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Shakespeare North

Click here to view a Daily Telegraph feature article on Prescot's bid to celebrate its
cultural history with a working Elizabethan theatre and arts complex

Official Shakespeare North
website here

November 2007 Update
Earlier this month it was announced that Shakespeare North had not been chosen as one of the three recipients of Big Lottery funding. Shakespeare North and Knowsley Council will continue to pursue funding to commemorate Prescot's Shakespearean heritage.

Shakespeare North project through to final shortlist
(October 2007 press release)

Knowsley Council and Shakespeare North Trust have today had confirmation from the Big Lottery Fund that its Living Landmarks bid is still in the running for £25m to create a new theatre, education, heritage and community arts complex in Prescot. .

It brings the dream of the £38.5m community and visitor attraction for Knowsley a step closer.

Knowsley Council, Shakespeare North Trust and the Friends of Shakespeare North at The Cockpit are now waiting to hear if they are one of the projects to be awarded the grant in November.

Cllr Ron Round, leader of Knowsley Council, said: “This is absolutely wonderful news and is an exciting step forward towards making our dream to transform the area come true.

“If we were to get this lottery funding, it would mean much more than ‘just’ a new theatre for the region. It would be a multi-functional arts facility for both local people and visitors from overseas. It will include spaces for performance, arts, education and training and would offer something for everyone of all ages and many interests. On top of that, it would commemorate the area’s rich heritage and links with Shakespeare. I also believe it would act as a catalyst to regenerate the area – not just Prescot but the whole borough, and the knock-on effect for the Merseyside and North West region from the additional tourism could be immense.

“At this stage I’d like to thank everyone who has given their support to the Knowsley bid so enthusiastically. Their input has helped enormously in getting us this far. The Big Lottery Fund committee need to see that there is a genuine hunger for a project on this scale in this area, and our local people have left them in no doubt that there is. More than 1,300 people have signed up to become Friends of Shakespeare North already.”

“We will now be keeping our fingers tightly crossed and hoping for more positive news from the Big Lottery Fund in November.”

Shakespeare North Executive Director David Thacker said: “This is a fantastic achievement for all those working in the project. We have come this far because of the inspirational vision to build on our heritage to transform the quality of life for local people, because of the powerful partnership between Knowsley Council and The Shakespeare North Trust and, crucially, because of the strength of support from the local community.

“With the help of local people we can go all the way. Everyone can play their part by becoming a Friend of Shakespeare North to demonstrate to the Big Lottery Fund that the momentum is with us.

 

Students on top of the world after Shakespeare bid
(June 2007)

Twenty-five Knowsley School pupils were on top of the world after they’d delivered Shakespeare North and Knowsley Council’s application for £25m to create an international theatre and community arts/education complex,

The Cockpit, in Prescot, Knowsley, Merseyside, to commemorate the first purpose-built indoor theatre in Britain (built in Prescot in the 1590’s) and William Shakespeare’s largely unrecognised association with Knowsley and the north of England.

They met with Shakespeare North Executive Director, David Thacker, and Architect Nick Helm and handed the precious bid document over to them. David Thacker delivered it to Big Lottery on their behalf and on behalf of all future generations of Knowsley children.

After handing over the impressive bid document the children enjoyed a day by the Thames where William Shakespeare would have walked 400 years ago.

First they saw the whole of London from the London Eye. Then they walked along the River to Shakespeare’s Globe where the Globe Education Department had arranged a tour of the Globe and a question and answer session with the students.

David Thacker said today: "The young people were a credit to Knowsley Schools. I had a wonderful day with them; they were great fun to be with and extremely appreciative. We wanted them to bring the bid document to London to represent the people of Knowsley as a symbol of Knowsley’s aspirations for a better future. They were perfect ambassadors and Knowsley can be very proud of its young people."

Klare Murray, Community Arts Manager at Halewood Performing Arts College helped David Thacker organise the trip. Klare said today: "The young people were extremely excited to be part of this adventure, they are very passionate and hope that the lottery bid is successful so they can continue developing their Shakespeare work. They have now decided they want to stage their own version of Macbeth."

David Lane, one of the students, said today: "London was great, the bid was massive, the biggest thing I’ve ever seen. I hope we get the new Theatre it will be boss."

