Marlborough Pub and Theatre
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The Marlborough Pub and Theatre is a historic venue, situated at 4 Princes Street, Brighton. It has been associated, since the 1970s, with the LGBT community. Until 2020, the Marlborough's small theatre presented drama, cabaret and music throughout the year, including during the
Brighton Fringe Brighton Fringe is an open-access arts festival held annually in Brighton, England. It is the largest annual arts festival in England and one of the largest fringe festivals in the world. The programme of 2018 included 1008 events at over 166 ve ...
Festival,
LGBT History Month LGBT History Month is an annual month-long observance of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender history, and the history of the gay rights and related civil rights movements. It was founded in 1994 by Missouri high-school history teacher Rodn ...
and
Brighton Pride Brighton and Hove Pride is an annual LGBT pride event held in the city of Brighton and Hove, England, organised by Brighton Pride, a community interest company (CIC) who promote equality and diversity, and advance education to eliminate discr ...
Arts Festival. It is colloquially referred to as 'The Marlborough' or 'The Marly'.


Early history

The Marlborough was built in 1787 as an inn called the Golden Cross. The cellar has a bricked-up passageway which, it is rumoured, provided a direct link between the inn and Royal Pavilion (left). According to Brighton lore, this was used by George, Prince of Wales to make discreet visits, either to a brothelLaura Kayne, ''Backstage Brighton'', QueenSpark Books, 2010, p.20. or a theatreRose Collis, ''New Encyclopaedia of Brighton'', Brighton & Hove City Council, 2010, p.356. in the inn. In the early 1820s, the inn was owned by James Ireland, a prosperous local woollen-draper and undertaker. Ireland also owned land on the Level where, on 1 May 1823, he opened his 'Royal Gardens' to the public. The pleasure gardens including a ladies' bowling-green, an aviary, an ornamental grotto, a maze, and a small lake. Despite numerous attractions and special events, Ireland's Gardens were not a financial success and he sold them in December 1826.Rose Collis, ''New Encyclopaedia of Brighton'', Brighton & Hove City Council, 2010, p.158. During James Ireland's tenure, the Brighton Royal Catch & Glee Club, a popular subscription music society, met at the Golden Cross every Tuesday evening.''The New Monthly Magazine'', Vol.10, p45.. Ireland was succeeded at the Golden Cross by Robert Ellis and then, in the 1840s, by the brothers James and William Creech. In 1849, James Creech got into financial difficulties and, after borrowing money against the contents of the pub, all the property's goods were seized and sold by the Sheriff of Sussex to pay Creech's creditors. Thanks to the subsequent debt collector's record,AMS 66109/9/1-3
The Keep
/ref> we have a detailed description of the inn's interior and furnishings in 1849. The 20-room inn offered drink, food, lodgings and recreations to gentlemen of comfortable means. On the top floor were four bedrooms, furnished with Japanned (black lacquered) and mahogany bedsteads, dressing tables, wash stands and chests of drawers; white dimity, leather-covered armchairs; and Kidderminster or Brussels carpets. On the second floor were three slightly bigger rooms, with four-poster beds. On the first floor were four comfortable sitting rooms, with open fires, velvet-covered oak chairs and mahogany tables. The third sitting room had a piano in a mahogany case. The first floor also had a ballroom (where the current theatre is). Its fittings included a mahogany board for the game of Racehorse Balls and 20 brown ware spittoons. The ground floor featured the bar, plus a parlour (with 20 iron spittoons) and a coffee room, with a writing desk. The bar featured an 18 x 3 ft counter and a spirit fountain with eight brass taps. The kitchen was well equipped, with numerous pans, fish steamers and a five-foot kitchen range. With the selling off of the fixtures and fittings, the building's life as a fashionable inn came to an end. It was now a typical Victorian pub, renamed the Marlborough Tavern (later Hotel) around 1850.John Beard, ''Brighton and Hove Pubs Past and Present'', JB Enterprise, 1998, p.9-10 From the 1860s,the landlord was Thomas Packham. His son, also Thomas, succeeded him in 1885.


