The Marina To provide entertainment to the numerous tourists, adverts were placed in January 1893 to attract shareholders to form a company and build a new palace of entertainment. This was The Marina, which opened in April 1893. To create the space needed a
"Belfast Roof" was built, meaning a barrel vaulted roof was formed from iron sections bolted together into hoops which were then reinforced and faced with laminated wood. However the venture was not a success, and the Marina closed after only three months when the company became bankrupt. In January 1894, the building was auctioned and bought by a consortium of creditors. Not wanting to be associated with the bankrupt company, the building was renamed.
The Pavilion The Marina re-opened as The Pavilion in February 1894 with a concert by a Douglas choir. The venue was operated by the Pavilion Company Ltd which was headed by Richard Maltby Broadbent, the man who turned
Groudle Glen into pleasure gardens and was instrumental in the construction of the
Groudle Glen Railway. The idea was that the Pavilion would match the theatres and dance halls at other resorts such as
Blackpool and was used for concerts, music halls, exhibitions, bazaars and, in one summer, roller skating. In 1899 the company merged with the Palace and Derby Castle Company.
Gaiety Theatre The new owners enlisted the services of
Frank Matcham to carry out an extensive renovation of the venue with Matcham presenting his plans for the theatre to Douglas Corporation in March 1899. Part of the plans saw the creation of a dome above the stalls which included a stained glass ceiling lit from above together with an elegant and playful interior inside the narrow shell of the Pavilion's Belfast Roof and the remains of the Villa house. The stage was extended by and the resulting loss of seating was made up for by enlarging the circle and adding the third level. The under-stage machinery was installed by the
Douglas firm of J.L. Killip & Collister of Tynwald Street. The new entrance facade, with its upstairs loggia, pedimented towers and flamboyant stucco decoration, took its inspiration from the buildings of the
Italian Renaissance, while the interior, with its ceiling paintings and ornate plasterwork, combined
Baroque and Elizabethan elements. An ingenious feature was what was known as a
"sunburner". This consisted of 7 gas lamps just below the glass ceiling with an open vent in the centre of the glass. As the gas lamps heated up, they caused the hot air around them to rise and fresh air would flow through vents at floor level to replace it. This was an early form of air conditioning. Sunburners can be found in other theatres including Matcham's theatre in
Buxton, Derbyshire, and the Lyceum in Crewe which boasts the only existing working sunburner. The theatre opened on 16 July 1900, with a
West End production of
"The Telephone Girl" featuring
Ada Blanche. The theatre enjoyed considerable success in the
Edwardian era until the outbreak of the
First World War in 1914, but then much harder times set in after the
war and the theatre fell into decline along with the Island's tourist industry. Various attempts were made to regain its former commercial success, including installation of cinema equipment in the 1920s and a 1938
ice show. The
Second World War period and aftermath saw deterioration of the building outside the means of the owners to repair and by 1970 the theatre came
"just one signature away" from being demolished. In 1971, the
Isle of Man Government acquired the dilapidated building from the Palace and Derby Castle Company for the sum of £41,000. It also granted a further £9,000 for essential repairs, as the circle bar, toilets and stage all needed a revamp. ==Restoration==