious ticket-holders for performances which have been cancelled are waiting for news on whether they will be able to claim refunds from the venue.

Don't miss six pages of reaction and analysis in today's Somerset County Gazette.

7:44am

10:59pm Wed 20 Feb 13

blackmasquerade says

Just returned from an emotive final performance that brought the curtain down on a 36 year run. A great final show to go out with & a truly sad night.

With thanks to Robert & the team for the pleasure you have given me & countless others over the years & I wish you all every future success.

9:58pm

8:49pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Madmavis says

This is so sad. What has happened to Taunton? There will be plenty of room on the Castle Green "redevelopment" as everyone will soon bypass Taunton on the new road to be built. No car parks, no theatre or cinema in town....no reason to visit Taunton

8:33pm Wed 20 Feb 13

PlentyMoor says

How very sad. My Mum worked there as a volunteer well into her 70s and loved the place - as have we, our children and grandchildren. All sympathy for those who have lost their jobs tonight.
What we need is a source of income to support this wonderful asset to the town.. Perhaps a premium rate car park right in the centre of town - if only we could find a suitable unused space!
Oh that's right there's one going begging at Castle Green isn't there?
Wonder if there had been some consultation and perhaps even a referendum whether we would still have a theatre instead of an empty space?

9:56pm

9:55pm

9:47pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Adrian Prior-Sankey says

This is a cultural disaster for Taunton and the sub region. The Theatre should never have relinquished the services of a magnificent band of volunteers like my late Mother. As a 17 year old I loved working backstage when it opened and I fought hard as chair of the Borough Council's Brewhouse Panel to gurantee public funding 10 years ago. The pricing out of most of the amateur productions was another contributory factor. Clearly councillors have known the dire situation for weeks, if not months, just the latest example of the woeful lack of civic leadership...

7:58pm

7:57pm

7:42pm Wed 20 Feb 13

JulesAT says

Have just read the news , this is an absolute travesty and a massive blow to our community. Those responsible for funding cuts should be ashamed and not just on a national level, SCC. A valued and well established cultural attraction is surely more important than excessive traffic schemes which increase traffic chaos and other half baked initiatives that seem the norm in the present day.

7:57pm

6:52pm

6:51pm

6:42pm


 

6:29pm

6:23pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Bizzie Lizzie says

Feel very sorry for the staff that have lost their jobs and all those people that have paid for shows they now cannot see. Its a very sad day for Taunton.

6:28pm




 

6:21pm

6:19pm


 

6:16pm

6:12pm


 

6:12pm

5:38pm Wed 20 Feb 13

redstaranie says

I'm really upset to see this. I have wonderful memories of going to the Brewhouse as a child, and more recently I've had the pleasure of taking my daughter there. This is a really sad day for Taunton, and I feel very sorry for the staff.

6:10pm

6:10pm

6:00pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Chrissie Godfrey says

Hello everyone, this is such sad news. Like someone gradually, so gradually, drained of blood, this wonderful organisation has suffered from under-funding and funding cuts until it is no more. My heart is breaking, as this is a place I love. It is central to the beating heart of this town. I cannot imagine how things will be here without it. But it is gone, and this passing needs to be marked by people who feel the same as I do.

I will be outside The Brewhouse from 7-8pm on Thursday 21st February, with a candle, maybe some flowers, maybe a note of regret to stick to the door. A little vigil of love and care. Do please come and join me in this. And do please pass this invitation on to anyone you think might like to join me too.

5:34pm

The Brewhouse opened in March 1977 - here's the first group of volunteers, staff and founders pictured outside the venue shortly after it opened:

Brew

5:32pm

5:30pm

5:28pm Wed 20 Feb 13

pintomine says

This closure is a clear example of what Taunton has become over the last ten years. It has lost its soul and status as a quality county town. It seems that our local representatives are totally out of touch with the general population and the forthcoming local elections will provide no opportunity to correct this. How very, very sad.

