Address | 119 Gorbals Street Glasgow Scotland |
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Coordinates | 55°51′04″N 4°15′11″W / 55.851°N 4.253°W |
Owner | Glasgow City Council ~ founder = James Bridie and playwright in residence Paul Vincent Carroll |
Designation | Category B Listed building |
Capacity | 500 (Main auditorium) |
Construction | |
Opened | 11 September 1878 |
Architect | James Sellars[1] |
Website | |
www |
The Citizens Theatre, in what was the Royal Princess's Theatre,[2] is the creation of James Bridie and playwright in residence Paul Vincent Carroll is based in Glasgow, Scotland, as a principal producing theatre. The theatre includes a 500-seat Main Auditorium, and has also included various studio theatres over time.
The Citizens' Theatre repertory was founded in 1943 by dramatist and screenwriter James Bridie,[3][4] author of around forty plays presented in Britain and overseas, art gallery director Tom Honeyman,[5][6] cinema impresario George Singleton, known by many as "Mr Cosmo", whose headquarter cinema continues today as the Glasgow Film Theatre, and Paul Vincent Carroll, whose plays were first performed at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin (founder W.B.Yeats) and later on Broadway, winning the New York Drama Critics' Circle award for Shadow and Substance (1938) and The White Steed (1939).
Under the leadership of James Bridie (Dr O. H. Mavor), the Citizens Company was based at first in the Glasgow Athenaeum. It moved in 1945 to its present site, the then Royal Princess's Theatre (opened 1878), where the building became the Citizens Theatre.[2]