From
1931 until she died in 1983 the
Minack Theatre was planned,
built and financed by one
determined woman - Rowena Cade.
This page attempts to tell her
story and that of the theatre
she created.
A
Derbyshire Childhood
Rowena
Cade was born on 2nd August
1893 in Spondon, Derbyshire
where her father owned a
cotton mill. Her ancestors had
lived thereabouts for 300
years. Joseph Wright, famous
painter of the industrial
revolution, was her great
great grandfather. Though
Spondon was still a country
village, Derby was already
sprawling out towards it.
The
second of four children,
Rowena represented the fifth
generation of her family to
live at "The
Homestead". She spent a
happy and secure childhood in
that lovely old house. As a
tomboy of seven she remembered
climbing from her bedroom
window onto the spreading
branches of a cedar tree and
thence down to the ground.
In
January 1902, aged 8, Rowena
took the title role in her
mother's production of
"Alice Through the
Looking Glass". There was
a cast of eleven local
children. Fifteen guests and
ten servants watched the dress
rehearsal. The two
performances had audiences of
27 and 43 respectively. None
of those present could have
guessed at the impact Rowena
Cade would later make on the
English theatre.
Rowena
comes of age
It
was no surprise that the Cades
moved to Cheltenham when
Rowena's father retired in
1906. His brother was
headmaster of Cheltenham
College Junior School and his
wife had grown up in the town.
James Cade bought "Ellerslie"
an imposing town house
previously owned by Sir Walter
Scott the novelist. There the
family continued to live a
comfortable and genteel life.
But, just as Rowena came of
age, the First World War
changed all that. She went to
work in the re-mount stables
on Sir John Gilbey's estate at
Elsenham and lived in an old
shepherd's caravan. There she
selected and broke horses
which were shipped out to the
front lines in France and
Belgium.
Cornwall
in the 1920's
With
the war over, her husband dead
and the family scattered,
Rowena's mother sold their
home in Cheltenham.
The two women did not settle
permanently for some years;
then they rented a house at
Lamorna. Nearby Rowena
discovered the Minack headland
and bought it for £100. There
she built a house for herself
and her mother using granite
from a St. Levan quarry. It
was hurriedly extended to make
a home for her sister and
family returning from
Australia.
Through
the twenties entertainment in
West Cornwall was invariably
self made. Minack House and
its garden provided the
setting for many such
productions. Rowena found that
she had a talent for designing
and making the costumes needed
by her family and friends. And
then in 1929 a more ambitious
project was organised. Just a
mile or so inland "A
Midsummer Night's Dream"
was to be staged in the open
air.
A
Dream or a Vision?
Dorothea
Valentine chose a tree lined
meadow at nearby Crean as the
rural backdrop for her
production of "A
Midsummer Night's Dream".
Though six of the players were
or were to become part of her
extended family, Rowena Cade
was not in the cast. She
busied herself behind the
scenes as wardrobe mistress.
She designed, decorated and
made many of the
"props" and
costumes. The original Fairies
remembered her in the field
with her sewing machine making
last minute alterations. Their
only complaint was the
difficulty they had balancing
on the toadstools.
The
play went so well that it was
repeated in 1930, though by
that time it was a squeeze for
many of the children to get
back into their costumes.
Thinking of what to do next,
someone suggested "The
Tempest". The rugged
coastline offered more
appropriate scenery than
Crean's secluded valley and
the Cade's garden was proposed
as the perfect location.
The
Minack Theatre comes alive
While
Rowena Cade did think of
offering her garden to
stage "The
Tempest", there
really was nowhere to
seat an audience. Always
resourceful she
prospected alternatives,
one of which was on the
opposite side of the
bay. Then, looking into
the gully above the
Minack Rock she said
"I wonder if we
could make a stage
here?". With the
benefit of decades of
hindsight and with her
remarkable Theatre
spread out below, the
answerwas
clearly "Yes!"
But that first winter
was harsh. It took
six months for Rowena
and two Cornish
craftsmen to build a
simple stage and some
rough seating.