5:30pm

UPCOMING acts scheduled for the venue which have been cancelled include Mark Thomas, Marcus Brigstocke and Marty Wilde.

5:28pm

5:28pm

5:25pm

5:24pm

5:20pm

5:19pm

5:19pm

5:18pm

5:16pm

THE Brewhouse Theatre in Taunton has called in the administrators and will close on Thursday, it has emerged.

Dozens of staff at the 352-seat venue have been made redundant and all scheduled performances after tonight's production of Jane Eyre have been cancelled.

The demise of the riverside theatre, which is a registered charity, has been blamed on cuts in funding.

For more on this story, including an exclusive column by Brewhouse director Robert Miles explaining the reasons for the theatre's closure, see Thursday's edition of the Somerset County Gazette.

Leave your reaction to the news uisng the comment facility below or Tweet your views to @CountyGazette

Comments(50)

pintomine says...
5:28pm Wed 20 Feb 13

This closure is a clear example of what Taunton has become over the last ten years. It has lost its soul and status as a quality county town. It seems that our local representatives are totally out of touch with the general population and the forthcoming local elections will provide no opportunity to correct this. How very, very sad.

FreeSpeech? says...
5:38pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Perhaps it would be nice if you would bring the story into one item!

redstaranie says...
5:38pm Wed 20 Feb 13

I'm really upset to see this. I have wonderful memories of going to the Brewhouse as a child, and more recently I've had the pleasure of taking my daughter there. This is a really sad day for Taunton, and I feel very sorry for the staff.

TauntonGal1978 says...
5:45pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Saw Hats Off to Led Zeppelin there a few weeks ago and have tickets booked to see T-Rex there in a few weeks time...a real shame that it is closing...

On a practical note, will tickets be refunded for cancelled shows?

FreeSpeech? says...
5:58pm Wed 20 Feb 13

TauntonGal1978 wrote:
Saw Hats Off to Led Zeppelin there a few weeks ago and have tickets booked to see T-Rex there in a few weeks time...a real shame that it is closing...

On a practical note, will tickets be refunded for cancelled shows?
Won't hold my breath , but i do believe that TDBC underwrite the brewhouse.
I may be wrong though.

Chrissie Godfrey says...
6:00pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Hello everyone, this is such sad news. Like someone gradually, so gradually, drained of blood, this wonderful organisation has suffered from under-funding and funding cuts until it is no more. My heart is breaking, as this is a place I love. It is central to the beating heart of this town. I cannot imagine how things will be here without it. But it is gone, and this passing needs to be marked by people who feel the same as I do.

I will be outside The Brewhouse from 7-8pm on Thursday 21st February, with a candle, maybe some flowers, maybe a note of regret to stick to the door. A little vigil of love and care. Do please come and join me in this. And do please pass this invitation on to anyone you think might like to join me too.

TauntonGal1978 says...
6:02pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Thanks FreeSpeech?

It is a shame that the theatre is closing but I saved to see both these shows with my partner and can ill afford to lose £40.00! Hopefully information will become available in the coming days...

Bizzie Lizzie says...
6:23pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Feel very sorry for the staff that have lost their jobs and all those people that have paid for shows they now cannot see. Its a very sad day for Taunton.

FreeSpeech? says...
6:30pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Mark my words a carpark for Somerset County Cricket Club is on the cards and i believe that TDBC as looked at buying Lidl's to turn it into a cinema with, wait for it a underground carpark next to a river that floods regular.

FreeSpeech? says...
6:38pm Wed 20 Feb 13

TauntonGal1978 wrote:
Thanks FreeSpeech?

It is a shame that the theatre is closing but I saved to see both these shows with my partner and can ill afford to lose £40.00! Hopefully information will become available in the coming days...
Thankyou & please let me know how you get on.

