Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Riverside Studios

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Owner
  
Riverside Trust

Riverside Studios

Location
  
HammersmithLondon, W6United Kingdom

Public transit
  
Hammersmith (District/Piccadilly) Hammersmith (Circle/Hammersmith & City)

Type
  
Fringe Theatre, Cinema, Television Studio

Production
  
Celebrity Juice, The Apprentice: You're Fired!, The York Realist, TNT Show, You Have Been Watching, Zambezi Express

Opened
  
1933 as Riverside Film Studio

Riverside Studios was a production studio, theatre and independent cinema on the banks of the River Thames in Hammersmith, London, England, that played host to contemporary and international dramatic and dance performance, film, visual art exhibitions and television production prior to closing for redevelopment in 2014. It is planned to reopen in 2018.

Contents

Riverside Film Studio

In 1933 the Triumph Film Company moved into the Riverside Film Studio, a converted former industrial warehouse in Crisp Road, London, picturesquely located on the Thames just south of the late Victorian Hammersmith Bridge. Under the ownership of Jack Buchanan, the company produced such films as The Happiest Days of Your Life (1950) and Father Brown (1954), starring Alec Guinness.

B.B.C. era

In 1954, the studio was acquired by the British Broadcasting Corporation for its television service, and renamed The Riverside Studios. Series 2 to 6 of Hancock's Half Hour (1957–60) were made at what was now the BBC Riverside Studios, along with other drama and music programmes, including the science-fiction classic Quatermass and the Pit (1958–59), early episodes of the long-running Doctor Who, and the children's programme Play School. The facility was in continuous use until the early 1970s, the rooftop camera position providing one of the highlights of the annual University Boat Race each Easter Saturday.

Hammersmith & Fulham Council Trust Arts Centre

In 1974 the BBC moved out of the premises, and a charitable trust formed by Hammersmith and Fulham Council took control of the building, and a building re-structuring programme of works was begun, with two large multi-purpose spaces designed by Michael Reardon from the two main sound stages. The redesigned Studio was to be used for a mixed programme of live theatre, music, dance and film, with a foyer area with exposed industrial-style trunking and pipework being created as an always-open meeting point at the heart of the building. During the building's conversion in 1974-75 an amateur West London pop music band named The Strand illicitly used one of the Studio's sound stages for several months to rehearse, the band subsequently going on to become The Sex Pistols.

In 1976, Peter Gill was appointed Riverside's first Artistic Director and soon established the Studios as a leading London arts venue with acclaimed productions of The Cherry Orchard with Judy Parfitt, Julie Covington and Michael Elphick (1978), The Changeling with Brian Cox (1979) and Measure for Measure (1980). During the 1980s, under the leadership of David Gothard, the Centre was the venue for the highly successful Dance Umbrella seasons, and hosted a huge variety of productions from across the world - including, notably, the work of Polish theatre maestro Tadeusz Kantor. An influential gallery area also flourished, under the direction of Milena Kalinovska who joined in 1982, her assistant Greg Hilty continued the program after1986. Channel 4's opening night launch party was held at the Studios in 1982. During the 1980s, the Riverside was also home to Motley Theatre Design Course, under the directorship of Margaret Harris. Following repeated financial crises, and the directorship of David Gothard, Riverside pulled in its horns.

William Burdett-Coutts (also Artistic Director of Edinburgh's Assembly Rooms) was appointed Artistic Director of Riverside Studios in 1993. The Studios' Cinema, with an eclectic repertory programme, became firmly established as a primary revenue stream to keep the Studios open, in addition to Arts Council of Great Britain and local authority funding, and there were fewer home-grown live productions. Studios 1 and 3 were lucratively used once more in the 1990s for broadcasting, including the Chris Evans vehicle TFI Friday. CD:UK was broadcast from Riverside from 2003 until 2006. Later projects included the BBC's Mighty Truck of Stuff (2005–6) and Channel 4's T4 (2006–9) and Popworld.

Demolition

In 2014 Riverside Studios started undergoing a major new redevelopment, due for completion in 2018. London builder Mount Anvil, working in conjunction with A2 Dominion, demolished the old Riverside Studios and the adjacent Queen's Wharf buildings.

Queen's Wharf Residential Development

Assael Architecture, an architectural firm were employed to design a new building arrangement on the site centered around 165 residential flats, with a new production studio, cinema, a theatre, a riverside restaurant and café/bar. As part of the redevelopment a new riverside walkway will be created to connect the Thames Path to Hammersmith Bridge.

Selected dramatic productions

  • Spectacular by Forced Entertainment (2008)
  • 1800 Acres by David Myers starring Cathy Tyson (2008)
  • The New Electric Ballroom by Enda Walsh (2009)
  • Salvage by Diane Glancy (2009)
  • Windmill Baby (winner of the Patrick White Playwrights' Award) by David Milroy and Ningali Lawford (2009)
  • The Little Mermaid by Blind Tiger Theatre Company (2013)
  • Selected dance productions

  • Stormforce by Rophin Vianney (2006)
  • Havana Rumba by Toby Gough (2009)
  • Dancing on Your Grave by Lea Anderson's The Cholmondeleys and The Featherstonehaughs (2009)
  • Mamootot by Batsheva Dance Company (2008)
  • At Swim Two Boys by Earthfall Dance (2012)
  • Selected comedy shows

  • Rhod Gilbert: Work In Progress
  • Bill Bailey: Tinselworm
  • Ed Byrne: Different Class
  • Wil Anderson
  • Count Arthur Strong: The Man Behind the Smile
  • Russell Howard's Good News & Good News Extra
  • Film

    The cinema screened an eclectic variety of independent and foreign language films and was also known for its double bill programmes. It played regular host to the London Taiwanese, Italian, Polish and Deep Desires & Broken Dreams Gay Film Festival amongst others.

    Music

    Tom Robinson hosted live recording sessions for his BBC Radio 6 Music radio show, show Introducing... in Studio 3.

    References

    Riverside Studios Wikipedia


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