

The Silk Room has a tile floor and dimensions of approximately 40’ by 35’ with a capacity for theatre seating of approximately 125 and for business meetings approximately 75. The room is flexible for use in a variety of ways, and bridal and baby showers, birthday parties and business workshops are perfectly served in this smaller space, with direct access to the kitchen and bathrooms. The Silk Room, also know as the meeting room, has recently been renovated with soft hues of tan and cranberry. The upholstered theatre seats are not available for rental events in which food or beverages are served and/or consumed in the Auditorium. The Auditorium’s capacity for theatre seating is 300 and for banquet seating is approximately 200. The “Auditorium” refers to the historic performance and event space (with a flat maple floor) that is approximately 62’ long by 44’ wide. The elegant architecture of the Cheney Hall's Auditorium makes it a favorite for weddings, banquets, expos and annual meetings. If you have enjoyed one of our productions and would like to leave a review, please click here.Cheney Hall is the perfect spot for your family or business event. Over the years, we have presented a complete range of theatre, from Sophocles to The Graduate, as a scroll through our list of productions since 1959 will show, and we continue to use our small stage in ambitious and innovative ways. We organise a one-act play festival annually for visiting youth and adult groups throughout North Kent and beyond. The Youth Company (ages 12-18) which meets on Saturdays from 10.30am - 12.30pm.The Children's Workshop (ages 7-12) which meets on Saturdays from 1.30pm - 3.30pm.Anyone interested in joining the company in any capacity is invited to come along to meet us at our social nights, every Tuesday from 8pm onwards, except during productions. There is always a welcoming atmosphere in our friendly auditorium with its integral bar. We are now a fully-equipped public theatre, with well over 400 productions behind us. In 1995 we acquired the freehold to our premises with the aid of a generous grant from the old Rochester City Council.

It was converted from a disused warehouse into a 100-seat theatre in 1958. Medway Little Theatre is situated in historic Rochester.
#Little theatre full#
Third Place Finalist – The Willington Players – Jam and Dame Judyįor the full list of awards check out the festival pages.Second Place Finalist – Alternate Shadows – Matchless Orinda.Best Production – ROAN Theatre Company – Four Freaks from Iowa.

It's tender and poignant and awkward and funny all at the same time - you know, just like life.ĥ0th EDITION DUNCAN RAND ONE-ACT PLAY FESTIVAL WINNERS Who knows if you the audience will feature in the recording of love, life and how we learn to say goodbye. Our tour guide is the town photographer, who lets us peek into her neighbours' lives to catch moments of romance in all its stages. Welcome to a small town where everybody knows each other and the pace of life allows the pursuit of love to take up as much space as it needs. Valerie (30s) - curious, friendly but hiding a painful life-changing event.Īny questions or further details please contact director Fiona McGahren on 07596068122, or SOON KODACHROME Likes to show off his success and make off-hand digs but always done with humour. His friends know he is cleverer than he lets on.įinbar (40s) - taking over the family business, not short of money, property owner and shrewd investor. Works with Jack and does lots of odd jobs. Jim (30s) - lives with his poorly mother, a quiet gambler but very good at it. Warm, friendly, set in his ways, likes to wind up the others but has a quiet loneliness about him. Join us on a ghostly haunting journey which is filled with warm Irish humour, comical off-hand remarks, much laughter and a few tears.īrendan (late 30s) - landlord and farm owner, a great observer with morals, single, independent and kind. What is discovered through each character is either wasted opportunities, missed huan connections, vulnerability and loss.

Throughout the course of just one evening, events about themselves and others are exchanged, based on rumour and local legend but tinged with the supernatural. The Weir centres around a rural, isolated pub in the northwest of Ireland, where a landlord and his regulars share old stories with a newcomer, recently arrived from Dublin. Playing dates: 29 January-3 February 2024 Find out details about our coming 65th season.Īuditions: Tuesday 12 September, 8pm, Copley Room, Medway Little Theatre