FreeSpeech? says...
6:50pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Mark my words a carpark for Somerset County Cricket Club is on the cards and i believe that TDBC as looked at buying Lidl's to turn it into a cinema with, wait for it a underground carpark next to a river that floods regular.

Slow down! says...
6:53pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Flats to house all the Romanians and Bulgarians that are heading our way, How many Mr Clegg?????

Oh no sorry your not answering that question!

Very very sad news for Taunton maybe we should change the name to Ghost town, a big well done to the local Councils, your mission is complete Taunton is dead in the water.

Well done.

FreeSpeech? says...
6:57pm Wed 20 Feb 13

FreeSpeech? wrote:
Mark my words a carpark for Somerset County Cricket Club is on the cards and i believe that TDBC as looked at buying Lidl's to turn it into a cinema with, wait for it a underground carpark next to a river that floods regular.
That should have read" they are planning an underground carpark next to a river that floods"

Slow down! says...
7:02pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Maybe Mecca Bingo could move there and the Gaumont could be turned into the premier concert venue that Taunton and the South West badly needs

lizbeth says...
7:26pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Very sad and shaming to the council who waste money on enhancements which many don`t want.
Taunton has little enough culture. The public need to be consulted more often.
Who ever heard of a town Taunton`s size without a theatre. Thank you Robert Miles you improved it hugely. What a shame the council can`t stop wasting money on their projects. Lets not have a Tory majority on S C C again

JulesAT says...
7:42pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Have just read the news , this is an absolute travesty and a massive blow to our community. Those responsible for funding cuts should be ashamed and not just on a national level, SCC. A valued and well established cultural attraction is surely more important than excessive traffic schemes which increase traffic chaos and other half baked initiatives that seem the norm in the present day.

PlentyMoor says...
8:33pm Wed 20 Feb 13

How very sad. My Mum worked there as a volunteer well into her 70s and loved the place - as have we, our children and grandchildren. All sympathy for those who have lost their jobs tonight.
What we need is a source of income to support this wonderful asset to the town.. Perhaps a premium rate car park right in the centre of town - if only we could find a suitable unused space!
Oh that's right there's one going begging at Castle Green isn't there?
Wonder if there had been some consultation and perhaps even a referendum whether we would still have a theatre instead of an empty space?

Slow down! says...
8:48pm Wed 20 Feb 13

PlentyMoor +1

Madmavis says...
8:49pm Wed 20 Feb 13

This is so sad. What has happened to Taunton? There will be plenty of room on the Castle Green "redevelopment" as everyone will soon bypass Taunton on the new road to be built. No car parks, no theatre or cinema in town....no reason to visit Taunton

jenoli says...
8:50pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Very sad, I hope the people in tdbc and scc are pleased with the way the town is heading, it's bad enough that the retail shops are either leaving or closing in the town but to lose a or rather the only venue capable of putting on great shows, productions and even attracting some big names is huge blow and will affect many other businesses I'm sure....

Madmavis says...
9:20pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Just read that the council are spending £250k on new traffic lights. Yay!!!!! At least when stopped a red light we can admire the empty shops, numerous pubs and coffee shops.

Adrian Prior-Sankey says...
9:47pm Wed 20 Feb 13

This is a cultural disaster for Taunton and the sub region. The Theatre should never have relinquished the services of a magnificent band of volunteers like my late Mother. As a 17 year old I loved working backstage when it opened and I fought hard as chair of the Borough Council's Brewhouse Panel to gurantee public funding 10 years ago. The pricing out of most of the amateur productions was another contributory factor. Clearly councillors have known the dire situation for weeks, if not months, just the latest example of the woeful lack of civic leadership...

philnicholls says...
10:23pm Wed 20 Feb 13

If the Brewhouse had put productions and shows on that appealed to the masses not just the few they might well of filled all 350 seats more often hence more monies and not just reliant on funding from the public purse.

blackmasquerade says...
10:59pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Just returned from an emotive final performance that brought the curtain down on a 36 year run. A great final show to go out with & a truly sad night.