Shakespeare North at The Cockpit

Shakespeare North at The Cockpit is one of 23 national projects to be shortlisted from over a hundred in the Big Lottery’s Living Landmarks Scheme.

If the bid is successful, this iconic building, The Cockpit, will contain at its heart an authentic recreation of Inigo Jones's renowned theatre, the Cockpit-in-Court, built in 1629.

The Cockpit will act as a vital hub for community life, with spaces not just for theatre but for education and all community arts, as well as family-friendly facilities including a café and cinema.

If successful, this exciting project will become a catalyst for the regeneration of Prescot, Knowsley and the region, attracting visitors from the UK and internationally, stimulating the economy and providing a focus for community activities in the area. Its success depends on winning the £25 million bid from the Big Lottery’s Living Landmarks Scheme.

A message of support for the students came from Knowsley South MP Edward O’Hara, said: "I am 100% behind this exciting project which will achieve a number of things: it will recall what a vibrant and important town Prescot was in Tudor times, as attested by the fact that the first purpose built indoor theatre was built there; it will broaden people's understanding of Shakespeare's career and make an important addition to the "Shakespeare trail"; and it will do so by providing a first class cultural facility at the centre of community life in Prescot - just as the Playhouse was in the 1590's."

 

Curtain up on Shakespeare bid
(March 2007)

The final act has begun for a bid to secure a stunning £27 million community and visitor attraction for the North West.

Shakespeare North aims to create a world-class building to commemorate Prescot’s unique identity, Elizabethan history and connection with William Shakespeare.

If the bid is successful, this iconic building, The Cockpit, will contain at its heart a historically authentic recreation of Inigo Jones’ renowned theatre, the Cockpit in Court, built in 1629.

The Cockpit will act as a vital hub for community life, creating spaces not just for performance but education and training, as well as family friendly facilities including a café and cinema.

This exciting project could potentially become a catalyst for the regeneration of Prescot, Knowsley and the region, attracting visitors from the UK and internationally, stimulating the economy and providing a focus for community activities in the area.  Its success depends on winning a £20 million bid from the Big Lottery’s Living Landmarks Scheme.

Prescot was home to the very first indoor playhouse in the country, which it is very likely that Shakespeare himself visited, given his close connections with the Stanley family, the Earls of Derby, who have lived at Knowsley Hall since 1385.

In a major coup for the project, award-winning theatre and TV director David Thacker has been appointed as Executive Director of Shakespeare North Trust to spearhead the final phase of the bid, which will be submitted in May.  David has directed 16 of Shakespeare’s plays for the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Young Vic and the Duke’s Playhouse, Lancaster.

Speaking at a meeting of leading business and theatre consultants in which Helm Architects and David Thacker introduced the project, David Thacker said:

“Shakespeare North at the Cockpit is one of the most exciting and important projects with which I’ve ever been associated. I’m deeply honoured to have been appointed as Executive Director to lead the process of trying to secure £27m from Big Lottery and other partners. Creating Shakespeare North at The Cockpit in Prescot, close to the site of the original Playhouse, would celebrate Knowsley’s role in the development of British theatre and of Shakespeare’s work in particular, and would provide a massive boost to the continuing regeneration of Knowsley. This is an opportunity that must not be missed. We owe it to Shakespeare, to our children and to our children’s children.”

Cllr Graham Morgan, Knowsley Council’s Cabinet Member for Regeneration and Neighbourhoods, said: “The Shakespeare North project represents an extremely exciting opportunity, not only for Prescot and Knowsley, but for the North West region as a whole.

“This would be a very important cultural centre, attracting visitors from this country and abroad, and locally it would provide employment, encourage economic growth and act as a catalyst for regeneration.

“We are fully supporting this bid to bring this development to our borough.”

The design brief for Shakespeare North has been created following consultation with the local community, including public meetings, consultation with schools, local young people and community groups.  David Thacker explains: “We face a complex challenge with Shakespeare North, to create somewhere that people will get on a plane to visit, that local people will also see as the heart of their community.  I’m confident that we can find that balance.”

The hard work to bring Shakespeare North to fruition has also taken a further step forward with the formation of the Shakespeare North Trust, a body which brings together all of the key partners.  The Shakespeare North Trust will submit the final bid, and, if successful, oversee the creation of this iconic community and visitor attraction.