Similar to his father, Stephen Kemble became a very successful theatre manager of the Eighteenth-Century English stage. He managed the original
Theatre Royal, Newcastle for fifteen years (1791–1806). He brought members of his famous acting family and many other actors out of London to Newcastle. Stephen's sister,
Sarah Siddons, was the first London actor of repute to break through the prejudice which regarded summer " strolling", or starring in the provincial theatres, as a degradation. Stephen Kemble guided the Theatre through many celebrated seasons. The Newcastle audience quickly came to regard itself, that is, as "in a position of great theatrical privilege." The original Theatre Royal was opened on 21 January 1788 and was located on Mosley Street, next to Drury Lane. While in
Newcastle upon Tyne Kemble lived in a large house opposite the White Cross in Newgate Street. File:StephenKemble4.jpg|Kemble by
John Raphael Smith,
National Portrait Gallery File:StephenKemble3.jpg|Stephen Kemble File:Newcastle Theatre-1809.jpg|Royal Theatre, Newcastle File:StephenKembleTicket.jpg|Kemble Theatre Ticket File:Kemble Hamlet.jpg|Stephen Kemble as Hamlet 1794 File:Harlow The Court for the Trial of Queen Katharine.jpg|Kemble as
Henry VIII in
The Court for the Trial of Queen Katharine by
George Henry Harlow, 1817 in
Oroonoko Stephen Kemble took a temporary 12-month lease on the
Theatre Royal, Edinburgh in 1792/3 but initially failed to take a long-term lease. He ran a temporary theatre nearby at the head of
Leith Walk 1793/4 under the title of "circus" before securing long-term lease in 1794 and he held this until 1800 although with an interval created by
Harriet Pye Esten. He also managed other theatres; The Theatre Royal, Glasgow (eventually replaced by
Tivoli Theatre (Aberdeen)) (1795); Chester; Lancaster; Sheffield (1792);
Berwick-upon-Tweed (1794); theatres in
Northumberland;
Alnwick (where he built a theatre, 1796) and rural areas on the theatre circuit. From Newcastle, Kemble ran the
Durham circuit (1799), which included
North Shields,
Sunderland,
South Shields,
Stockton and
Scarborough and the opening for the Stockton Races at
Stockton Racecourse. He also managed theatres at
Northallerton and
Morpeth. In
Broadway, he performed in the Assembly Room of the Lygon Arms (formerly known as the White Hart Inn). He also managed
Whitehaven and
Paisley (1814),
Northampton Theatre, the
theatre at Birmingham and Theatre Royal,
Dumfries, Portsmouth. For a short time in 1792, actor
Charles Lee Lewes assisted Stephen Kemble in the management of the
Dundee Repertory Theatre He supported the careers of many leading actors of the time such as
Master Betty, his wife
Elizabeth Satchell, his sister
Elizabeth Whitlock,
George Frederick Cooke,
Charlotte Wattell, Harriet Pye Esten,
John Edwin,
Joseph Munden, Grist,
Elizabeth Inchbald, Pauline Hall, Wilson,
Charles Incledon, Egan. His nephew
Henry Siddons (Sarah Siddons' son) made his first appearance on stage in Sheffield (October 1792), his younger brother Charles Kemble,
Thomas Apthorpe Cooper,
John Liston, John Emery,
Daniel Egerton, William Macready. Stephen presented London stars such as
Edmund Kean, Alexander and Elizabeth Pope (née
Elizabeth Younge), Mrs. Dorothea Jordan, his brother
John Philip Kemble, Wright Bowden, his sister
Sarah Siddons,
Elizabeth Billington,
Michael Kelly (tenor),
Anna Maria Crouch, and
Charles Lee Lewes. == Actor ==