Museums, galleries and street art (left). The museum is home to The
Bessemer Converter, the most important technique for making
steel from the 1850s to the 1950s. Sheffield's museums are managed by two distinct organisations.
Museums Sheffield manages the
Weston Park Museum (a Grade II* listed Building),
Millennium Galleries and
Graves Art Gallery. These museums constitute the oldest extant museums in the city, with Graves Art Gallery and Weston Park Museum being gifted to the city by industrialist philanthropists in the 19th and 20th centuries. The Millennium Galleries, being established in the early 2000s, is one of the newest museums and constitutes part of the Heart of the City development, connecting directly to the Winter Garden and Millennium Square. All three museums host a broad range of exhibits which reflect Sheffield's history and numerous other themes, including exhibitions on loan from other major galleries and museums.
Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust manages the museums dedicated to Sheffield's industrial heritage of which there are three.
Kelham Island Museum (located just to the North of the city centre) opened in 1982 and is located on the site of a 19th-century iron foundry and showcases the city's history of steel manufacturing and includes a range of important historical artifacts, including a preserved
Bessemer Converter (which won an Engineering Heritage Award in 2004 from the
Institution of Mechanical Engineers), munitions and mechanical components from WW2 aircraft (Including a crankshaft from a
Spitfire which, during the early stages of the war, could only be produced in Sheffield) and a fully functional 12,000 horsepower steam engine dating to the 19th century. The museum is an Anchor Point for the ERIH,
The European Route of Industrial Heritage.
Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet (in the south of the city) is a Grade I listed building and a
Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Shepherd Wheel (in the south-East of the city) is a former water-powered grinding
workshop, Grade II listed and a
Scheduled Ancient Monument. Also there are
Sheffield Archives.
Weston Park Museum is a museum telling the stories of Sheffield and its people. The museum was originally opened in 1875.
Bishops' House was built in 1500 and is a
Grade II listed building which is now a museum. In August 2022 the Yorkshire Natural History Museum opened on Holme Lane in Sheffield. Many of the exhibits come from the collection of James Hogg and feature a collection of Jurassic marine life, such as
ammonites,
belemnites,
plesiosaurs and
ichthyosaurs, many of which were collected from the Lias of the Yorkshire Coast. The museum has Europe's first publicly accessible fossil preparation and conservation laboratory with ultrasonic preparation facilities, an acid preparation laboratory, 3D scanning, CT scanning and 3D printing. On the opening day palaeontologist Dean Lomax examined one of the fossils on display and declared it to be the oldest example of a vertebrate embryo found in Britain and the oldest complete ichthyosaur embryo ever found in Britain. There are also a number of independent museums in the city including the
National Videogame Museum and the
National Emergency Services Museum, as well as the University of Sheffield's
Turner Museum of Glass.
Pete McKee is an artist and painter from Sheffield. He is a cartoonist for the
Sheffield Telegraph. His work is shown in street art across the city.
Theatre Sheffield has two large theatres, the
Lyceum Theatre and the
Crucible Theatre, which together with the smaller
Studio Theatre make up the largest theatre complex outside London, located in
Tudor Square. The Crucible Theatre, a grade II listed building, is the home (since 1977) of the
World Snooker Championships, which sees most of Tudor Square and the adjoining Winter Garden used for side events, and hosts many well-known stage productions throughout the year from local, national and international performance groups. The theatre was awarded the Barclays 'Theatre of the Year Award' in 2001. Between 2007 and 2009, the theatre underwent a £15 million refurbishment during which time major internal and external improvements were carried out. The Lyceum, which opened in 1897, serves as a venue for touring
West End productions and operas by
Opera North, as well as locally produced shows. Sheffield also has the Montgomery Theatre, a small 420 seater theatre located a short distance from Tudor Square, opposite the town hall on Surrey Street. There are also a large number of smaller amateur theatres scattered throughout the city.
Music The Tramlines Festival was launched as an annual music festival in 2009, it is held at Hillsborough Park (the main stage) and at venues throughout
Sheffield City Centre, and features local and national artists. Musical acts originating in Sheffield include
Joe Cocker,
Ace,
Def Leppard,
Paul Carrack,
Arctic Monkeys,
Bring Me the Horizon,
65daysofstatic,
Rolo Tomassi,
While She Sleeps,
Pulp and
Moloko. The Sheffield band
the Long Blondes are part of what the
NME dubbed the
New Yorkshire musical movement. Sheffield has been home to several bands and musicians, with a number of
synth-pop and other
electronic bands originating from the city. These included
the Human League,
Heaven 17,
ABC,
Thompson Twins and the more
industrially inclined
Cabaret Voltaire and
Clock DVA. This electronic tradition has continued:
techno label
Warp Records was a central pillar of the
Yorkshire Bleeps and Bass scene of the early 1990s, and has gone on to become one of the UK's oldest and best-loved dance music labels. More recently, other popular genres of electronic music such as
bassline house have originated in the city. , a Grade II* listed building In 1999 the
National Centre for Popular Music, a museum dedicated to the subject of
popular music, was opened in the city. It was not as successful as was hoped, however, and later evolved to become a live music venue; then in February 2005, the unusual steel-covered building became the
students' union for Sheffield Hallam University. Live music venues in the city include
Leadmill, the
Octagon Centre,
Corporation, the
City Hall, the
University of Sheffield Students' Union, the Studio Theatre at the
Crucible Theatre and the
O2 Academy Sheffield. The city is home to several orchestras and choirs, such as the Sheffield Symphony Orchestra, the Sheffield Philharmonic Orchestra, the
Sheffield Chamber Orchestra, the City of Sheffield Youth Orchestra, the
Sheffield Philharmonic Chorus and the
Chorus UK community choir. It is also home to
Music in the Round, a charitable organisation that exists to promote chamber music. Sheffield has a folk music, song and dance community. Singing and music sessions occur weekly in pubs around the city and it also hosts the annual Sheffield Sessions Festival. The University of Sheffield runs a number of courses and research projects dedicated to folk culture. The tradition of singing carols in pubs around Christmas is still kept alive in the city. The Sheffield Carols, as they are known locally, predate modern carols by over a century and are sung with alternative words and verses. Although there is a core of carols that are sung at most venues, each particular place has its own mini-tradition. The repertoire at two nearby places can vary widely, and woe betide those who try to strike up a 'foreign' carol. Some are unaccompanied, some have a piano or organ, there is a flip chart with the words on in one place, a string quartet (quintet, sextet, septet) accompanies the singing at another, some encourage soloists, others stick to audience participation, a brass band plays at certain events, the choir takes the lead at another. Sheffield was shortlisted to host the
2023 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place between 9 and 13 May 2023 in
Liverpool.
