翻訳と辞書 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 1982 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 1986 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 1990 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 1994 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 1998 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 2002 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 2006 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 2010 ・ Southwark London Borough Council election, 2014 ・ Southwark London Borough Council elections ・ Southwark North (UK Parliament constituency) ・ Southwark North by-election, 1927 ・ Southwark North by-election, 1939 ・ Southwark Park ・ Southwark Park railway station ・ Southwark Playhouse ・ Southwark Railroad ・ Southwark School ・ Southwark Schools' Learning Partnership ・ Southwark South East (UK Parliament constituency) ・ Southwark South East by-election, 1921 ・ Southwark St George the Martyr ・ Southwark St John Horsleydown ・ Southwark St Olave ・ Southwark St Saviour ・ Southwark Street ・ Southwark Towers ・ Southwark tube station ・ Southwark West (UK Parliament constituency) ・ Southwark, Philadelphia
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Southwark Playhouse : ウィキペディア英語版 | Southwark Playhouse
==History==
Southwark (''Br'' ())〔"Southwark", in ''The Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World'' (1952), New York: Columbia University Press.〕 Playhouse Theatre Company was founded in 1993 by Juliet Alderdice, Tom Wilson and Mehmet Ergen. They identified the need for a high quality accessible theatre which would also act as a major resource for the community. They leased a disused workshop in a then comparatively neglected part of Southwark and turned it into a flexible theatre space. The theatre quickly put down strong roots in Southwark, developing an innovative, free-at-source education programme. It has worked closely with teachers, Southwark Borough Council, businesses and government agencies to improve educational achievement and raise aspirations. This programme is in great demand and attracts substantial funding each year. Over the past fifteen years the theatre has established itself as one of London's leading studio theatres, presenting high quality work by new and emerging theatre practitioners. Under successive artistic directors, Mehmet Ergen (now Artistic Director of the Arcola Theatre), Erica Whyman (subsequently Artistic Director of the Northern Stage Company and deputy Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company), Thea Sharrock and Gareth Machin (now Artistic Director of Salisbury Playhouse), it has become an indispensable part of small-scale fringe theatre in London. Its venue hire rates remain among the lowest and therefore the most competitive in London theatre, providing the opportunity to host the best of the emerging companies based in or visiting the capital. Southwark Playhouse has moved venues twice in its 20-year history. After leaving its original home in Southwark Bridge Road in 2006, the theatre operated in vaults beneath platform one of London Bridge railway station, accessed from Tooley Street, from 2007 until early 2013. From early 2013 to 2018 the theatre is based at 77-85 Newington Causeway〔http://www.whatsonstage.com/news/theatre/london/E8831352826265/Southwark+Playhouse+secures+temporary+home+in+Elephant+%26+Castle.html〕 before moving back to London Bridge as part of a Section 106 agreement when the station is completed in 2018.
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