The Thekla Explained

The Old Profanity
Address:Floating Harbour
Pushpin Map:Bristol
Pushpin Map Caption:Thekla, Bristol
City:Bristol
Country:England
Designation:Showboat
Capacity:Variable
Othernames:Thekla
Production:Visiting performances
Currentuse:Music venue

Thekla is a former cargo ship moored in the Mud Dock area of Bristol's Floating Harbour, England. The ship was built in Germany in 1958 and worked in the coastal trades.

In 1982 the ship was bought by Ki Longfellow-Stanshall, the wife of Vivian Stanshall, refitted, and brought to Bristol in 1983 as the Old Profanity Showboat. It was used as a theatre to showcase music of every sort, including cabaret, comedy, plays, musicals, and poetry events. The ship also contained an art gallery. The living quarters were home for Vivian, Ki, their daughter, Silky Longfellow-Stanshall, and Ki's daughter, Sydney Longfellow, as well as a few key personnel. During the 1990s, under new management, it was run as a rent-a-nightclub. The ship has now been returned to its original working name of Thekla and is run as a night club and venue for various bands by Daybrook House Promotions.

Construction and working life

Built in Yard No. 185, Thekla was launched on 12 July 1958 by Büsumer-Schiffswerft W & E Sielaff at Büsum, Schleswig-Holstein for the Schepers family of Haren/Ems.[1] [2] One of the last riveted ships to be produced (the hulls of metal ships have long been made by welding plates), she measured 424 gross registered tons and had a deadweight tonnage of 718 tons. Her overall length is 52.77m (173.13feet) and breadth 8.82m (28.94feet), with a 3.21m (10.53feet) draft. Theklas hold was lined with Australian red jarrah, one of the hardest woods.[3] With a single screw propulsion, she was powered by a 300abbr=onNaNabbr=on diesel engine made by Bohn & Kähler, Kiel.

Thekla was a coastal trading vessel carrying a variety of cargoes between northern and western European ports, particularly timber from ports of the Baltic Sea.[4] During her trading life, she remained on the ship register of Haren/Ems, passing in ownership from Johann Schepers to Josef Schôning and then Bernhard Schepers but with no change of name. After running aground at Gatesend, Norfolk, she was left rusting away for seven years in the half-abandoned docks of Sunderland on the eastern coast of England,[5] before being purchased by the Stanshalls for £15,000.[6]

Converting a ship into a showboat

The Stanshalls bought the ship with a government-guaranteed loan.[7] Refitted and covered in a new coat of black paint and white paint Thekla took six days and six nights to sail the 732nmi to Bristol, arriving on 4 August 1983.[8] Her opening night on 1 May 1984 was filmed as an Omnibus BBC 1 documentary by the BBC.[9]

For the next two and a half years, The Old Profanity Showboat put on over 240 theatrical productions. To support its theatre and cabaret (which seldom paid for itself), the Old Pro also provided a stage for bands. Within a year, the Old Pro was in use as a small theatre, jazz venue, folk club and cabaret.[10]

By early 1986, Ki had become exhausted and wanted to go back to writing novels, and Vivian wanted to renew his recording career, and in August 1986 the showboat stopped putting on shows.

Throughout the 1990s and into the early 2000s, Thekla was taken over and run as an underground nightclub.[11]

Work by the artist Banksy can be seen stencilled over the bulkheads inside the club as well as his much larger work on the outside of the hull at the waterline. This piece was painted over by the harbour master, much to the annoyance of the club's owners, who threatened the council and harbour master with legal action. Banksy returned to paint it again. The painting of the "Grim Reaper" is now on display at the M Shed.[12] [13] The space on the hull was replaced with artwork by Bristol-born artist, Inkie. The Banksy "Grim Reaper" is still used as key iconography by Thekla.

A refurbishment of the ship was completed in October 2006 after being purchased by Daybrook House Promotions (DHP). It remains at the moorings in central Bristol where it was first positioned in 1983 and continues to function as a music venue and nightclub. Artists such as Franz Ferdinand, The New York Dolls, Pete Doherty, Tokyo Police Club, The Growlers, Santigold, Wire, Kevin Coyne, The Chords in their final gig in the classic line-up, and iconic bands from all over the world as well as local acts from Bristol and Bath have played at Thekla since DHP purchased the venue. Artists that have played the boat since DHP's takeover include Stormzy,[14] Phoebe Bridgers[15] and James Marriott.[16] The ship was repainted from black to cream and dark green.

