Tag Archives: television

Peter & David put Bromley theatre on the map

Peter Goss

I knew a bit about my godfather (Peter Goss) and Dad (David Poulson) running the New Theatre, Bromley, and had previously posted about them taking over the lease in late 1954. I recently combed through old newspapers to better understand their first few years trying to win back audiences, build a repertory company and balance the books. I came away impressed – gobsmacked – at how much they did, at a time so many provincial repertory theatres were struggling.

David Poulson

Commercial television began in 1955 compounding worries about the impact of films and BBC television on keeping live theatre outside of London’s West End financially viable. According to an interview Peter gave to a local paper in 1961, he and Dad had worked out what they could afford for rent if they were to cover their costs for quality productions and told Rank (the landlord) their rate was too high – then offered them half what they were asking! Peter’s view was “This is not just our theatre, it’s Bromley’s theatre”

Two and a half years after they opened, a local paper covered their work in a story headlined: “HOW TO MAKE A SUCESS OF REPERTORY” – crowds coming out of the repertory company outnumbering those from the cinema.

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Two young actors start a repertory theatre

New Theatre Bromley
New Theatre Bromley

Peter Goss, my godfather, and David Poulson, my Dad, met while working as actors in repertory theatre at the Theatre Royal, Bath in August 1954. Both had been in weekly rep for several years, long enough to have some idea about how to produce a play as well as act in it. When I asked my mother, actress Yvonne Forster, whether it was Dad’s youthful good looks that attracted her, she said it was his ability to bring order to a chaotic production she was acting in (in Dartford). In some scribbled notes Dad made for a memoir (which he never completed), he described a performance where he was acting as a human door hinge for a broken part of a set (in between being fired by a furious producer!) – the show must go on…

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