With thanks to Robert & the team for the pleasure you have given me & countless others over the years & I wish you all every future success.

Caresabouttaunton says...
11:40pm Wed 20 Feb 13

Why don't TDBC reinstate Castle Green to a car park? The income generated could subsidise the theatre and the reinstatement of this previously shoppers car-park will help the letting of the nearby (soon-to-close) HMV store

Taunton John says...
8:51am Thu 21 Feb 13

I blame the Brew House Management. The theater worked very well in the days of volunteers. They only had five or six paid staff. Finding funding for 55 staff in such a small venue was never going to go well. What were they thinking of?

CappoKid says...
10:03am Thu 21 Feb 13

Sad day for whats left of Taunton, not much of a County town to write about, there really is nothing left to close. Most of the high St shops and old nightclub haven't been open for years. We moved here 12 years ago and it was a bustling little County Town, but slowly over the years its fallen badly by the wayside. There is going to be nothing left soon to visit or see. The Council have spent 3 million turning Castle Green into an open space that they haven't used and people are parking there again, what a waste of money and left The Brewhouse underfunded, they should be ashamed of themselves. Will the last person to leave please switch the lights out!!...

Daily Mail Fan says...
10:30am Thu 21 Feb 13

What Brewhouse needed was a large 1300 capacity theatre surrounded by 3 large car parks, pubs and restaurants in the centre of town. Oh, hang on....

http://www.geograph.
org.uk/photo/212461

Whoops ....

http://www.somersetc
ountygazette.co.uk/n
ews/8491380.Castle_G
reen_car_park__not_f
or_sale_/

Slow down! says...
10:42am Thu 21 Feb 13

Council Members Details - John Raymond Williams - Leader of the Council
Email - cllr.j.williams@taun
tondeane.gov.uk

Email him and let him know how disappointed you are.

Also ask him to resign as its clear he has no idea what he is doing.

HipposRule says...
11:53am Thu 21 Feb 13

At least SSDC know how to run/treat a theatre with the Octagon.

KevinStratton says...
12:11pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Adrian Prior-Sankey wrote:
This is a cultural disaster for Taunton and the sub region. The Theatre should never have relinquished the services of a magnificent band of volunteers like my late Mother. As a 17 year old I loved working backstage when it opened and I fought hard as chair of the Borough Council's Brewhouse Panel to gurantee public funding 10 years ago. The pricing out of most of the amateur productions was another contributory factor. Clearly councillors have known the dire situation for weeks, if not months, just the latest example of the woeful lack of civic leadership...
I'm sorry Mr Prior-Sankey but on what planet are you living. Pricing the amateurs out? Stop banging that drum - all of you. They built it, it was well run then... blah blah blah. This is or was a business. If amateur groups hire the building they should pay the same as anyone else because guess what - the weekly costs are the same - the hire price has to cover this! And last time I looked, those who couldn't afford went elsewhere and still refused to cut their cloth. Do the right thing and focus as you say on the obligation the council need to take for the sake of the arts and related industries that spend a huge amount of money in the town. And before you defend the am drams, spare a thought for those who now have to find their mortgage payments in 7 days with no money. I'm also heavily involved with running Am Dram in Somerset... are you? Austerity bites, reality bites harder.

Bazinga says...
12:28pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Yes, I also heard the Cricket Ground have shown large interest in the site for a Car Park. Only time will tell.

Tolstoy14 says...
12:33pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Our group of four have tickets for this Saturday's performance of the excellent Peter Straker's Brel at the Brewhouse as well as a restaurant booking. We missed the show at St James Theatre London last Saturday when it was a sell out. As yet it is unclear what is happening- presumably nothing.
It is not acceptable to close a theatre with what appears to be one day notice with apparent disregard for performers as well as customers. We live on Dartmoor and are enthusiastic supporters of the Taunton Theatre. While this sudden closure is very inconvenient for us, it is a major disaster for the people losing their jobs and for cultural development in the region. It is encouraging to read the messages of support from other theatres in the South West.

