The theatre is situated on
King Street, a few yards from the
Floating Harbour. From 1972 until 2016, the public entrance was through the Coopers' Hall, the earliest surviving building on the site. The Coopers' Hall was built in 1744 for the Coopers' Company, the
guild of
coopers in Bristol, by
architect William Halfpenny. It has a "debased
Palladian" façade with four Corinthian columns. It only remained in the hands of the Coopers until 1785, subsequently becoming a public assembly room, a wine warehouse, a Baptist chapel and eventually a fruit and vegetable warehouse. The theatre was built between 1764 and 1766. Although Bristol architect
Thomas Paty supervised construction, the theatre was built to designs by James Saunders,
David Garrick's carpenter at Drury Lane. Saunders had provided drawings for the theatre in Richmond, Surrey, built in 1765. A long section (1790, at Harvard University Theatre Collection) and a survey plan (1842, at the Local Studies Library) of the Richmond theatre show close similarities with the Bristol theatre in the proportions and in the relationship between the actors on stage and the spectators surrounding them on three sides. The site chosen was Rackhay Yard, a roughly rectangular empty site behind a row of medieval houses and to one side of the Coopers' Hall. Two (and possibly three) new passageways built through the ground floor of the houses fronting King Street gave access to Rackhay Yard and the "New Theatre" inside it. . Fifty numbered
silver tickets were issued to shareholders, granting them unlimited free access to shows at the theatre, in return for each of them donating £50 to fund its construction. Two special
golden tickets were issued to cabinet maker Edward Crump and his wife Ann Crump, for "the great trouble and expense" they had gone to to convince the landowners to allow the construction of the theatre. The theatre opened on 30 May 1766 with a performance which included a prologue and epilogue given by David Garrick. As the proprietors were not able to obtain a royal licence, productions were announced as "a concert with a specimen of rhetorick" to evade the restrictions imposed on theatres by the
Licensing Act 1737. This ruse was soon abandoned, but a production in the neighbouring Coopers' Hall in 1773 did fall foul of this law. Legal concerns were alleviated when the royal
letters patent were eventually granted following the passing of the '''''' (
18 Geo. 3. c. 8), and the theatre became a
patent theatre and took up the name "Theatre Royal". whose ghost, according to legend, haunts the Bristol theatre. The auditorium was rebuilt with a new sloping ceiling and gallery in 1800. Following her death in 1853 the M'Creadys' son-in-law James Chute took over. However, he became overcommitted, running the Bath Theatre Royal, the Theatre Royal Bristol and the new
Prince's Theatre, opened in 1867. In 1881 the lease on the theatre was taken up by popular actor George Melville, who invested heavily in it, carrying out heavy refurbishment. Despite the popularity of his pantomime performances, he struggled to make a profit and gave up the lease in 1893. Failures to invest in the decaying fabric of the building in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, legal battles between the proprietors and the managers, as well as the shifting nature of popular entertainment, saw the theatre struggle up to the time it was taken over by the Old Vic in 1943. Historic documents from the history of the Theatre Royal and Bristol Old Vic can be found at
Bristol Archives and
University of Bristol Theatre Collection. == Formation of the Bristol Old Vic ==