Art The
Grundy Art Gallery on Queen Street opened in 1911 and adjoins
Blackpool Central Library. Blackpool Art Society was formed in 1884 by George Dearden as Blackpool Sketching Club. The first exhibition was at the YMCA Rooms in Church Street. In 1886 the club hosted an exhibition of 226 exhibits in the Victoria Street schoolrooms. The Grundy brothers were prominent members, and in 1913 the society was granted the use of the new Grundy Art Gallery for its annual exhibition, where it still exhibits today. Blackpool School of Arts, part of
Blackpool and The Fylde College, opened in 1937 on Park Road in a building designed by civic architect JC Robinson. The building houses a gallery space which hosts a range of exhibitions. Alumni visual artists include
Jeffrey Hammond,
Adrian Wilson,
Sarah Myerscough and
Craig McDean. Plans for a new town centre 'multiversity' are set to replace the current Park Road campus in 2026. Established in 2011 and named after its former use for the production of
Blackpool rock, the Old Rock Factory consists of studios housing printmakers and other artists in Blackpool. Residents include printmaker and painter Suzanne Pinder and its founder, screen printer Robin Ross who brought the building back into use. Ross, a former radio DJ, also founded the Sand, Sea and Spray
street art festival. Running between 2011 and 2016, the festival featured live street art by international artist produced on walls and billboards in various locations throughout central Blackpool. Opened in 2014, Abingdon Studios is a contemporary visual art project space and artist studios curated and directed by Garth Gratrix, who champions
working-class and
queer artists. In 2021 he and artist Harry Clayton-Wright produced ''We're Still Here'', the first permanent collection of
LGBTQIA+ heritage in Blackpool, supported by the
National Lottery Heritage Fund. Founded and directed by local artists, HIVEArts is a gallery space and
grassroots arts collective that hosts regular exhibitions. Exhibitions have included
The Art Of Forgery by Peter Sinclair (2022), the Gallery Space open exhibition (2022) and
The Air That A Breathe, a group exhibition raising money for the Aspergillosis Trust (2023). In 2022 the gallery hosted an art auction of 250 original paintings, photos and sculptures donated by local artists raising £8,000+to help victims of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. Tea Amantes is a tearoom and gallery established in 2021 which hosts monthly art exhibitions by local emerging artists. Exhibitions have included
The Main Resort, featuring Blackpool street photography, and
Golden Energies by Katarzyna Nowak.
Left Coast Left Coast is an arts organisation that was established in 2013, as part of the UK Creative People and Places Programme to produce socially-engaged creative and cultural activities in Blackpool and Wyre. Left Coast projects have included a National Community Lottery funded
Real Estates programme in which artists were given residencies on local
housing association estates to test whether they could become embedded in the community rather than being seen as visitors. An independent evaluation by the
University of Central Lancashire stated that the project "made a real difference to local communities through the use of arts as a catalyst for the development of a sense of confidence and self-worth, developing or rediscovering skills, and increasing social connections." Left Coast commissioned a series of artists to provide "a nuanced and thoughtful counter position". Photographer
Craig Easton photographed the Williams family who he had first met in 1992 for a commission by French newspaper
Libération to document the British 'underclass'. His images of the Williams's, titled ''Thatcher's Children,
"came to symbolise the deprivation that was a legacy of the Conservative government of the day".
Revisiting them for Left Coast, Easton created a project entitled Is Anybody Listening?.'' Left Coast helped raise finance for the Art
B&B project which opened in 2019. Among the 18 different themed rooms were The ''Now You See it, Now You Don't
suite created by artist and writer professor Tim Etchells, and the Willy Little'' suite by artist Mel Brimfield, which celebrated the career of a fictional entertainer and his performances at The Ocean Hotel – the original name of Art B&B. The B&B closed in October 2022 claiming there were not enough future bookings to sustain the business. In 2022, Left Coast opened
Wash Your Words: Langdale Library & Laundry Room on
social housing estate Mereside. It provides somewhere for people to wash clothes, read, learn and create art. In January 2023 it was nominated for the
RIBA Journal MacEwen Award, celebrating architecture for the common good. Judges praised its "joyful design [that] raises expectations of the quality of architecture people should demand of social housing estates".