Murder at the Marlborough

In 1900, the Marlborough was the setting for a murder case, when Lucy Packham, wife of the landlord, was found dead and badly battered at the foot of the stairs. Her husband Thomas was arrested and tried for murder. At the trial, a policeman, PC Puttick, testified that, while in the street outside the pub on the day of the killing, he had heard Packham say to his wife, 'You're a lazy woman. You ought to be killed. I will kill you'. Despite this evidence, the all-male jury found Packham guilty only of manslaughter, sentencing him to just four years in prison. In 1979, the crime was re-enacted in the pub with a comic play, ''Murder at the Marlborough'', by John Montgomery, starring Binky Baker. During the play, the audience watched the murder in the bar, and the trial in the theatre upstairs. According to John Rackham, the first performance was disrupted by a woman customer, who was unaware that a play was in progress:


Ghost stories

Over the years, bar staff at the Marlborough have described poltergeist-like activities in the pub, which they blame on Lucy Packham's ghost. Eddie Scannell, landlord in the 1970s, recalled, 'It was around 1976 and soon after evening closing time. the bar staff had gone home and I'd locked all the doors and was clearing up the bar. Suddenly the temperature dropped and there was a cold draught. The next moment I felt something invisible brush past me. I was shocked enough to leave the rest of the bar work until the following morning!'. In 2000, manager Sue Kerslake described witnessing lights going on and off, the switching off the gas on beer taps and the shattering a row of bottles, swept off a shelf behind the bar.Brighton Evening Argus, 30 October 2000 The pub was a major location on Brighton ghost walks.


Sussex Gay Liberation Front

The pub's links with Brighton's LGBT community date from the 1970s. Sussex GLF (
Gay Liberation Front Gay Liberation Front (GLF) was the name of several gay liberation groups, the first of which was formed in New York City in 1969, immediately after the Stonewall riots. Similar organizations also formed in the UK and Canada. The GLF provided a ...
), formed in February 1971 by Sussex University students, started to have regular meetings on Tuesdays at the Marlborough from early 1974, and discos were held fortnightly on Fridays. They held other events too, including a 1974 screening of a BBC documentary about gay Christians, ''The Lord is my Shepherd and He Knows I'm Gay''. After Sussex GLF, came Brighton CHE ( Campaign for Homosexual Equality) which took the Tuesday meeting slot from 1976 until 1981. In the 1970s, the pub was also being used for regular events for the local branch of the right wing National Front.


The Marlborough Theatre

The pub theatre, with a capacity of 50-60, dates from a refurbishment in the 1970s, with the building of a stage with a proscenium arch. There was a second refurbishment in 1988, with the addition of thick velvet curtains. On 4 March 1988, the venue re-opened as the New Marlborough Theatre.Timothy Carder, ''The Encyclopedia of Brighton'', East Sussex County Libraries, 1990, entry 189.l


Siren Theatre Company

In 1979, Jude Winter, Tasha Fairbanks, Jane Boston and Deb Trethewy — previously members of Brighton-based bands The Devil's Dykes and The Bright Girls — formed the radical lesbian feminist theatre collective, Siren. Siren's shows included ''Curfew'', ''Mama's Gone a-Hunting'', ''From The Divine…'', ''Now Wash Your Hands'', ''Pulp'' and ''Hotel Destiny''. The company made their debut at the Marlborough and toured extensively until disbanding in 1989. They also released two albums, ''Siren Plays'' and ''In Queer Street''.Tasha Fairbanks, ''Pulp and Other Plays'', edited by Gabrielle Griffin and Elaine Aston, Routledge, 1997. Siren reformed in 2014, announcing plans to perform again at the Marlborough.


John Roman Baker and Aids Positive Underground

Another company linked with the Marlborough was Aids Positive Underground Theatre (now Aputheatre) which performed the
In-yer-face theatre In-yer-face theatre is a term used to describe a confrontational style and sensibility of drama that emerged in Great Britain in the 1990s. This term was borrowed by British theatre critic Aleks Sierz as the title of his book, ''In-Yer-Face Theat ...
plays of John Roman Baker. The subject of these works was the impact of HIV and AIDS on gay men at the height of the crisis. The company's first play, ''Crying Celibate Tears'', was such a success with critics and public in the 1989
Brighton Fringe Brighton Fringe is an open-access arts festival held annually in Brighton, England. It is the largest annual arts festival in England and one of the largest fringe festivals in the world. The programme of 2018 included 1008 events at over 166 ve ...
Festival that they were selected to be part of the main
Brighton Festival Brighton Festival is a large, annual, curated multi-arts festival in England. It includes music, theatre, dance, circus, art, film, literature, debate, outdoor and family events, and takes place in venues in the city of Brighton and Hove in Engla ...
in 1990 with two shows, ''The Ice Pick'' and ''Stretching Frontiers''. The first, which premiered at the Marlborough in May 1990, was described in the festival brochure as 'the second of a trilogy in which the profoundest commitment of men to each other is essential to their survival. Michael is HIV positive. Peter chooses not to know. ''Note: This production contains scenes which may offend.'.Brighton Festival 1990 Brochure, p.12 Despite causing controversy, the play still won the festival's 'Best Theatre' award. ''Stretching Frontiers'' was an 'entertainment devised around travel and risk by John Roman Baker, with music by Michael Finnissy', also staged at the Marlborough. The ''Crying Celibate Tears'' trilogy was completed in 1991 with ''Freedom to Party'', staged yet again at the Marlborough as part of the main Brighton Festival. This final play is set in an imagined future, years after a cure has wiped HIV from gay collective memory. 'The freedom to party, and to forget, has returned. But what of the survivors and the rejected?'Brighton Festival 1991 Brochure, p.15


