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{{short description|National Theatre of Ireland, Dublin
{{About|the Abbey Theatre, Dublin}}
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{{Infobox Theatre
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|website = {{url|www.abbeytheatre.ie}}
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The '''Abbey Theatre''' ({{
In its early years, the theatre was closely associated with the writers of the [[Irish Literary Revival]], many of whom were involved in its founding and most of whom had plays staged there. The Abbey served as a nursery for many of leading [[Irish theatre|Irish playwrights]], including [[William Butler Yeats]], [[Augusta, Lady Gregory|Lady Gregory]], [[Seán O'Casey]] and [[John Millington Synge]], as well as leading actors. In addition, through its extensive programme of touring abroad and its high visibility to foreign, particularly American, audiences, it has become an important part of the Irish cultural brand.
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The third base was the financial support and experience of [[Annie Horniman]],<ref name=EB/> a middle-class Englishwoman with previous experience in theatre production, having been involved in the presentation of [[George Bernard Shaw]]'s ''[[Arms and the Man]]'' in London in 1894. An acquaintance of Yeats from London circles, including the Order of the Golden Dawn, she came to Dublin in 1903 to act as Yeats' unpaid secretary and to make costumes for a production of his play ''The King's Threshold''. Her money helped found the Abbey Theatre and, according to the critic Adrian Frazier, would "make the rich feel at home, and the poor—on a first visit—out of place."<ref>Frazier, Adrian. ''Behind the Scenes: Yeats, Horniman, and the Struggle for the Abbey Theater'', Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1990. p. 172</ref>
The founding of the Theatre is also connected with a broader wave of change found in European drama at the end of the nineteenth century. The founding of Théâtre Libre in Paris in 1887 and the work of the Moscow Art Theatre in 1895 represented a challenge to a "stale metropolitanism".<ref>{{Cite news|title=Film: "The Abbey Theatre: the First 100 years"|last=Lynch|first=John|date=2004|work=RTÉ}}</ref> This movement echoes Lady Gregory's commitment and determination to make the Abbey Theatre a theatre for the people.<ref name="
===Foundation===
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In 1905 without properly consulting Horniman, Yeats, Lady Gregory and Synge decided to turn the theatre into a [[limited liability company]], the National Theatre Society Ltd.<ref>Richards, Shaun. ''The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century Irish Drama'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, February 2004. p. 63. {{ISBN|0-521-00873-5}}</ref> Annoyed by this treatment, Horniman hired [[Ben Iden Payne]], a former Abbey employee, to help run a new repertory company which she founded in [[Manchester, England|Manchester]].<ref>Butler Yeats, William. ''The Collected Letters of W. B. Yeats: Volume IV: 1905–1907'', Oxford: Oxford University Press, Republished 1996. p. 616. {{ISBN|0-19-812684-0}}</ref> Leading actors [[Máire Nic Shiubhlaigh]], Honor Lavelle ([[Helen Laird]]), Emma Vernon, Máire Garvey, Frank Walker, [[Seamus O'Sullivan]], [[Pádraic Colum]] and [[George Roberts (publisher)|George Roberts]] left the Abbey.<ref>Edward Kenny (nephew of Máire Nic Shiubhlaigh): The Splendid Years: recollections of Maire Nic Shiubhlaigh, as told to Edward Kenny, with appendices and lists of Irish theatre plays, 1899–1916. Duffy and Co., Dublin. 1955</ref>
The press was impressed with the building and the ''Cork Constitution'' wrote that "the theatre has neither orchestra nor bar, and the principal entrance is through a building which was formerly the Dublin morgue."<ref name="
==== Contributions of founders and funders ====
===== Lady Gregory =====
Gregory helped create the Irish Literary Theatre, which would later form one base for the INTS, with W.B. Yeats and Edward Martyn. She met Yeats in 1898,<ref name="
In 1903, when Horniman offered the INTS a theatre, Lady Gregory schemed to bypass the terms of the deal. She didn't like Horniman and was happy when she left, saying she was "free from her and from further foreign invasion."<ref name="bts 205">{{Cite book|title=Behind the Scenes: Yeats, Horniman and the Struggle for the Abbey Theatre|pages=205}}</ref> She wrote many plays for the theatre, specializing in the one-act play.
