Blackpool Wonderful Blackpool
By Donald Auty
Blackpool
Wonderful Blackpool was the opening chorus with the spectacular summer
revue titled 'Singing in the Reign' starring Josef Locke and Nat Jackley
that reopened the Queen's Theatre in 1952.
Right - Site of the Queen's Theatre
2003 D. A.
Blackpool was wonderful to a 15 year
old boy who ate and slept show business in those days. The resort
was full of summer shows, 14 in number, and the home of many bill
toppers and supporting artistes not to mention its own resident top
notch producers Jimmy Brennan and the great Jack Taylor.
The
site of the Queen's is now a shop. It began life in the twenties as
Feldman's Theatre and was a number two touring theatre with a diet
of variety and touring revues. It was intimate on two levels and seated
around 1000. At the rear of the stalls behind the pit was a little
raised balcony where the cheapest but best seats in the house were
and I spent many a happy night there with Uncle Jack Taylor. Blackpool's
greatest home grown producer of summer shows, touring
revues, and pantomimes.
Left - Frank Randle's Last Blackpool
appearance in February 1957 - Recreated by Barry
Band in the style of the original press ad.
One
of my treats was to be taken to lunch at Hill's restaurant, that was
a meeting place for the theatre fraternity and because I was with
my Uncle Jack we sat at a table reserved for producers and managers.
Bob Johnson the portly manager of Feldman's was always there and I
considered him to be the height of sophistication because he crumbled
a bread roll into his soup and added Worcester Sauce to it, be it
minestrone tomato or mushroom. The conversation between the managers
about artistes salaries, box office takings, and contracts was electrifying
to me. I was sitting and dining with the greats of Blackpool. They
talked about how business was in far away theatres such as the Palace
Bath, the Empire Swindon, and the Palace
Reading which at that time I had never been to and I imagined the
interiors of them as these learned conversations took place and stored
it all away for the future. They are all dead and gone now, producing
shows at that great Moss Empire in the sky, but they inspired, me
a thirteen year old boy, to take up a career that has been good to
me and lasted more than fifty years, and I have enjoyed it. There
are not many people who are actually paid for doing something that
they love and I have been one of those few lucky ones.
Next Page...
Back to Front
Page