Aunty Social Established in 2011, Aunty Social is a voluntary-run community arts organisation in Topping Street. In 2013 it registered as a
Community interest company (CIC) and opened Charabanc, a shop selling products made by local artists and designers. Aunty Social runs the online arts and culture magazine Blackpool Social Club, the
Winter Gardens Film Festival and
BFI Film Club. Facilities include a community darkroom and library. A Queer Craft Club and
Heritage Craft workshops are hosted. Local textiles group Knittaz With Attitude is an Aunty Social project which has carried out several
yarn bombing projects in public spaces. In 2022 the group responded to reports of
sexual harassment recorded by Reclaim Blackpool which maps incidents that take place in public places. Over 20 participants created
craftivist works highlighting the precarious safety of women and using methods including
cross stitch,
crochet,
appliqué and
embroidery under the banner ''We're Sew Done''. The pieces were placed in locations plotted on the map before being exhibited in
Blackpool Central Library. The exhibition featured in local singer
Rae Morris's video for her single No Woman Is An Island.
Public art Performing arts Theatre At its peak in the 1930s Blackpool's numerous theatres and cinemas could seat more than 60,000 people. In 1874 the Indian Pavilion was built on
North Pier to host regular concert performances. After being damaged by fire in 1921 and destroyed by another in 1938 it was replaced by the
Art Deco Pavilion Theatre (now the Joe Longthorne Theatre) in 1939. One of few remaining pier theatres in the country, it hosts variety acts during the summer season. The theatre is Grade II
listed but has been on the Theatres At Risk Register since 2014. The Borough Theatre (later Queens Theatre) opened in September 1877 on Bank Hey Street. A blue Plaque marks the location of the building which was demolished in 1972/73. Her Majesty's Opera House, part of the
Winter Gardens complex
, was built in 1889 and designed by architect
Frank Matcham. The 2,500 capacity was soon deemed insufficient and was redesigned by architects Mangnall and Littlewood in 1910. In October 1938 the old Opera House was demolished and the third and current
Opera House, with a classic
Art Deco design, replaced it. Seating 3,000, it was the largest theatre in the country when it opened. The Opera House is one of only three remaining historic theatres in Blackpool still in operation, regularly staging touring
musicals. The Empire Theatre and Opera House on Church Street opened in 1895 and by 1900 it had been converted into a circus venue and renamed Hippodrome. In 1929 it became the ABC cinema but continued to host stage shows, including in the 1960s TV variety show Blackpool Night Out in which the Beatles appeared on 19 July 1964. The theatre became
The Syndicate superclub in 2002 until it was demolished in 2014. The Prince of Wales Theatre was built in 1879 next to the site of
Blackpool Tower. It was replaced in 1900 with the grand
Alhambra complex but, unable to compete with the neighbouring Tower hit financial difficulties in 1902. Architect
Frank Matcham remodelled the building and it became the Palace Theatre in 1904. It was demolished in 1961.
The Grand Theatre was built in 1894 and dubbed Frank Matcham's masterpiece. In the 1990s the theatre was annexed to provided a Studio Theatre. Supported by the Friends of the Grand Theatre, it is a registered charity and in 2022 received
Arts Council England National Portfolio Organisation status – a three-year investment of more than £1.5m. In September 2023 Blackpool Council committed £500,000 to carry out urgent repairs to the theatre. The Grand has had a youth theatre company since 1996 and has partnered with the Royal Shakespeare Company to engage school children with theatre and performance. The
Regent Cinema, built in Neo-Baroque style, opened in 1921. From the 1970s it was a bingo hall; after renovation in the 2010s it re-opened as a cinema and venue for live performances. The Old Electric is Blackpool's newest theatre, opening in 2021 on Springfield Road in the former Princess Electric Cinema. Founded by creative director Melanie Whitehead, it became the home of The Electric Sunshine Project CIC, a community theatre company she established in 2016, as well as a community arts space. The renovation of the building, which had been a string of nightclubs prior, was
National Lottery funded and carried out during lockdown.
Dance Dance has been central to Blackpool culture for 150 years. One of the first places visitors could dance was on the open air on the piers and its popularity led to ballrooms opening across the town.