There needs to be an active campaign for a constructive policy for the arts in the region. Taunton Deane Borough Council and Somerset County Council need not lemming-like follow the Con-Dem Coalition rubric of knowing the cost of everything and the value of nothing. Support for the arts is crucial for community well being. It acts as a catalyst which brings together many disparate groups. I have looked through again the Brewhouse's planned programme for the coming weeks. There is a wide mix of activities appealing to many different groups.

Wake up Taunton!
You have a theatre right in the centre, unlike many other towns. It should be celebrated not dissolved.

Something precious is disappearing.

joward says...
12:50pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Diabolical! One would call for heads to roll at SCC and TDBC for allowing this to happen, but that would waste even more of ill used community funding. Thank you Robert Miles for all your efforts in trying to bring culture to Taunton - I saw you and your beautiful wife and children at a wonderful performance of Wind in the Willows and I thought then how dispicable that you have had to stoop to the level of begging bowls to enable us to enjoy what should be easily afforded through funding for a town the size of Taunton.

It is yet another example of how badly this country is beieg run - we have a country that is being strangled by online tax dodgers, with the knock on effect of putting people out of work when high street stores are forced to close because of unfair pricing competition. Then instead of rapidly making new rules and regulations to claw back the billions of revenue that is being lost they pull the plug on funding for venues such as the Brewhouse which in turn dries up revenue from other businesses effected by the loss of trade.

We hear that the town is readying itself for future cultural attractions so we have new road junctions (that have served to slow down rather than improve the flow of traffic) we have Castle Green (enough has been said already about this) we have traffic lights for every occassion under the sun, we have some very clever pigeons by the railway station, a couple of wooden pigs that deserve our respect for their sheer entertainment value. But our town centre has no county town farmers market, no cinema, no music venue, no heart and now no theatre. The haunting taste of Taunton - maybe soon we wont need SCC and TDBC as there will be nothing left to ??? I cannot think of a word - what it is they do?

Allastair says...
1:10pm Thu 21 Feb 13

55 staff, 20 of whom were full time, is hard to believe. What did they do? If Bridgwater manages to keep its Art Centre going surely someone will step in and run the Brewhouse as a good business. Not with 55 staff though...

Plumb01 says...
1:54pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Why is everyone so surprised? And why blame local councils et al when the theatre was being run as a business by extremely highly paid staff? The fault must lie with the management. Granted The Brewhouse building itself has never been fit for purpose and has always been a bit of a pig-in-a-poke, but in recent years it's practically been run as a private members' club! Tickets for the more popular 'big name' shows were nearly always sold out before actually going on sale to the general public - and at discount members' prices, too. Theatre-goers themselves were all too often left feeling in the way and playing second fiddle to art 'installations' and the usual in-house clique. I'm still trying to get my head around the merits of a toilet art installation which saw the ladies' conveniences stuffed full of bird boxes and plastic flowers . . . and you wonder why it's gone down the pan? No pun intended. Theatres like this need volunteers not directors in swanky suits and glasses with an army of co-directors and marketing types in tow. Lets hope the proverbial derrieres get kicked and The Brewhouse gets back on track as a community theatre not an in-house breeding ground for luvvies.

www.socialistparty.org.uk (Somerset Branch) says...
3:23pm Thu 21 Feb 13

The closure of the Brewhouse Theatre is not unique to Taunton....Closures of this type are occuring all over the UK at an accelerating rate.

Cllr John Meikle and his Party's unelected coalition government of millionaires are the cause not the solution to this problem.

