Theatre Cambridge's main traditional theatre is the
Arts Theatre, a venue with 666 seats in the town centre. The theatre often has touring shows, as well as those by local companies. The largest venue in the city to regular hold theatrical performances is the
Cambridge Corn Exchange with a capacity of 1,800 standing or 1,200 seated. Housed within the city's 19th century former
corn exchange building the venue was used for a variety of additional functions throughout the 20th century including
tea parties,
motor shows, sports matches and a music venue with temporary stage. The City Council renovated the building in the 1980s, turning it into a full-time arts venue, hosting theatre, dance and music performances. The
ADC Theatre is managed by the University of Cambridge, and typically has 3 shows a week during term time. It hosts the
Cambridge University Footlights Dramatic Club which has produced many notable figures in British comedy. The Mumford Theatre is part of
Anglia Ruskin University, and hosts shows by both student and non-student groups. There are also a number of venues within the colleges.
Museums Within the city there are several notable museums, some run by the
University of Cambridge Museums consortium and others independent of it. The
Fitzwilliam Museum is the city's largest, and is the lead museum of the University of Cambridge Museums. Founded in 1816 from the bequeathment and collections of
Richard, Viscount FitzWilliam, the museum was originally located in the building of the
Perse Grammar School in
Free School Lane. After a brief housing in the University of Cambridge library, it moved to its current, purpose-built building on
Trumpington Street in 1848.
The Centre for Computing History, a museum dedicated to the story of the
Information Age, moved to Cambridge from
Haverhill in 2013. Housed in a former sewage pumping station, the
Cambridge Museum of Technology has a collection of large exhibits related to the city's
industrial heritage.
Music Popular music Pink Floyd are the most notable band with roots in Cambridge. The band's former songwriter, guitarist and vocalist
Syd Barrett was born and lived in the city, and he and another founding member,
Roger Waters, went to school together at
Cambridgeshire High School for Boys.
David Gilmour, the guitarist who replaced Barrett, was also a Cambridge resident and attended the nearby
Perse School. Bands that were formed in Cambridge include
Clean Bandit,
Henry Cow,
the Movies,
Katrina and the Waves,
the Soft Boys,
Ezio,
the Broken Family Band,
Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats, and the pop-classical group
the King's Singers, who were formed at the university. Solo artist
Boo Hewerdine is from Cambridge, as are
drum and bass artists (and brothers)
Nu:Tone and
Logistics. Singers
Matthew Bellamy, of the rock band
Muse,
Tom Robinson,
Olivia Newton-John and
Charli XCX were born in the city. 2012
Mercury Prize winners
Alt-J are based in Cambridge. Live music venues hosting popular music in the city include the
Cambridge Corn Exchange,
Cambridge Junction, the Portland Arms, and The Blue Moon.
Classical music Started in 1991, the annual Cambridge Music Festival takes place each November. The Cambridge Summer Music Festival takes place in July.
Contemporary art Cambridge contains
Kettle's Yard gallery of modern and contemporary art and the
Heong Gallery which opened to the public in 2016 at
Downing College. Anglia Ruskin University operates the publicly accessible Ruskin Gallery within the Cambridge School of Art.
Wysing Arts Centre, one of the leading research centres for the visual arts in Europe, is associated with the city, though is located several miles west of Cambridge. Artist-run organisations including Aid & Abet, and Motion Sickness also run exhibitions, events and artists' studios in the city, often in short-term or temporary spaces.
Festivals and events and
menger sponge models at the
Cambridge Science Festival Several fairs and festivals take place in Cambridge, mostly during the British summer.
Midsummer Fair dates back to 1211, when it was granted a charter by
King John. Today it exists primarily as an annual
funfair with the vestige of a market attached and is held over several days around or close to
midsummers day. On the first Saturday in June Midsummer Common is the site for
Strawberry Fair, a free music and children's fair, with various market stalls. For one week in May, on
Jesus Green, the annual
Cambridge Beer Festival has been held since 1974. audience for a screening of
Triangle of Sadness Launched in 1977
Cambridge Film Festival is the third-longest-running film festival in the UK. Presented annually each autumn by the Cambridge Film Trust, the Festival showcases a selection of around 100, predominantly independent and specialised, films and embeds them within a programme of special events, Q&As, and talks.
Cambridge Folk Festival is held annually in the grounds of
Cherry Hinton Hall. The festival has been organised by the city council since its inception in 1964. The Cambridge Summer Music Festival is an annual festival of classical music, held in the university's colleges and chapels. The
Cambridge Shakespeare Festival is an eight-week season of open-air performances of the works of
William Shakespeare, held in the gardens of various colleges of the university. The
Cambridge Science Festival, typically held annually in March, is the United Kingdom's largest free
science festival. The Cambridge Literary Festival, which focusses on contemporary literary fiction and non-fiction, is held bi-annually in April and November. Between 1975 and 1985 the
Cambridge Poetry Festival was held biannually. Other festivals include the annual Mill Road Winter Fair, held the first Saturday of December, and The Big Weekend, a city outdoor event organised by the City Council every July. Three Cambridge Free Festivals held in 1969, 1970, and 1971 that featured artists including
David Bowie,
King Crimson,
Roy Harper,
Spontaneous Combustion,
UFO and others are believed by the festival organiser to have been the first free multiple-day rock music festivals held in the UK.
Literature and film The city has been the setting for all or part of several novels, including
Douglas Adams' ''
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency'',
Rose Macaulay's
They Were Defeated,
Kate Atkinson's
Case Histories,
Rebecca Stott's
Ghostwalk and
Robert Harris'
Enigma, while
Susanna Gregory wrote a series of novels set in 14th century Cambridge.
Gwen Raverat, the granddaughter of
Charles Darwin, talked about her late Victorian Cambridge childhood in her memoir
Period Piece, and
The Night Climbers of Cambridge is a book written by
Noel Symington under the pseudonym "Whipplesnaith" about nocturnal climbing on the colleges and town buildings of Cambridge in the 1930s. Fictionalised versions of Cambridge appear in
Philippa Pearce's ''
Tom's Midnight Garden and Minnow on the Say'', the city renamed as Castleford, and as the home of
Tom Sharpe's fictional college in
Porterhouse Blue. The
ITV TV series
Granchester was partly filmed in Cambridge. For
Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer, establishing shots of
J. Robert Oppenheimer's time at
Cambridge University were filmed in Cambridge, featuring
King's College along the
River Cam.
Television News and television programmes are broadcast from the
BBC Look East (West) studio in Cambridge.
Radio Local radio stations are
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire on 96.0 FM,
Heart East on 103.0 FM,
Cambridge 105 on 105 FM,
Star Radio on 100.7 FM and
Cam FM on 97.2 is a student run-radio station at the
University of Cambridge and
Anglia Ruskin University.
Newspapers The city's local newspapers are
Cambridge News,
Cambridge Independent and
Varsity, the student newspaper of the University of Cambridge. == Public services ==