Best LGBT Bar None Award

From 1997, the Marlborough, now a lesbian pub, was run by Sue Kerslake and Bernadette Moss. Kath Lawson was manager in October 2006, when the Marlborough won the 'Best Bar None' award for best LGBT Venue, sponsored by Pink News and 3Sixty magazine. Lesbian and gay venues that entered were assessed on a variety of aspects of the business, including public safety, the prevention of crime and disorder and protecting children from harm. 'We're absolutely delighted with the award,' said Kath Lawson,'I've always tried to run the pub so it's a safe and welcoming place for people to drink.' From 2003-5, the theatre was run separately from the pub, by Ros Barber and Paul Stones, who programmed a wide variety of theatre and comedy. It was then managed by Nicola Haydn and Eden Rivers (Otherplace Productions), who moved on, in 2009, to programme theatre in other Brighton venues.


The Maydays

In 2004, the improvised comedy troupe, The Maydays, made its debut at the Marlborough. Rebecca McMillan of the Maydays later recalled the show for Sussex Life magazine:


Marlborough Productions

From 2008, the theatre was run by Marlborough Productions, a not-for-profit community interest company led by David Sheppeard, Tarik Elmoutawakil and Abby Butcher. In 2009, they also took over the management of the pub. Between 2008 and 2020, Marlborough Productions supported hundreds of LGBTQ+ artists, including Sh!t Theatre, Travis Alabanza, Emma Frankland, Lucy McCormick, Harry Clayton-Wright, Lucy Hutson and Rachael Young. International and established artists who appeared at the theatre included
Justin Vivian Bond Justin Vivian Bond (born May 9, 1963) is an American singer-songwriter and actor. Described as "the best cabaret artist of heir!-- MOS:GENDERID --> generation" and a "tornado of art and activism", they first achieved prominence under the pseudon ...
,
Big Freedia Freddie Ross Jr. (born January 28, 1978), better known by his stage name Big Freedia ( ), is an American rapper and performer known for his work in the New Orleans genre of hip hop called bounce music. Freedia has been credited with helping popu ...
, Mykki Blanco, Bette Bourne, David Hoyle (performance artist), David Hoyle, Le Gateau Chocolat, Scottee, KUCHENGA, Lorraine Bowen, Ridiculusmus, Liz Aggiss and Kate Bornstein.Phil Hewitt, 'Bold new LGBTQ+ work promised as new era opens for Brighton's Marlborough Productions', Brighton and Hove Independent, 7 July 2020
/ref> In 2010, Bella Todd, writing in The Guardian, welcomed the theatre's new direction: 'A great opening programme of new performance art and theatre includes the debut of The Marlborough Madams, a new lesbian company formed in the guise and spirit – and under the wing – of the famous Drill Hall Darlings. It also sees increasing activity from Neil Bartlett (playwright), Neil Bartlett in his home city. His gender-bending Brighton festival cabaret The Girl I Left Behind Me is preceded by his appearance at Pink fringe alongside Bette Bourne. It's all taking place at the Marlborough theatre, a volunteer-run venue above a well-established lesbian pub, one of the early meeting places of the modern gay rights movement in Sussex.' In 2016, the pub hosted the first ever Museum of Transology, showcasing artefacts collected by E-J Scott, 'as a form of curatorial direct action designed to halt the erasure of transcestry.' The expanded collection was later exhibited in Brighton Museum, whose website declared, 'This bold, brave and profound collection of artefacts and photographic portraiture began with donations from Brighton’s vibrant trans community. It is now the largest collection representing trans people in the UK – if not the world.' In 2018, the company launched a crowdfunding campaign to raise £10,000 to replace 'decrepit equipment including a broken air conditioning system, vintage sound and lighting and “viciously uncomfortable” seats.' The campaign raised £11,208 from 323 supporters in 56 days.10 Years of Queer: Support The Marlborough', Crowdfunding page
/ref> In July 2020, Marlborough Productions announced that they had ceased management of the pub and theatre, but would continue to present performances, parties and community gatherings at other spaces across Brighton and Hove.


The Actors

Following a period of closure throughout the COVID-19 pandemic; the pub was refurbished, renamed 'The Actors', and reopened in October 2021 by Brighton's Laine PubCo. The theatre space is currently closed and awaiting refurbishment.


References


External links


Marlborough Productions website

Latest TV report on the Museum of Transology at the Marlborough

The Actors pub website
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