Click photo to enlarge
The Fortune Theatre, on the corner of Stuart St and Moray
Pl.
Dunedin is one of the smallest cities in the world
able to maintain a professional theatre. And life is certainly
full of drama at the Fortune Theatre. Nigel Benson peeks behind
the curtains.
It's 1974, and a class of Corstorphine School children
shuffle excitedly into the Fortune Theatre in the Octagon to
see their teacher, Kay Thomson, perform in Charley's Aunt.
I'm not the only 10-year-old who starts a lifelong love
affair with theatre that day.
In the past 34 years, legions of people have experienced
something special at the Fortune Theatre.
In many ways, the Fortune is our canary in the coal mine.
When it is healthy, it is a sign our local arts community is
healthy.
The Fortune was founded in July, 1974, by Huntly Elliot,
Murray Hutchinson, David Carnegie and Alex Gilchrist.
It was originally located in the Otago Cine Club theatrette,
at the rear of the Athenaeum building in the Octagon, but by
1978, it had outgrown the location and moved to the Trinity
Methodist Church, at the top of Moray Pl.
The church was designed by R. A. Lawson as the third building
in his First Church and Knox Church trilogy, and has a New
Zealand Historic Places Trust "B" classification.
A few months before his death in 1999, Huntly Elliot said:
"Back in 1973, the idea of starting a professional theatre in
Dunedin seemed a logical one.
"At the time, all other main centres and some smaller ones
had thriving community theatres and Dunedin had not."
The Southern Comedy Players, which had been an institution at
the Playhouse Theatre in Albany St, had disbanded several
years earlier.
"We agreed on the need for a professional company - one which
would bring together the city's then parochial audiences,
provide regular work for its actors, and offer Dunedin
theatre-goers some continuity."
Huntly Elliot had seen his vision realised by the time he
died on May 27, 2000.
Head of design Peter King originally joined the Fortune as a
trainee stage manager in 1978, just as the move to its
present home was being completed.
"For a young person, it was a very colourful time. It was
almost like olde England.
"We'd get a lot of English actors out here in those days;
people like Peter Drake and William Bullock.
"You could almost smell the grease makeup coming out of their
skin," King said with a smile.
"We'd work every day for six months without a day off. They
paid me $70 a week. I don't know if we ever got full houses
in the Athenaeum.
"It was old-school theatre and it was a fringe thing. We took
it very seriously, but we also used to drink a lot of
alcohol."
King later ran his own theatre design company in Australia
for 20 years, before returning to the Fortune in 2001.
"It was lovely coming back. You walk into that theatre and
you can be transported somewhere else. They can take you on a
journey you hadn't imagined.
"There are so many more things for people to do these days,
with all the electronic devices and everything.
"But that's one of the greatest things about theatre - it's
one of the few things that haven't changed," he said.
"We're very privileged to have professional theatre in a town
of this size. That's one of the things I love about Dunedin;
you can live in a small town, but still do big-city stuff."
Theatre manager Janice Marthen enthused: "Peter's sets are
incredible. He's a genius at what he does.
"The Fortune is renowned for the quality of its sets. It's
one of the areas where I think we've made amazing progress in
the last few years.
"We're attracting directors and actors and staff of
international standing."
The Fortune budgets for 2500 to 3000 people attending each
production.
"It's tough. It's really tough. If one show doesn't fly, it
has an incredible impact on the next production. You can tear
yourself up thinking, `Why?'." Marthen said.
"Our goal is to engage on both sides of the stage. We're
after that unique connection between the audience and actors.
"We want to inspire and transform people's lives, because
that's what we believe theatre can do."
The Fortune receives $430,000 from Creative New Zealand and
$45,000 from the Dunedin City Council, which is used for
overheads and to help subsidise ticket prices.
"We'd be looking at $75 or $80 a ticket otherwise," Marthen
said.
"Our budget's very tight. Without Creative New Zealand, we
couldn't exist.
"We're always looking for new backers and sponsors. We're
very lucky to have supporters like the Bank of New Zealand,
Perpetual Trust, Vincent George House of Travel, WHK Taylors,
the Dunedin City Council and the Community Trust of Otago.
"They've all been incredibly supportive for a long, long
time," Marthen said.
"As the economy tightens, perhaps theatre is going to go to
the back of people's minds as entertainment, but I firmly
believe we can still promote world-class theatre at
affordable prices.
"It's going to be a challenge, but we will rise to that
challenge," she said.
"The core audience has been changing in the last couple of
years. We've had a 20% increase in children and families.
"The Twits broke all box-office records. We were getting
letters afterwards from kids saying they wanted to be actors,
which is wonderful.
"And God love Roger Hall. Long may he continue writing plays.
He's a phenomenon in New Zealand.
"People have a real relationship with his characters. It's
extraordinary that a writer can talk to people in that way."