The unelected Coalition government of millionaires' (and their New 'Labour' apologists, eg Southampton city Council) austerity programme of cuts is laying waste to the arts all around the UK!.. These cuts to arts funding sit alongside the cuts to (and accelerating privatisation of) all our public services (including, fire brigades, NHS and state education), increased/increasing levels of university tuition fees, abolishing EMA, cuts to our pension (paying more, working longer, receiving less), cuts to our benefits, cuts to our wages alongside public sector wage freezes, cuts to housing benefit (aka bedroom tax), cuts to council tax benefits (which holds similarities to Thatcher's hated and defeated poll tax) rising electricity, gas and water bills, ever-increasing train, bus and petrol/ diesel prices, rising food prices...yet the likes of Starbucks (and they are by no means alone) paid not ONE SINGLE PENNY corporation tax in the last three years. These corporate thieves disclosed that since its arrival in Britain in 1998, it has paid a mere £8.5 million in corporation tax, despite total sales of what they claim to be £3 billion after further claiming that it had made a profit in only one single year! The corporations are collectively sitting on more than £700billion that they do not know what to do with, as there is no profitable outlet for this amassed capital within the framework of the organically sick and diseased capitalist system...By stashing this monumental mountain of capital in the banks rather than investing it in developing the economy and society they are, as Marx explained "betraying their historic mission".

If only a modest half of this £700 billion were made immediately available through the immediate imposition of a windfall-tax on the corporations, what could be achieved?

How many Brewhouse theatres would that fund?

How many council houses would that build?

How many jobs would that provide?

How many hospitals or schools could that build fund and maintain?

How many libraries would that fund?

EMA could be restored and even raised.

University tuition fees could be abolished.

It would mean that the super-rich would have to give up on the lie that there is a deficit that we have all run up and that we all have to now pay for. It would mean that the 1% super-rich multi-billionaires could be forced back in their relentless and brutal war on the 99%...



The main capitalist parties won't do anything about this. A workers' government must close these loopholes and take these companies into democratic public ownership.

Don't just get angry....

Get Organised!....

Join the socialists...

For more information visit www.socialistparty.o
rg.uk”

Lulu2011 says...
3:35pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Taunton John wrote:
I blame the Brew House Management. The theater worked very well in the days of volunteers. They only had five or six paid staff. Finding funding for 55 staff in such a small venue was never going to go well. What were they thinking of?
So true. The volunteer model worked very well, this closure is down to bad management. I read the Gazette most weeks and I cannot remember any occasion when there was any publicity about fundraising. I am sure that the original model is still vialble, and that there are plenty of people in Taunton and the surrounding area that would volunteer. It would be very easy to franchise the restaurant and bar. If more popular shows where put on more ofter instead of occasionally then the audience numbers would quickly rise. It should not be art for arts sake, but run as a business with proper business decisions made instead of complaining about a lack of funding. If the administratiors can find the right person I am sure the Brewhouse can be saved

www.socialistparty.org.uk (Somerset Branch) says...
4:10pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Arts and culture workers need to fight back

"The most unkindest cut"

"This was the most unkindest cut of all." Mark Antony on Brutus's murder of Julius Caesar. Which of the Con-Dems' cuts is most unkindest is not mentioned - in part because Shakespeare died 394 years before the coalition formed.

But if arts and culture workers are to save their industry from assassination, more than stirring rhetoric is required.

Public sector union PCS, representing culture workers, says: "as much as 90% of the cuts threatened have yet to occur."

With private investment in the arts continuing its decade-long decline, how are cultural bodies to survive?

The answer is they aren't. A recent casualty is this year's Manchester Comedy Festival, cancelled outright in August.

Festival creator Don Ward lays the blame squarely at the coalition's door: "With a clean sweep, government cuts have wiped out funding for a lot of festivals." The same is happening to cultural organisations of every stripe. For many it is permanent.

In 2011, the Federation of Entertainment Unions (FEU) launched the Lost Arts campaign. "Campaign" may be too strong a word.

Website www.lost-arts.org seeks to be a catalogue of cultural bereavement.

