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Royal Whanganui Opera House

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Royal Wanganui Opera House in New Zealand

The Royal Wanganui Opera House is New Zealand's last Victorian theatre. Located in St Hill Street in central Wanganui, the 110-year-old theatre seats 830 and is the venue for many local, national and international events.

These include grand opera, operetta, tribute concerts, piano recitals, orchestral concerts, school events, lectures, graduations, fashion shows, dance of all forms, and floral theatre. Functions requiring a stage and auditorium style seating can be accommodated. Wedding ceremonies have been performed and the stage can accommodate a reception of up to 80. The Opera House has its own ticketing system but maintains a link to TicketDirect Network.

Background

The Opera House in 1967, before the paint job.
The interior of the Opera House in 2014

In 1897, Wanganui Borough Councillor F.M. Spurdle proposed that Queen Victoria’s “record reign” should be commemorated by the building of an opera house. The idea was supported by Mayor Alexander Hatrick, an investigative committee was established and the council agreed to proceed. The Wanganui Opera House Company published a prospectus in a local newspaper in March 1897. Of the 5000 £1 shares, 4000 were offered to the public.[1] The council announced a competition to design the opera house, to be sited beside the council chambers in St Hill St. The successful architect was to be rewarded with supervision of the job, and a commission of five percent on the total cost, with a second prize of £40 and third prize of £20. The winner, Wellington architect, George Stevenson, was announced in January, 1899. Stevenson died that July, the day on which the foundation stone was laid. A retired Wanganui builder, James Tawse, took over supervision free of charge. The tender of £4597 was awarded to a former employee of his, Swiss-born Nicholas Meuli, who ran his own building company in Wanganui.

Building

The general design of the building is of the Tuscan order (pillars and pilasters) for the lower storey and the Doric for the upper one, and…somewhat in keeping with the Borough’s other building alongside, the Council Chambers. The plans Stevenson drew up are held in the Whanganui Regional Museum. Copies are displayed in the bar/sweet stall lounge at the Opera House. The six sheets show "plans at basement, ground floor and dress circle levels, a longitudinal cross-section, and external elevations.

The Wanganui Herald of the day recorded that "the building which is of wood, resting on massive concrete foundations, all the inside walls being plastered. In size, it compares favorably with any theatre in the colony, the auditorium measuring 60 ft by 60 ft, affording seating accommodation for over one thousand persons. The dress circle and orchestral stall seats are of the latest pattern, with cast-iron frames and upholstered backs, the latter to tip up, thus giving ample room for persons to pass in front of those sitting down…" The circle itself was supported from below by 18 cast iron pillars, painted to imitate marble, and which spoiled the view of patrons. Even today patrons avoid buying seats located too close to the pillars. Behind the circle was a reception and refreshment room”.

Thomson notes that "the auditorium was comparatively narrow, and the circle ended at the proscenium on each side, "strengthening the intimacy of relationship between actors and audience". Ten large windows provided some ventilation and lit the auditorium and dress circle in the day time. Other ventilation was provided with "twenty-two ‘a hit and miss’ ventilator fitted into the walls, and in the dome itself is an ornamental cast-iron ventilator. At night electricity was used to light the theatre, ‘power for which is derived from a 16 hp Crossley Brothers engine".

Wanganui District Council has determined that the building is earthquake prone under the Building Act 2004.[2]

Timeline

1897 Council discusses need for Municipal Opera House.

1898 Competition to design an Opera House for Wanganui.

1899 Foundation stone laid by Mayor Alexander Hatrick

1900 Official opening by Premier Richard Seddon on 9 February

1900 First shows, A Sporting Life and The White Heather performed 9 January by Bland Holt and Company.

1901 Water main laid.

1905 Wanganui Liedertafel - 20th Grand Concert.

1909 Handrails provided on stairs leading to Dress Circle.

1910 Agreement in July to cover stage entrance before next winter.

1911 Engineer told to prepare specifications and tenders invited for erecting stage.

1912 Larger music stands and improved lamp holders for the orchestra.

1913 The committee decided to recover 300 armrests, in Utrecht velvet.

1915 Staircase to dress circle treated with dark spirit stain.

1917 Engineer reports on ventilation.

1918 Council suggests Opera House could become Fire Station.

1920 Alterations to Opera House - movie theatre established.

1921 Modification of seats with central aisle created.

1930 Wiring reconditioned.

1934 First loan paid off.

1937 Fire in sweet stall closes theatre for several months.

1938 Annexe added.

1956 Custodian/manager collapses, dies.

1957 Opera House Debt free.

1958 Gas engine removed.

1962 Stairs carpeted.

1963 Exterior repainting.

1967 Gray’s attention drawn to deterioration in paintwork.

1964 Dome repainted.

1978 Fire in annexe.

1986 Staff member Dave Brough died while working in the circle.

1989 Council retains control of Opera House for at least 12 months more. Friends of the Opera House steering committee established. Membership drive for Friends of the Opera House begins. Smoke detectors installed. Foodtown donates $10,000 for refurbishing the orchestra pit. Girvan Corporation pledges at least $5000 through pre-Christmas competition.

1990 Orchestra pit refurbished.

1991 $51,000 Lotteries Commission grant towards sprinkler system.

1991 Exit doors installed at either side of the building replace two doors at the front of the building and make room for upgraded toilet facilities.

1992 New toilet facilities provided, including a paraplegic toilet. Upstairs area becomes lounge, bar and new sweet stall.

1992 New toilet facilities completed. Seat refurbishment begins.

1993 Stage replaced. Seventeen volunteers help to lay 3500 lineal metres of matai timber, and hammer in 15,500 nails. Old flooring reused in the foyer of the Whanganui Riverboat Restoration and Navigation Trust’s Riverboat centre in Taupo Quay.

1995 Newly installed sprinklers save Opera House from arson attempt.

1996 Historic Places Trust awards Category One grading to the Opera House.

1997 Discussions to extend annexe. Historic Places Trust agrees to 15 m by 13 m corrugated iron extension to maintain historic connections. Plans include room for set construction and catering kitchen. Horror when Friends discover upgrading the annexe means "every aspect of the building" having to adhere to the Building Industry Act regulations 1991. Friends’ president warns that people are pulling down buildings because the cost of compliance is so high.

1999 Annexe construction begins. Centennial celebrations begin. October: Royal charter given to the Opera House as part of the centennial celebrations. Name changed to Royal Wanganui Opera House

References

  1. ^ "Proposed Opera House". Wanganui Herald. No. 9554. 29 September 1898. p. 2. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  2. ^ "Notices up at quake prone buildings". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  • Excerpt taken from A Grand Victorian Lady by Penny Robinson.