Barn Theatre, Welwyn Garden City Explained

Barn Theatre
Address:Barn Close
Location:Welwyn Garden City, United Kingdom
Coordinates:51.7984°N -0.215°W
Owner:Barn Theatre Trust
Seating Type:Seated auditorium
Seating Capacity:121
Type:Theatre
Opened:January 1932
Website:www.barntheatre.co.uk
Pushpin Map:United Kingdom Hertfordshire
Pushpin Map Caption:Barn Theatre on the map of Hertfordshire

The Barn Theatre, located in Welwyn Garden City, England is a Grade II listed, 17th-century timber-framed barn converted to a community theatre in 1931.[1]

It is owned by The Barn Theatre Trust and used by a local amateur theatre company, The Barn Theatre Club. It has two performance spaces: a main auditorium and a studio.

History

The original barn or barns that form the current building were constructed from timbers dated to 1597 by dendrochronology in 2014, most probably sourced from nearby Sherrardspark Wood.[2]

The building in its current form was constructed on its present site on Handside Lane in or around 1830, as part of Lower Handside Farm.[3]

It was converted from a cowshed to a theatre in 1931 and opened in January 1932.[4] [5] In 1969 the Barn Theatre Club was formed from the combined Welwyn Drama Club and Welwyn Folk Players.

The building was Grade II listed on 4 November 1980 and bought by the Barn Theatre Trust in 1984.[6]

Building

There are two performance areas:

The building also houses a bar, green room, dressing rooms, rehearsal space, workshop, and properties and costume stores.

Use of the building

The resident theatre company, The Barn Theatre Club, presents monthly productions in the main auditorium and other shows in the studio, alongside other community and club events. The club also participates in theatre festivals and provides basic youth theatre training.[9]

The venue also hosts the annual Welwyn Drama Festival (since 2015) and Welwyn Garden City Youth Drama Festival.[10] [11]

The building was also used as a film location for Hot Fuzz.[12] [13]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Barn Theatre . . 10 January 2024.
  2. Web site: Dendrochronological analysis of oak timbers from The Barn Theatre, Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, England. Moir. A K. 2014. Tree-Ring Services. 2020-02-23.
  3. Book: Eserin, Angela. Welwyn Garden City. 2013. The History Press. 978-0-7524-0133-1. Images of England. Stroud, Gloucestershire. 99. Chapter 5: Community Spirit. 41290832. 1995.
  4. Book: Rook, Tony. Welwyn Garden City Past. 2001. Phillimore. 978-1-86077-141-5. Chichester,East Sussex. 109. Chapter 8: Town Structure. 54633732.
  5. Book: Busby, Richard J.. The book of Welwyn: the story of the five villages and the Garden City. 1976. Barracuda Books Ltd. 978-0-86023-023-6. 80. en.
  6. Web site: THE BARN THEATRE. Historic England. en. 2020-02-23.
  7. Web site: By Jove! Jeeves and Wooster open new season at refurbished Welwyn Garden City theatre. Davies. Alan. 2016-10-07. Welwyn Hatfield Times. en. 2020-02-23.
  8. Web site: Studio and Stair Extensions to the Barn Theatre. WEAL Architects. en. 2020-02-23.
  9. Web site: The Barn Theatre Trust Limited Report of the Trustees and Unaudited Financial Statements. 2018-07-31. Companies House. 2020-02-23.
  10. Web site: Welwyn Drama Festival finds a new home in Welwyn Garden City. Davies. Alan. 2015-05-03. Welwyn Hatfield Times. en. 2020-02-23.
  11. Web site: Welwyn Garden City Youth Drama Festival winners announced at Barn Theatre. Davies. Alan. 2016-03-11. Welwyn Hatfield Times. en. 2020-02-23.
  12. Web site: Eight movie scenes you didn't know were filmed in Hertfordshire. Clugston. Harriet. 2017-08-17. Hertfordshire Mercury. 2020-02-23.
  13. Web site: Open day at Welwyn Garden City theatre. Davies. Alan. 2011-10-06. Welwyn Hatfield Times. en. 2020-02-23.