The Tower Ballroom came first in 1894, quickly followed by the
Empress Ballroom and the Alhambra. The original Tower Ballroom was a smaller pavilion but the facility posed a threat to the
Winter Gardens whose management responded in 1896 by improving its facilities. The Empress Ballroom – much grander and larger than its rival – was built on the site of a roller rink and designed by Mangnall and Littlewood with a capacity of 3,000. The festival was devoted to three competitions to find three new
sequence dances in three tempos –
waltz,
two step and
foxtrot. There was one competition per day and, on the fourth, one dance was chosen as the winner. In 1931 the dance festival hosted the inaugural British Professional and Amateur Ballroom Championships and in 1953 the competitions included the North of England Amateur and Professional Championships, a Ballroom Formation Dancing Competition, the British Amateur and Professional Ballroom Championships, plus a Professional Exhibition Dancing Competition. In 1961, a British Amateur Latin American Tournament was held, followed by a Professional event in 1962. These two events were upgraded to Championship status in 1964. 1968 saw the introduction of the Professional Invitation Team Match and in 1975 the first British Closed Dance Festival was held – now the British National Championships. In modern times around 50 countries are represented across eight annual festivals in the Empress Ballroom and Blackpool Dance Festival is considered ‘the world's first and foremost festival of dancing’. The
BBC series
Come Dancing – aired between 1950 and 1998 – was broadcast from the Tower Ballroom and featured professional dancers competing against each other. Its reinvention as
Strictly Come Dancing launched in 2004 and includes an annual Blackpool week, when the show is broadcast from the Tower Ballroom. The Tower Ballroom remains a popular venue for dancing and its celebrated Wurlitzer organ still rises from below the stage. During the 20th century, ballroom bandleaders created new novelty dances including The Blackpool Walk, the dance craze of the 1938 summer season. The music was composed by
Lawrence Wright, a prominent music publisher, under the pen name Horatio Nicholls, and choreographed by 1937 Blackpool Dance Festival Champions, Cyril Farmer and Adela Roscoe. Inspired by the Blackpool Walk, in 2020 local dance company House of Wingz created a new social dance, The Blackpool Way, as part of a community project called Get Dancing. Music was composed by Callum Harvey and dance steps and moves were submitted by people from across the world. House of Wingz is the Blackpool partner for
Breakin' Convention, a festival celebrating the best in UK hip hop talent founded by pioneer Jonzi D. In 2022 members of House of Wingz collected seven trophies in the UDO World Street Dance Championships including two first place prizes. Although dance is at the heart of House of Wingz, it is also home to a collective of musicians, artists and performers who stage their own productions and collaborate on creative projects. Skool of Street is House of Wingz' charitable arm, providing free access to classes for children who do not have the means to pay as well as delivering the Government's Holiday Activities and Food programme. Other dance schools in Blackpool include Phil Winstone's Theatreworks, Whittaker Dance & Drama Centre and Langley Dance Centre.
Amateur dramatics There are a number of notable amateur and community theatre companies in Blackpool. Junction Four Productions, formed in 1904 as Lytham Amateur Operatic Society (LAOS), is one of the original musical theatre groups on the Fylde Coast. A registered charity, it changed its name in 2018 to reflect its varied canon. Blackpool & Fylde Light Opera Company (BFLOC) is an amateur musical comedy society that has hosted annual productions since 1950. Blackpool Operatic Players (BOP) has been presenting musical theatre productions in Blackpool and the surrounding areas since 1953. On 14 January 2022, a blue plaque was unveiled on Michael Hall Theatre School (formerly Marton Parish Church Hall) on Preston New Road recording that, from 1930 to 2002, Marton Operatic Society performed Gilbert and Sullivan and other operas there. Founded as Marton Parish Church Choral and Operatic Society in 1930 by Reverend Charles Macready and William Hogarth, their first production was Cupid and the Ogre. In 2021, following a decline exacerbated by COVID-19, members voted to wind the society up. A final concert version of The Mikado was held on 29 October. Michael Hall Theatre School is a small theatre space and school in the former Marton Parish Church Hall. Founded in 2003, it is run by Michael Hall who studied at the Royal Academy of Music and whose past pupils include
Jodie Prenger and
Aiden Grimshaw. Hall also runs Musica Lirica Opera Company which aims to make opera accessible. Founded in 2005, TramShed is an inclusive theatre company and charity offering inclusive performing arts to all children, young people and adults many of whom have additional needs. In 2021 it was named a National Diversity Awards finalist. Cou-Cou Theatre Productions is a Community Interest Company founded in 2018 by sisters Sophie and Nikita Coulon.
Music Heritage Blackpool has a rich musical heritage associated with its tourist industry alongside a number of popular music scenes and artists that have emerged there. The first registered venue offering musical entertainment in Blackpool was the original Uncle Tom's Cabin, situated on the cliffs at North Shore, from the early 1860s. The Wurlitzer organ at Blackpool Tower Ballroom was played by
Reginald Dixon from March 1930 until March 1970, with live broadcasts of his performances being aired each week during the summer season on the BBC Light Programme.