Food and drink Sheffield has a 1
Michelin starred restaurant JÖRO, which specialises in New Nordic" cuisine combined with Japanese influences. The city has another 3 restaurants mentioned in the
Michelin Guide. Additions to the city's leisure scene include
Leopold Square, situated just off the northern end of West Street and
Millennium Square, which are home to several restaurants offering international cuisine. Aagrah, an Indian restaurant in the square which serves
Kashmiri cuisine, was prior to 2014 voted "Best Restaurant Group in the UK" at the
British Curry Awards. Sheffield has many
Pubs,
Nightclubs and
Bars throughout the city. West Street, running through the heart of the
West End district of the city centre, is home to pubs, bars and clubs and attracts student visitors. Sheffield was once home to a number of historically important nightclubs in the early dance music scene of the 1980s and 1990s,
Gatecrasher One was one of the most popular clubs in the North of England until its destruction by fire on 18 June 2007. The city is home to thirteen
morris dance teams. Forms of the dance represented in the city, include
Cotswold (Five Rivers Morris, Pecsaetan Morris, Harthill Morris, Lord Conyer's Morris Men, Sheffield City Morris, William Morris),
border (Boggart's Breakfast),
North West (Yorkshire Chandelier, Silkstone Greens, Lizzie Dripping),
rapper (Sheffield Steel Rapper) and
Longsword. Sheffield hosts a number of festivals, including the
Festival of Debate, the Grin Up North Sheffield Comedy Festival, the
Sensoria Music & Film Festival and the
Tramlines Festival.
Media Sheffield has two commercial newspapers,
The Star and
Sheffield Telegraph, both published by
JPIMedia, which took over the assets of
Johnston Press PLC.
The Star has been published daily since 1897; the
Sheffield Telegraph, now a weekly publication, originated in 1855. Sheffield has its own TV station;
Sheffield Live TV, a not-for-profit company which began broadcasting on 23 September 2014. SLTV has been awarded a 12-year licence to provide the digital terrestrial broadcasting service. Regional broadcasters
BBC Yorkshire and
Yorkshire Television also cover the city. Local radio stations broadcasting in the city include
BBC Radio Sheffield and
Bauer Group stations
Hits Radio South Yorkshire (formerly
Hallam FM) &
Greatest Hits Radio South Yorkshire. Sheffield is also home to two
FM licensed
community radio stations:
Sheffield Live, and Link FM.
Kiveton Park-based community station
Redroad FM also broadcasts to the east of the city. Sheffield Hospital Radio broadcasts a 24-hour service to the Royal Hallamshire, Northern General and Weston Park hospitals and also offers a dedicated patient visiting service. The charity is operated by volunteers from studios at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital.
Film The films and plays
The Full Monty,
Threads,
Looks and Smiles,
When Saturday Comes,
Whatever Happened to Harold Smith?,
The History Boys and
Four Lions are set in the city.
F.I.S.T.,
Kill List, ''
'71 and The Princess Bride also include several scenes filmed in Sheffield and a substantial part of Among Giants was filmed in the city. The documentary festival Sheffield Doc/Fest has been run annually since 1994 at the Showroom Cinema, and in 2007 Sheffield hosted the Awards of the International Indian Film Academy. The 2018 series of Doctor Who, which features the Park Hill estate and other Sheffield locations, premiered in Sheffield. A follow-up series of the same name, to the 1997 film The Full Monty
, which released on Disney+ in 2023 was filmed in Sheffield and Manchester between 2022 and 2023. Furthermore, scenes in HBO miniseries The Regime,'' starring
Kate Winslet and
Hugh Grant, were filmed in Sheffield as well as in
Wentworth Woodhouse, a stately home in neighbouring
Rotherham.
Cinema, onscreen entertainment , Sheffield
Valley Centertainment, located in the
Don Valley, is the main out of town leisure complex in Sheffield. It opened in the 1990s and was built on land previously occupied by
steel mills across the road from what is now Sheffield Arena. It is anchored by a 20 screen
Cineworld complex which is the largest in the chain and contains the only
IMAX screens and
4DX screen in Sheffield. Other features of the complex include a
bowling alley, several chain restaurants, an indoor play area as well as indoor
laser tag. Sheffield has six other cinema complexes, five of which are in the city centre and a one at Meadowhall—
Odeon Sheffield, situated on Arundel Gate in the city centre,
Curzon, which opened in 2015 in the former Sheffield Banking Company building on George Street,
The Light, located on The Moor and opened in 2017 as part of the regeneration project, and
Vue, located within Meadowhall Shopping Centre, are the three other mainstream cinemas in the city. The
Showroom, an independent cinema showing non-mainstream productions, is located in
Sheaf Square, close to
Sheffield station. In 2002 the Showroom was voted as the best Independent cinema in the country by
Guardian readers. ==Notable people==