. The Academy of Dramatic Art was founded on 25 April 1904 by actor-manager Sir
Herbert Beerbohm Tree (the grandfather of actor
Oliver Reed) at the
West End's
Her Majesty's Theatre (now His Majesty's) situated in
Haymarket in the
City of Westminster, London. In 1905, the Academy moved to 62 Gower Street, and a managing council was set up to oversee the school. Its first president was Sir
Squire Bancroft, and its members included
George Bernard Shaw, who later donated his royalties from his play
Pygmalion to RADA and gave lectures to students at the school. In 1920, the Academy was granted a royal charter, becoming the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. In 1921, a new theatre was built on Malet Street behind the Gower Street buildings. Edward, Prince of Wales, opened the theatre. In 1923, Sir
John Gielgud studied at RADA for a year. He later became president of the academy and its first honorary fellow. In 1924, RADA received its first government subsidy, a grant of £500. The Gower Street buildings were torn down in 1927 and replaced with a new building, financed by Bernard Shaw, who also left one-third of his royalties to the academy on his death in 1950. The academy has received other government funding at various times, including a £22.7 million grant from the Arts Council National Lottery Board in 1996, which was used to renovate its premises and rebuild the Jerwood Vanbrugh Theatre. In 2000, the academy founded
RADA Enterprises Ltd, now known as RADA Business, providing training programmes and coaching for organisations and individuals in communications and team building which use drama training techniques in a business context. The profits are fed back into the academy to help cover its costs. In 2001, RADA joined with the
London Contemporary Dance School to create the UK's first
Conservatoire for Dance and Drama (CDD). RADA left the CDD in August 2019 to become an independent higher education provider. RADA is also a founder member of the
Federation of Drama Schools, established in 2017. In 2004, celebrity photographer
Cambridge Jones was commissioned to create a body of work published as a book,
Off Stage: 100 Portraits Celebrating the RADA Centenary, in 2005 to celebrate RADA's centenary. The photographs include
John Hurt,
Alan Rickman,
Sheila Hancock, Sir
Anthony Hopkins,
Ralph Fiennes,
Edward Woodward, Sir
Ian Holm,
Richard Attenborough,
Joan Collins,
Tom Courtenay,
Warren Mitchell,
Imelda Staunton,
June Whitfield,
Richard Briers,
Glenda Jackson,
Juliet Stevenson,
Jonathan Pryce,
Kenneth Branagh,
Ioan Gruffud,
Susannah York and
Timothy Spall. In 2011,
the Lir Academy was established in association with RADA at
Trinity College Dublin, with the partnership of the
Cathal Ryan Trust. Following RADA’s conservatoire-style, practical theatre training, the Lir Academy modelled its courses after the London-based school. RADA has been registered with the Office for Students as a higher education institution since July 2018. The current principal of the academy, Niamh Dowling, succeeded
Edward Kemp in 2022. ==Courses==