A further £1m refurbishment of the ship took place in the summer of 2019.[17] For the extensive repairs, the venue was towed away from its historic spot in the harbour to Albion Drydock. The repairs included a brand new steel offset hull, which was welded into place around the original hull. During this time the venue had to close, and took up temporary residency as "Thekla Faraway" in a bar on Small St in central Bristol - where its regular club nights continued until it was able to re-open in September that year. In 2020, the venue was forced to temporarily close as a result of the COVID-19 Pandemic. In accordance with government guidelines, the venue was able to periodically reopen for socially distant "Sit Down Sessions" of its regular club nights. The venue fully re-opened in July 2021. In May 2024, the venue celebrated its 40th anniversary.[18]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Thekla is still moored in Bristol's Floating Harbour where she was docked in 1983. Today she is used as a venue for bands and club nights.
  2. No advertisements were ever placed anywhere. No one was ever actually interviewed and formally "hired." Theklas people either came from the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, or as customers ... and kept returning until a place was found for them.
  3. The Bristol production of Stinkfoot was celebrated in print with Stinkfoot:An English Comic Opera by Sea Urchin Editions, with full script, song lyrics, cast, artwork by Stanshall, and an introduction by Ki.
  4. It was not, he insisted, about Christmas, or for Christmas, and it certainly was not a pantomime, a very British style of entertainment traditionally put on in theatres over the Christmas period.
  5. Stanshall called it his "awkestra"

General references

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thekla – Küstenmotorschiff – Bau Nr. 185. Büsumer-Werft. Dieter A Sattler. 3 December 2015. de.
  2. Web site: Thekla. Miramar Ship Index (subscription required). R B Haworth, Welloington, New Zealand. 3 December 2015.
  3. Web site: Old Profanity 2. Ginger Geezer. 3 December 2015.
  4. News: Viv Stanshall: Bristol's eccentric genius and Thekla 'captain'. 3 December 2015. Bristol Post. 20 January 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208144035/http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/Viv-Stanshall-Bristol-s-eccentric-genius-Thekla/story-25893576-detail/story.html. 8 December 2015. dmy-all.
  5. Web site: M. V. Thekla. The Broadcasting Fleet. 3 December 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160127010406/http://broadcasting-fleet.com/thekla.htm. 27 January 2016. dmy-all.
  6. Book: Welch , Chris . Ginger Geezer: The Life of Vivian Stanshall . Lucian . Randall . 2010 . Fourth Estate . 978-1841156798 . 233. .
  7. Dalton. Stephen. Magic, mischief and madness. Shipshape. Winter 2012. 23–25.
  8. News: Viv Stanshall: Bristol's eccentric genius and Thekla 'captain'. 28 November 2015. Bristol Post. 20 January 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208144035/http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/Viv-Stanshall-Bristol-s-eccentric-genius-Thekla/story-25893576-detail/story.html. 8 December 2015. dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Listings 30 September 1984 . BBC . 19 August 2018.
  10. Web site: Historic Ship Gets Turbosound Makeover. Ziogiorgio. 28 November 2015.
  11. Web site: History. Thekla. 28 November 2015.
  12. Web site: Banksy’s Grim Reaper goes on display at M Shed. Bristol Museums Galleries and Archives. 28 November 2015.
  13. News: Dave. Simpson. 2019-01-16. Crowds, vandals, chaos: what happens when Banksy sprays your wall?. The Guardian. 16 January 2019. 0261-3077. www.theguardian.com.
  14. Web site: Stormzy . 2022-12-13 . Thekla Bristol . en.
  15. Web site: Phoebe Bridgers . 2022-12-13 . Thekla Bristol . en.
  16. Web site: James Marriott . 2024-02-13 . Thekla Bristol . en.
  17. Web site: Restoration . 2022-12-13 . Thekla Bristol . en.
  18. News: Morris . Steven . 2024-05-02 . ‘Thekla runs a tight ship’: Bristol’s floating venue marks 40 years at dock . 2024-05-03 . The Guardian . en-GB . 0261-3077.