This has its place; but what is the FEU actually doing? Constituent unions published reports and supported motions calling for increased funding and an end to exploitation. But they have yet to match their words with action. And so we suffer on.

It's not just our careers at risk - or our benefits and services, either. With the economy flatlining, and bosses shedding staff and slashing pay, it's our day jobs too.

With vanishing cultural gigs and nothing in between we have one hope. Fight every job loss and every funding cut that businesses and politicians make.

The annual Trades Union Congress, of last September, historically voted to support prison officers' union POA's motion calling for "far reaching campaigns including the consideration and practicalities of a general strike".

The enormous N30 strike in 2011 saw millions of public sector workers walk out over pensions. The action won concessions. Imagine what could have been gained if a second, larger strike had been called.

Last July, comedian Stewart Lee slammed what he called "the cultural bankruptcy of late capitalism". If we are to become culturally solvent once more, we need an end to cuts across the board. We need a fully funded arts sector, and support for all its workers.

We must kick out the government and its austerity policies, and start planning our nation's considerable output for the good of all, not the profit of a few.

Arts and culture workers must continue to put pressure on our unions and the TUC to name the date for a general strike, with another threatened after if we don't win our demands. This is the fight of our lives. Stewart Lee is right - let's make capitalism 'late'.

Don't just get angry....Get organised!!

Join the Socialists... Join the Socialist Party...

Further information at: www.socialistparty.o
rg.uk

http://www.socialist
party.org.uk/keyword
/Art/Arts/15345/03-1
0-2012/arts-and-cult
ure-workers-need-to-
fight-back

St. Austell says...
4:28pm Thu 21 Feb 13

The Brewhouse in Taunton has been no more than as disaster waiting to happen. It is so small that it has
never been able to accommodate any large concert, unlike days of old when the venue was the old cinema
in Corporation Street, so most of what has been on offer has been mediocre at best: international celebrities just aren't interested in the Taunton venue. The fact that it has attracted 55 staff for a 352 seat theatre can not done anything other than contribute to the disaster. The upshot is that Taunton is little better than when it was branded "Cider City" in the days when entertainment centred upon fights in
Station Road and a dances in the Empire Room at the rear of the Trust Forte County Hotel.

Monument says...
4:58pm Thu 21 Feb 13

"Although we cannot say so in public, the fact is that we do not subsidise the arts because people want to see and hear great works interpreted by famous (and expensive) performers. If people want entertainment they will pay for it. We do not subsidise football matches or speedway or pop music festivals or cinemas showing Hollywood movies or music halls or greyhound racing; these are the chosen pursuits of the great mass of ordinary people, and they are quite happy to pay for them. The point is, we subsidise arts that people do not want to see, certainly not in large enough numbers to make quality performances financially viable. "

Sir Humphrey Appleby

Says it all about the arts. I will weep no tears for The Brewhouse only those who have lost their jobs.

St. Austell says...
5:54pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Slow down! wrote:
Maybe Mecca Bingo could move there and the Gaumont could be turned into the premier concert venue that Taunton and the South West badly needs
But since what is now Mecca Bingo used to be a venue for large concerts I don't see the company returning its premises to a concert venue if, clearly, it found bingo to make more money for shareholders.

St. Austell says...
5:58pm Thu 21 Feb 13

lizbeth wrote:
Very sad and shaming to the council who waste money on enhancements which many don`t want.
Taunton has little enough culture. The public need to be consulted more often.
Who ever heard of a town Taunton`s size without a theatre. Thank you Robert Miles you improved it hugely. What a shame the council can`t stop wasting money on their projects. Lets not have a Tory majority on S C C again
The only culture and entertainment that the majority want in Taunton is confined to Wetherspoons, Ladbrokes and prostitution in the Canal Road area.

St. Austell says...
6:03pm Thu 21 Feb 13

TauntonGal1978 wrote:
Thanks FreeSpeech?

