Camden Festival was an annual spring festival founded in 1954 and held in London , England. Originally, it was named the St Pancras Festival until 1965. It continued until 1987.
7-594: The festival specialised in the revival of long-forgotten operas, some of which subsequently made their way back into the repertory. Performances were given at St Pancras Town Hall until 1969, and thereafter at the Bloomsbury Theatre (formerly Collegiate Theatre ). Among now well-known singers who appeared in the Festival was the young Kiri Te Kanawa who sang Elena in Rossini's La donna del lago in 1969 prior to joining
14-473: Is a theatre on Gordon Street , Bloomsbury , in the London Borough of Camden , owned by University College London . The Theatre has a seating capacity of 541 and offers a professional programme of innovative music, drama, comedy and dance all year round as well as providing a space for student-led productions. Funded by a UGC grant and a considerable private donation, the theatre was opened in 1968 as
21-680: The Collegiate Theatre , and was renamed the Bloomsbury Theatre in 1982. Between 2001 and 2008, the theatre was known as The UCL Bloomsbury , to emphasise links with UCL, who use it for student productions 12 weeks a year. The Bloomsbury Theatre recently returned to the logo designed by cartoonist Gerald Scarfe which it had used for nearly twenty years until 2001. The main theatre was closed for building works in 2015 and reopened in February 2019. The theatre building also provides access to
28-588: The Covent Garden Opera in 1970. The Camden Festival was superseded by the Bloomsbury Festival in 1988. Today, the festival consists of a very broad range of cultural events, as evidenced by its 2013 programme, and opera appears as only a very small part of its programming. This article about an opera company or opera festival is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Collegiate Theatre The Bloomsbury Theatre
35-710: The UCL Union Fitness Centre and Clubs and Societies Centre on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors. The basement also holds one of the three University Shops. A UCL Union-run café is on the Ground Floor. Access to the Main UCL Wilkins Building ( Octagon Building ) and the UCL Refectory is possible through the theatre building. Amongst the many other artists who have performed at the theatre are; UCL alumnus Ricky Gervais has performed two of his standup shows in
42-709: The theatre provided a residency for the New London Orchestra and hosted Robin Ince 's "Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People" for several years. May 2006 Paul Simon performed a concert which was recorded for the BBC Radio 2 January 2008 Adele performed her first solo concert which included a full performance of her debut album 19 which went to No.1 in the UK charts in the same week. Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas meet whilst being members of UCL Film Society and cite
49-528: The theatre, where they were also filmed for release on DVD and was the venue for Crusader Norman Housley come-back lecture series: Contesting the Crusades, which he developed into a popular history book. In July 1982, the Bloomsbury Theatre premiered the English language performance of Pirandello's Liola by Internationalist Theatre directed by UCL alumnus Fabio Perselli who also did the translation. From 2001,
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