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The
first performance of "The
Tempest" in the summer of
1932 was lit by batteries, car
headlights and the feeble
power brought down from Minack
House.
Everyone collected
their tickets at a table in
the garden before clambering
down the gorse lined path. |
Then, as the moon shone across
the bay, the magic that is The
Minack Theatre touched its
first audience.
Shakespeare's
great poetry complemented by
live music in this idyllic
setting prompted an article in
"The Times". Rowena
Cade realised that she had
started something that just
had to continue.
The
Master Builder
Rowena
Cade was already thirty eight
when she undertook to provide
a stage for "The
Tempest". Until that
moment the nearest she had
come to manual work was sewing
and mucking out horses. During
that first winter of 1931-32,
she laboured as apprentice to
her gardener Billy Rawlings
and his mate Charles Thomas
Angove.
Using
the skills of the
two men, granite
was cut by hand
from a pile of
tumbled boulders.
Stones were inched
into place. The
terraces were
in-filled with
earth, small
stones and pebbles
shovelled down
from the higher
ledges. All this
work took place on
the slope above a
sheer drop into
the Atlantic.
Luckily the only
"men
overboard"
were a few stones
and one
wheelbarrow. Thus
the Minack Theatre
grew from Rowena's
commitment that
one show should go
on.
Over
the next seven
years there were
many improvements
and extensions.
Then, with the
coming of World
War II, it seemed
as though all the
back-breaking work
might have been
wasted. When peace
returned, Rowena
looked out over a
ravaged Theatre.
The Army, Gainsborough's
film unit and
prisoners of
war sent in to
clear the coastal
defences had reduced
it back to what it
had been in 1932.
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Yet, determined as
ever, Rowena slowly
brought the Minack
magic back to life.
As
its reputation spread, Rowena
realised that she would have
to separate the Theatre from
her garden. Through the early
fifties she and Billy Rawlings
completed this huge task with
granite walls, an access road,
a car park and a flight of 90
steps up from the beach. When
Billy died in 1966 Rowena
inscribed the one granite seat
in the whole auditorium as his
memorial.
Rowena
Cade had become "The
Master Builder". Unable
to afford the cost of granite,
she had developed her own
technique for working with
cement. Using the tip of an
old screwdriver she decorated
the surfaces with lettering
and intricate Celtic designs
before they hardened. It was
not just the artistic work
that she did. Rowena fetched
sand from Porthcurno beach: to
start with in bags on her back
and latterly in her cars, soon
rusted out by the sea salt.
Tom
Angove "Builder's
Mate" from 1953, retiring
in 1993, recalled how single
handed Rowena carried twelve
15ft beams from the shoreline
right up to the Theatre.
Customs men looking for this
"wreck" from a
Spanish freighter met her on
the beach. Challenged as to
whether she had seen the
timber, Rowena admitted that
she had taken up some wood
that morning. She suggested
that the men should come and
see it. Concluding that such a
frail looking woman could not
have lifted what they were
looking for, they went on
their way. "I didn't tell
them a lie now did I?"
remarked Rowena as she and Tom
built the twelve beams into
the new dressing rooms.
And
so Rowena Cade, that
"frail looking
woman", worked on each
winter in all weathers until
she was in her mid-eighties.
When she died, just short of
her ninetieth birthday, she
was still thinking of the
future. She left elaborate
sketches suggesting how the
Theatre might be covered on
the days when it rains. As yet
no one has had the temerity or
the cash to implement those
plans!
The
War Years
With
the outbreak of World War II
and with the threat of
invasion the Minack Theatre
fell silent. Actors and
"props" were
replaced by entanglements of
barbed wire. Rowena Cade soon
penetrated these defences. She
regularly crawled under the
wire to cut the grass. After
the War she converted the gun
post built to repel Hitler
into the theatre's Box Office.
Threats
of bombing and then the Blitz
itself drove waves of evacuee
children from London. Rowena
Cade became their local
billeting officer. Helping
hundreds to settle in Cornish
homes she dealt with the
worries of the youngsters,
their "host"
families and anxious mothers
three hundred miles away.