It is a shame that the theatre is closing but I saved to see both these shows with my partner and can ill afford to lose £40.00! Hopefully information will become available in the coming days...
Place a claim with the administrator my friend and be told "hard luck" your claim is at he bottom of the list of priorities since HMRC come first in the pecking order.

St. Austell says...
6:03pm Thu 21 Feb 13

TauntonGal1978 wrote:
Thanks FreeSpeech?

It is a shame that the theatre is closing but I saved to see both these shows with my partner and can ill afford to lose £40.00! Hopefully information will become available in the coming days...
Place a claim with the administrator my friend and be told "hard luck" your claim is at he bottom of the list of priorities since HMRC come first in the pecking order.

St. Austell says...
6:11pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Tolstoy14 wrote:
Our group of four have tickets for this Saturday's performance of the excellent Peter Straker's Brel at the Brewhouse as well as a restaurant booking. We missed the show at St James Theatre London last Saturday when it was a sell out. As yet it is unclear what is happening- presumably nothing.
It is not acceptable to close a theatre with what appears to be one day notice with apparent disregard for performers as well as customers. We live on Dartmoor and are enthusiastic supporters of the Taunton Theatre. While this sudden closure is very inconvenient for us, it is a major disaster for the people losing their jobs and for cultural development in the region. It is encouraging to read the messages of support from other theatres in the South West.

There needs to be an active campaign for a constructive policy for the arts in the region. Taunton Deane Borough Council and Somerset County Council need not lemming-like follow the Con-Dem Coalition rubric of knowing the cost of everything and the value of nothing. Support for the arts is crucial for community well being. It acts as a catalyst which brings together many disparate groups. I have looked through again the Brewhouse's planned programme for the coming weeks. There is a wide mix of activities appealing to many different groups.

Wake up Taunton!
You have a theatre right in the centre, unlike many other towns. It should be celebrated not dissolved.

Something precious is disappearing.
Hard luck! This is what happens when a business folds for whatever reason: remember caveat emptor - the buyer beware!

Bob Cockshaw says...
7:10pm Thu 21 Feb 13

I'm gutted...Had many fun nights there watching great comedians such as Al Murray, John Bishop,Greg Davies, Arthur Smith, Stewart Lee, Richard Herring, Jon Richardson,John Shuttleworth,Sean Hughes and was really looking forward to seeing Marcus Brigstocke in a couple of weeks!

Bob Cockshaw says...
7:17pm Thu 21 Feb 13

Slow down! wrote:
Flats to house all the Romanians and Bulgarians that are heading our way, How many Mr Clegg?????

Oh no sorry your not answering that question!

Very very sad news for Taunton maybe we should change the name to Ghost town, a big well done to the local Councils, your mission is complete Taunton is dead in the water.

Well done.
great name "Slow Down", the pace of change now is way too fast , the human race seems pre-programmed to self destruct ?

dan666 says...
2:41pm Sat 23 Feb 13

There's a rat here somewhere, firstly this did'nt happen overnight and secondly why where tickets for TAOS still on sale the day before (wednesday), will these poor people get there money back. Think Fraud Squad need to be called on this one.

For Arts Sake! says...
10:43am Sun 24 Feb 13

Monument wrote:
"Although we cannot say so in public, the fact is that we do not subsidise the arts because people want to see and hear great works interpreted by famous (and expensive) performers. If people want entertainment they will pay for it. We do not subsidise football matches or speedway or pop music festivals or cinemas showing Hollywood movies or music halls or greyhound racing; these are the chosen pursuits of the great mass of ordinary people, and they are quite happy to pay for them. The point is, we subsidise arts that people do not want to see, certainly not in large enough numbers to make quality performances financially viable. "

Sir Humphrey Appleby

Says it all about the arts. I will weep no tears for The Brewhouse only those who have lost their jobs.
So, you would be happy to close down anything that costs more money than it generates? Just think for a moment about what that actually means.

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