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===== Miss Annie Horniman =====
Annie Horniman, a British theatre enthusiast and manager, was essential in the creation of the Abbey
She supported him as well as the INTS with financial support as she came from a rich family and, in 1903, after Yeats eloquently declared his apolitical theatrical ideals, she offered to give him a theatre in Dublin worth thirteen thousand pounds, but for the deal to work, she had strict conditions. Firstly, she requested that his speech, essays on the "Irish National Theatre," and her offer be made public. Secondly, the point she stressed most, there were to be no politics at all.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Behind the Scenes: Yeats, Horniman and the Struggle for the Abbey Theatre|pages=49–50, 75–77}}</ref> She finally gave the building for the Abbey Theatre in 1904, but remained the owner. Yeats accepted her terms but Gregory and Synge worked on finding ways to finesse their way around them before officially accepting. She didn't want to have anything to do with Irish politics, especially not nationalism, and was very reactive to anything she saw as political, which caused several inflammatory feuds with her colleagues. She also did not care for the accessibility of theatre, which was an important issue for the founders, and she created additional rules for ticket pricing, and made the Abbey Theatre one of the most expensive theatres in Dublin.<ref name="int 115"/> From then, she became the manager of the Abbey Theatre. Over the years, she put many times the theatre's value in money back into it in exchange for input on the plays being staged and respect from the company's directors.
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===Early years===
In the early years, there were challenges in finding plays by Irish playwrights, so the founders established guidelines for playwrights submitting plays and wrote some plays themselves. The emergence of the theatre, the challenge of finding plays by Irish playwrights, the protests surrounding ''Playboy of the Western World'', and the work of the Irish Theatre were key developments during this time.<ref name="
[[File:John Millington Synge.jpg|right|150px|thumb|[[John Millington Synge]], author of ''[[The Playboy of the Western World]]'', which caused riots at the Abbey on the play's opening night]]
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====Affiliated schools====
The [[Abbey School of Acting]] was set up
====The Peacock and the Gate====
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The tradition of the Abbey as primarily a writers' theatre survived Yeats' withdrawal from day-to-day involvement. [[Frank O'Connor]] sat on the board from 1935 to 1939, served as managing director from 1937, and had two plays staged during this period. He was alienated from and unable to cope with many of the other board members. They held O'Connor's past adultery against him. Although he fought formidably to retain his position, soon after Yeats died the board began machinations to remove O'Connor. In 1941 [[Ernest Blythe]], a politician, who had arranged the first State subsidy for the theatre, became managing director.<ref>Pierce, David. "Irish Writing in the Twentieth Century: A Reader". Cork: Cork University Press, September 2000. p. 743. {{ISBN|1-85918-208-9}}</ref><ref>Welch, p. 135.</ref>
During the 1940s and 1950s, there was a steady decline in the number of new productions. There were 104 new plays produced from 1930 to 1940, whereas this number dropped to 62 for 1940–1950.<ref name="
During the 1940s and 1950s, the staple fare at the Abbey was a comic farce set in the idealised peasant world of [[Éamon de Valera]]. If such a world had ever existed, it was no longer considered relevant by most Irish citizens, and as a result, audience numbers continued to decline. This drift might have been more dramatic but popular actors, including [[F. J. McCormick]], and dramatists, including [[George Shiels]], could still draw a crowd.<ref>{{cite book | title=Experimental Irish Theatre: After W B Yeats | publisher=Palgrave Macmillan | author=Walsh, Ian | pages=80–82}}</ref> [[Austin Clarke (poet)|Austin Clarke]] staged events for his Dublin Verse Speaking Society—later the [[Lyric Theatre, Dublin|Lyric Theatre]]—at the Peacock from 1941 to 1944 and the Abbey from 1944 to 1951.{{citation needed|date=June 2012}} Long-time servant [[Nellie Bushell]] left service as an usher in 1948.
