Difference between revisions of "Luxurama"
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− | The Luxurama | + | A theatre in Wynberg, Cape Town. |
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+ | '''See [[Luxurama Theatre]]''' | ||
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+ | Also known as [[The Luxurama]] or [[The Lux]], this theatre was built in Wynberg, Cape Townthe [[Quibell Brothers]], it opened in 1964 under the management of [[Ronnie Quibell]]. For a while (1964-67) it was run as an “open” entertainment venue, exploiting a weakness in the apartheid legislation of the time. This allowed it to be used by visiting overseas artists such as Tom Jones, Engelbert Humperdinck, The Troggs, etc who wanted to appear before non-segregated audiences. In 1967 it had to conform to apartheid laws, and Dusty Springfield cancelled her tour. Others (e.g. Adam Faith, Percy Sledge and Peaches and Herb) still performed there in the 1960s. Thereafter it became an occasional venue, showing low-grade films and used as a political meeting place by the United Democratic Front and other groups. The Luxurama: It admitted multi-racial audiences. The Quibell’s, building contractors, built this theatre on land they owned circa 1964. Arthur Miller’s ''[[After the Fall]]'', produced by [[Leon Gluckman]] and [[Leonard Schach]] was staged here in 1964. Leonard directed Leon and Erica Rogers. It was performed to multi-racial audiences | ||
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 17:56, 16 July 2014
A theatre in Wynberg, Cape Town.
See Luxurama Theatre
Also known as The Luxurama or The Lux, this theatre was built in Wynberg, Cape Townthe Quibell Brothers, it opened in 1964 under the management of Ronnie Quibell. For a while (1964-67) it was run as an “open” entertainment venue, exploiting a weakness in the apartheid legislation of the time. This allowed it to be used by visiting overseas artists such as Tom Jones, Engelbert Humperdinck, The Troggs, etc who wanted to appear before non-segregated audiences. In 1967 it had to conform to apartheid laws, and Dusty Springfield cancelled her tour. Others (e.g. Adam Faith, Percy Sledge and Peaches and Herb) still performed there in the 1960s. Thereafter it became an occasional venue, showing low-grade films and used as a political meeting place by the United Democratic Front and other groups. The Luxurama: It admitted multi-racial audiences. The Quibell’s, building contractors, built this theatre on land they owned circa 1964. Arthur Miller’s After the Fall, produced by Leon Gluckman and Leonard Schach was staged here in 1964. Leonard directed Leon and Erica Rogers. It was performed to multi-racial audiences
Sources
Percy Tucker, 1997
For more information
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