In
1944 pre-war publicity led to
the Minack being chosen as a
location for "Love
Story" the Gainsborough
film starring Stewart Grainger
and Margaret Lockwood. The
unit arrived complete with the
grand piano that was to make
the Cornish Rhapsody a wartime
"hit".
"Shooting" began,
but storms forced the company
to retreat. A mock up of the
theatre constructed in a
studio proved to be much more
manageable.
Past
Productions
Since
"The Tempest" was
first produced in 1932, the
plays of Shakespeare have
provided a central focus to
every season at the Minack.
Rowena Cade admired
Shakespeare greatly. His
poetry paints all the scenery
that is needed: yet it is
never upstaged by the
theatre's dramatic backdrop.
While
Shakespeare has stood the test
of time, almost every other
sort of entertainment has been
tried at the Minack - comedy,
tragedy, farce, opera,
musical, Gilbert &
Sullivan, mime, ballet,
concert, gang show, son et
lumière and male voice choir.
Gilbert and Sullivan have been
second only to Shakespeare in
coming back year after year.
To no one's surprise "The
Pirates of Penzance"
remains the clear favourite. A
fortnight of plays specially
for schools is staged annually
when extra matinées are held
with excited and enthusiastic
Cornish children packing the
Minack terraces.
During
the summer season there is a
new play for each of the 16 or
17 weeks. This variety
benefits local audiences and
holidaymakers alike. Some
stalwarts come to every show.
Equally, many who see live
theatre here for the first
time go on to support the
performing arts in the areas
where they live.
Good
amateur theatrical groups are
encouraged to play at the
Minack Theatre. Among their
number will you spot the stars
of tomorrow? Michael York,
Sheridan Morley, John Nettles,
Sue Pollard, Sarah Brightman, Will Self,
Jack Shepherd, Hugh Dancy and
Charlotte Church have
all appeared on the Minack's
stage.
Books
Must Balance
When
Rowena Cade started work on
the Theatre she probably did
not worry about the cost. Soon
she realised that the takings
from each short season of
plays were never enough to
cover her running costs. As a
result, Rowena never received
a penny for what she did.
Instead, she had to make good
any annual shortfall using her
own money.
In
the 1950s Rowena Cade
approached a London drama
school and the National Trust,
but neither was able to give
her financial assistance. Then
the Cornwall branch of the
National Council of Social
Services was persuaded to take
on the challenge. Sadly,
following three years of
losses, they gave up and left
Rowena to carry on alone. And
that is what she did:
gradually adding to the
fabric; always working on a
shoe string.
In
1976, when she was well over
eighty, Rowena Cade gave the
Minack Theatre to a Charitable
Trust which was set up to
receive it. A little later she
bought a bungalow and some
more land thereby providing
the Theatre with its
independent offices and a
larger car park.
The Trustees
extended the season of plays,
built a Visitor Centre which is
open all year round and enlarged
the retailing operation. These
moves attracted bigger audiences
and at last the Theatre was able
to pay its way.
Over the years there has been
generous help from countless
individuals, from commercial firms
and from performing companies.
Special thanks must go to
"The Minack Theatre
Society" which existed from
1959 to 2000. Their good work
continues through the
"Friends of the Minack
Theatre". If you would like
to know more about the
"Friends", please go to
the Theatre-Goers section of this
site and click on the
"Friends of Minack"
button.
Looking
Ahead
As
to the future, the Trustees
have clear objectives -
To
preserve the magic of what
Rowena Cade created while
developing a fully equipped
modern theatre. To attract
large audiences and yet put on
programmes that have real
variety. To book new and
sometimes inexperienced
companies, while maintaining
high standards of performance.
To keep ticket prices low and
yet generate the money needed
to repair and improve the
theatre.
All
those who work for The Minack
Theatre Trust are committed to
achieving these aims and to
maintaining the difficult but
necessary balance between
them.
Rowena
Cade 1893 - 1983
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