Phil Kalsall has been principle organist at the venue since 1977.
Lawrence Wright was a successful music publisher and songwriter who moved to Blackpool in the 1920s and opened 20 song booths, hiring musicians to play his sheet music inside which passers-by would purchase after entering to listen and sing along. Blackpool was instrumental in the music of big bands who performed jazz and swing music in its dancehalls and ballrooms from the 1930s-1950s. Frequent performers from 1946 to 1959 were
Ted Heath,
Joe Loss and
Jack Parnell. In the
post-war period Blackpool was the centre of live entertainment outside
London and there was a proliferation of musical talent coming from and discovered in the town. The town hosted three or four
variety shows per night during tourist seasons, each featuring popular music including
The Shadows,
Tom Jones,
Engelbert Humperdinck and American stars including
Frank Sinatra who performed twice in the early 1950s. The heyday of Blackpool's musical history to date and the golden era was the 1960s when live music was offered in the town's many pubs, clubs, theatres and concert venues to accommodate its millions of visitors. and Mama & Papa Jenks on Talbot Road, which attracted emerging acts of the 1970s including the
Eurythmics and the
Buzzcocks and evolved into a punk music venue hosting bands such as
the Fits and
the Membranes.
The Beatles were booked to perform on
South Pier throughout the summer of 1962 but their fame saw them outgrow the venue before they could fulfil their residency. They did go on to play a series of dates in the ABC Theatre and later the Opera House in August 1963 and 1964. The
Factory Records band
Section 25 formed in Blackpool in 1977. Their key recordings include the US crossover club hit "Looking From a Hilltop" and the album
From the Hip. Another Blackpool band signed to the label was Tunnelvision, who recorded just one single for the label in 1981.
Musical influence The large number of musical artists connected to Blackpool exceeds that of towns of comparable size;
Stanley Holloway’s 1932 comic song "The Lion and Albert" tells the story of a small child being eaten by a lion at
Blackpool Zoo and
George Formby, one of the town's most successful regular performers in the 1930s and 1940s, penned songs including "Blackpool Prom", "Sitting on the Top of Blackpool Tower" and "With My Little Stick of Blackpool Rock". Songs inspired by Blackpool in the latter part of the 20th century include
Blur's "This Is a Low",
Soft Cell's "Say Hello, Wave Goodbye",
Manic Street Preachers' "Elvis Impersonator, Blackpool Pier" and The Kinks' "Autumn Almanac", which has been called ‘the most British song of all time’. Many songs about Blackpool reflect its position as a popular holiday destination for the working classes. At the end of the 1970s it was renamed Tiffany's and later the Rhythm Dome, home to Federation – influential in the 1990s
house and rave scene. It was demolished in 2009. Blackpool retains a strong connection to northern soul with major weekender events still taking place in the town at both the Blackpool Tower and the Winter Gardens. Blackpool was not initially at the forefront of the punk revolution, with its youth culture still preoccupied by northern soul throughout the '70s, and became more well known for its homegrown post-punk groups,
The Membranes,
The Fits,
Section 25 and the Ceramic Hobbs. The aggressive and unapologetic branch of rap resonated with disaffected young people in Blackpool. Artists on BGMedia, including Afghan Dan, Little T, Millie B and Sophie Aspin, became the subject of a 2016
Vice documentary
Noisey Blackpool: The Controversial Rise of Blackpool Grime, followed by 2017's
Noisey Blackpool 2: One Year On. And in October 2019
Channel 4 aired ''It's Grime Up North'', a documentary criticised for its "sneering derision" of children as young as 12 growing up in challenging circumstances. Alongside the Empress Ballroom, which continues to host large touring bands, there are two independent music venues in Blackpool. Opened in 2014, Bootleg Social has established itself as a regular fixture for nationally touring bands and provides a platform for local musicians. The Waterloo Music Bar is a popular independent music venue, regularly hosting local and touring bands with a focus on the
punk,
rock and
metal genres, since its reinvention in 2015. In Good Company is a grassroots music collective in Blackpool that seeks out and nurtures musicians from across the Fylde Coast and provides them with regular gigs across the town's venues.
