翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Marlene Marlowe Investigates
・ Marlene Mathews
・ Marlene Mevong
・ Marlene Mizzi
・ Marlene Mortler
・ Marlene Moses
・ Marlene Mungunda
・ Marlene Neubauer-Woerner
・ Marlene Norst
・ Marlene Perez
・ Marlene Robottom
・ Marlborough Nomads
・ Marlborough Park, Calgary
・ Marlborough Province
・ Marlborough Pryor
Marlborough Pub and Theatre
・ Marlborough railway stations
・ Marlborough Region
・ Marlborough Road tube station
・ Marlborough Royal Free Grammar School
・ Marlborough Rugby Union
・ Marlborough School
・ Marlborough School (Los Angeles)
・ Marlborough School, Woodstock
・ Marlborough Science Academy
・ Marlborough Sounds
・ Marlborough Sounds Important Bird Areas
・ Marlborough Street
・ Marlborough Street Magistrates Court
・ Marlborough Street railway station


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Marlborough Pub and Theatre : ウィキペディア英語版
Marlborough Pub and Theatre
The Marlborough Pub and Theatre is a historic venue, situated at 4 Princes Street, Brighton. It has been associated, since the 1970s, with the LGBT community. The Marlborough's small theatre presents a diverse and critically acclaimed range of theatre, cabaret and music throughout the year, including during the Brighton Fringe Festival, LGBT History Month and Brighton Pride Arts Festival.
==Early History==

The Marlborough was built in 1787 as an inn called the Golden Cross. The cellar has a bricked-up passageway which, it is rumoured, provided a direct link between the inn and Royal Pavilion (left). According to Brighton lore, this was used by George, Prince of Wales to make discreet visits, either to a brothel〔Laura Kayne, ''Backstage Brighton'', QueenSpark Books, 2010, p.20.〕 or a theatre〔Rose Collis, ''New Encyclopaedia of Brighton'', Brighton & Hove City Council, 2010, p.356.〕 in the inn.
In the early 1820s, the inn was owned by James Ireland, a prosperous local woollen-draper and undertaker. Ireland also owned land on the Level where, on 1 May 1823, he opened his ‘Royal Gardens’ to the public. The pleasure gardens including a ladies’ bowling-green, an aviary, an ornamental grotto, a maze, and a small lake. Despite numerous attractions and special events, Ireland’s Gardens were not a financial success and he sold them in December 1826.〔Rose Collis, ''New Encyclopaedia of Brighton'', Brighton & Hove City Council, 2010, p.158.〕
During James Ireland’s tenure, the Brighton Royal Catch & Glee Club, a popular subscription music society, met at the Golden Cross every Tuesday evening.〔''The New Monthly Magazine'', Vol.10, p45..〕
Ireland was succeeded at the Golden Cross by Robert Ellis and then, in the 1840s, by the brothers James and William Creech. In 1849, James Creech got into financial difficulties and, after borrowing money against the contents of the pub, all the property’s goods were seized and sold by the Sheriff of Sussex to pay Creech's creditors. Thanks to the subsequent debt collector's record,〔AMS 66109/9/1-3, (The Keep )〕 we have a detailed description of the inn's interior and furnishings in 1849. The 20-room inn offered drink, food, lodgings and recreations to gentlemen of comfortable means. On the top floor were four bedrooms, furnished with Japanned (black lacquered) and mahogany bedsteads, dressing tables, wash stands and chests of drawers; white dimity, leather-covered armchairs; and Kidderminster or Brussels carpets. On the second floor were three slightly bigger rooms, with four-poster beds. On the first floor were four comfortable sitting rooms, with open fires, velvet-covered oak chairs and mahogany tables. The third sitting room had a piano in a mahogany case. The first floor also had a ballroom (where the current theatre is). Its fittings included a mahogany board for the game of Racehorse Balls and 20 brown ware spittoons. The ground floor featured the bar, plus a parlour (with 20 iron spittoons) and a coffee room, with a writing desk. The bar featured an 18 x 3 ft counter and a spirit fountain with eight brass taps. The kitchen was well equipped, with numerous pans, fish steamers and a five-foot kitchen range.
With the selling off of the fixtures and fittings, the building's life as a fashionable inn came to an end. It was now a typical Victorian pub, renamed the Marlborough Tavern (later Hotel) around 1850.〔John Beard, ''Brighton and Hove Pubs Past and Present'', JB Enterprise, 1998, p.9-10〕 From the 1860s,the landlord was Thomas Packham. His son, also Thomas, succeeded him in 1885.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Marlborough Pub and Theatre」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.