==1950s to 1990s==
On 17 July 1951, a fire damaged the Abbey Theatre, with only the Peacock remaining intact.<ref>Haggerty, Bridget. "[http://www.irishcultureandcustoms.com/ALandmks/AbbeyTheatre.html Irish Landmarks: The Abbey Theatre] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080208174803/http://www.irishcultureandcustoms.com/ALandmks/AbbeyTheatre.html |date=8 February 2008 }}". irishcultureandcustoms.com. Retrieved 21 January 2008.</ref> It is often recounted that the building was destroyed in the fire, but [[Frank McDonald (journalist)|Frank MacDonald]] contends this is an overstatement, citing the continued use of the building by the Irish Academy of Letters until its eventual demolition in 1960.<ref name="
The board had plans for rebuilding with a design by the Irish architect [[Michael Scott (architect)|Michael Scott]] which dated back to 1959. The magazine, the ''[[Irish Builder]],'' argued that it was favourable to refurbish the old building rather than build a new one, as "we feel the tourists who come here would prefer to see the old Abbey of Yeats and Synge, rather than the Abbey of Scott."<ref name="
A new building, a new generation of dramatists, including such figures as [[Hugh Leonard]], [[Brian Friel]] and [[Tom Murphy (playwright)|Tom Murphy]], and tourism that included the National Theatre as a key cultural attraction, helped revive the theatre. Beginning in 1957, the theatre's participation in the [[Dublin Theatre Festival]] aided its revival. Plays such as [[Brian Friel]]'s ''[[Philadelphia Here I Come!]]'' (1964), ''[[Faith Healer]]'' (1979) and ''[[Dancing at Lughnasa]]'' (1990); [[Tom Murphy (playwright)|Tom Murphy]]'s ''[[A Whistle in the Dark]]'' (1961) and ''[[The Gigli Concert]]'' (1983); and [[Hugh Leonard]]'s ''[[Da (play)|Da]]'' (1973) and ''A Life'' (1980), helped raise the Abbey's international profile through successful runs in the West End in London, and on Broadway in New York City.
Irish American writer and W.B Yeats scholar [[James W. Flannery]] (born 1936) wrote two books about the Abbey Theatre: ''W. B. Yeats and the Idea of a Theatre: The Early Abbey Theatre in Theory and in Practice'' (1976)<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20220504114549/https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/theatre-research-international/issue/5AB9FC67D717F3A219EEDB64DE529207 Review of "W. B. Yeats and the Idea of a Theatre"] by [[A. Norman Jeffares]], Theatre Research International, Vol 4 #1, Oct 1978, pp. 68 - 69</ref> and ''Miss Horniman and the Abbey Theatre'' (1970).<ref>
==Challenges in the 2000s==
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In 2016, the Abbey's direction passed to two co-directors on five-year contracts. Neil Murray from Wales and Graham McLaren from Scotland pursued policies involving significant touring, a wider selection of plays including shorter runs, reduced reliance on Abbey stalwarts such as ''[[The Plough and the Stars]]'' (57 productions in the theatre's history), free previews, and an emphasis on diversity. They also pursued the project to renew the theatre building, with McLaren describing the current structure as "the worst theatre building I have ever worked in ... Stalinesque ... a terrible, terrible design".<ref>{{cite news |last1=Shortall |first1=Eithne |title=Out with the old, in the with new at the Abbey Theatre |url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/out-with-the-old-in-the-with-new-at-the-abbey-theatre-5xh2ff0jh |access-date=13 November 2018 |work=The Sunday Times |publisher=News International |date=1 July 2018 |archive-date=13 November 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181113165657/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/out-with-the-old-in-the-with-new-at-the-abbey-theatre-5xh2ff0jh |url-status=live }}</ref>
After discussions about new locations in the Docklands, on O'Connell Street and elsewhere, it was decided to redevelop the Abbey in situ. Hence, in September 2012, the Abbey Theatre purchased 15-17 Eden Quay,<ref>{{cite news|last=Crawley |first=Peter |title=Downtown Abbey |url=http://www.irishtheatremagazine.ie/News/Current/Downtown-Abbey.aspx |work=News |publisher=[[Irish Theatre Magazine]] |access-date=20 July 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150610223838/http://www.irishtheatremagazine.ie/News/Current/Downtown-Abbey.aspx |archive-date=10 June 2015}}</ref> and in 2016, 22-23 Eden Quay. With a budget of up to 80 million
In February 2021, after open competition, two new co-directors were appointed, Caitriona McLaughlin as Artistic Director and Mark O'Brien as Executive Director.<ref>{{cite web |title=Abbey Theatre announces new Artistic and Executive Directors |url=https://www.rte.ie/culture/2021/0223/1198845-abbey-theatre-announces-new-artistic-and-executive-directors/ |website=www.rte.ie |date=23 February 2021 |access-date=11 August 2021 |archive-date=11 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210811221148/https://www.rte.ie/culture/2021/0223/1198845-abbey-theatre-announces-new-artistic-and-executive-directors/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
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