Coasting (1990),
Funny Bones (1995) starring
Lee Evans and
Oliver Platt and directed by St. Annes born Peter Chelsom, and
The Parole Officer (2001) starring
Steve Coogan. The Japanese film
Shall We Dance? (1996) closes with a scene at the World Ballroom Dancing Championships in Blackpool. All the hair styling for the film was completed by Blackpool-born-and-bred hairstylist Eileen Clough, who has been in the trade since the 1960s. In the Hollywood
remake of the film (2004), directed by Peter Chelsom, Blackpool is mentioned but not shown. Blackpool is the setting for
Bhaji on the Beach (1993) directed by
Gurinder Chadha. The film
Like It Is (1998) directed by Paul Oremland was also partly filmed in Blackpool. The opening scenes were filmed in the Flamingo. The 2005 television comedy/thriller series
Funland revolved around the fictionalised, seedier aspects of Blackpool. The town also features heavily in the BBC television serial
Blackpool, starring
David Morrissey,
Sarah Parish and
David Tennant and first broadcast in 2004, and the one-off follow-up
Viva Blackpool, broadcast in June 2006. In 2006 Lion Television filmed
The Great British Summer, which featured many buildings in Blackpool. The Royal Windsor Hotel was featured, with the owner talking all about the hotel seasons and industry.
Bernard Manning was also shown at the hotel doing his spot through the season hosted by Blackpool Born local Entertainer & DJ Gordon Head and other local acts.
The Great British Summer was narrated by
Alan Titchmarsh. Between 10 September 2012 and 19 November 2012 the resort was featured in
Channel 4's ''
999: What's Your Emergency?'' The resort was featured in the three-part reality television series,
Blackpool Lights on
Channel 5 in December 2013. The 2016
Tim Burton film ''
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children'' features Blackpool and its key tourist attraction, The Blackpool Tower. Blackpool was once again featured in a Channel 5 documentary series from 26 October 2017, this time entitled
Bargain Loving Brits in Blackpool. The series ran for six episodes until 30 November 2017.
Media Newspapers that cover the Blackpool area are the
Blackpool Gazette, the daily newspaper covering the Fylde Coast area, known locally as
The Gazette. The
Lancashire Evening Post is a daily evening newspaper covering the county of
Lancashire. The principal local radio station is
Central Radio North West - across
The Fylde,
Leyland and
Chorley areas of Lancashire, news, talk, and music. The former local radio station
Radio Wave, was based on Mowbray Drive in Blackpool. This radio station closed and last aired on 20 August 2020. Blackpool also falls in the coverage area of
BBC Radio Lancashire,
Hits Radio Lancashire,
Greatest Hits Radio Lancashire,
Smooth North West and
Heart North West. Bay Trust Radio is a hospital radio station run by volunteers and broadcast throughout Blackpool Victoria Hospital, other hospitals in Lancashire and Cumbria and online. Radio Victoria, Blackpool was merged with Bay Trust Radio in October 2018. In September 2022, Fun Coast Digital, a not for profit Community Interest Company, was awarded an Ofcom licence to operate a DAB radio transmitter from the top of Blackpool Tower, allowing radio stations to broadcast across the Fylde Coast. Blackpool Social Club is an independent, volunteer-led online arts, culture and listings magazine which has been operating since 2012 (formerly as AltBlackpool) and has had various print editions. It is part of Aunty Social, a Community Interest Company and community arts organisation in Blackpool. Other online publications serving Blackpool include Lancs Live and The BPL Bible. National television with local opt-outs is provided by
ITV Granada, the ITV franchise holder for the North West,
BBC North West, the regional BBC station for the North West region. Blackpool also has a dedicated local TV news service, That's Lancashire, part of the
That's TV network, broadcast from their studio in Preston.
LGBTQ+ Blackpool had its first
gay pride celebration in 2006. Historically, seaside resorts have been able to provide niches for
minority groups. Blackpool, like other English resorts, has had a reputation for being a safe community for gay people. In the 1990s, the town began to be promoted as a gay tourist destination. As of the 2021 census, 3.26% of Blackpool residents aged over 16 identified as gay men or lesbians – this is the twelfth highest proportion among the 331 local authorities in England and Wales. In 2022, We're Still Here – an oral histories project supported by Heritage Lottery Fund was established by queer-led arts organisation Abingdon Studios and artists Garth Gratrix and Harry Clayton-Wright. Blackpool Pride has seen an arts and heritage strand as well as an international art project that aimed to raise awareness of sites of homophobic attack or insult reclaimed as sites beauty. In October 2023 Blackpool Council launched a public survey to gather views on its vision to build on the strength of the high concentration of gay venues in the north of the town centre to create an area celebrating the resort's LGBTQ+ heritage.
Twin towns/sister cities Blackpool is
twinned with
Bottrop, Germany and
Sanya, China. ==Sport==