Prof. Patrick
Lonergan, NUI Galway, Lorna Quinn, Actress, Michael Colgan,
Director of the Gate
Theatre and Prof. Jim Browne, President, NUI Galway
NUI Galway and the Gate
Theatre, Dublin are joining forces to digitise the Gate’s archive, a major
resource for theatre scholars and artists.
When completed in 2018, the Gate Theatre Digital Archive will be exclusively available at NUI Galway’s James Hardiman Library, where users will be able to access hundreds of videos, scripts, show programmes, and many more treasures from the Gate’s history.
When completed in 2018, the Gate Theatre Digital Archive will be exclusively available at NUI Galway’s James Hardiman Library, where users will be able to access hundreds of videos, scripts, show programmes, and many more treasures from the Gate’s history.
Michael Colgan, Director of the Gate Theatre, stated: “The
Gate Theatre is full of admiration for NUI Galway and we congratulate them for
having the vision and courage to provide this extraordinary resource for
generations to come. Long may their work continue and long may it be
supported.”
Founded in 1928 by Hilton Edwards and Micheál MacLiammóir,
the Gate Theatre has played a leading role in the production of Irish and
international theatre, launching the careers of such actors as Orson Welles and
Michael Gambon, staging the premieres of major plays like Brian Friel’s Philadelphia
Here I Come! and presenting major international festivals dedicated to
the Nobel laureates Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter – among many other major
achievements.
Barry McGovern |
The Gate Theatre’s archive is drawn mainly from the years
since 1980, and includes information about many of the Gate’s major national
and international successes during that period. The Gate has a long tradition
of working with some of the world’s great actors; the archive features material
relating to Orson Welles, Michael Gambon, John Hurt, Penelope Wilton, Stephen
Rea, Ian Holm, Liam Neeson, Charles Dance, and many others. As a multimedia
archive, this resource demonstrates the Gate’s enormous contribution not only to
the art of playwriting but also to acting, design, direction and production.
Patrick Lonergan, Professor of Drama and Theatre Studies at
NUI Galway, stated that the Gate Theatre project will have a transformative
impact on Irish theatre research. “The Gate is one of the major European
theatres, and has played an enormous role in the development of our theatrical
culture, especially in the areas of design, direction and acting, but also in
playwriting, as shown by its long association with Brian Friel. This archive
will allow NUI Galway researchers and students to learn from these achievements
and, we hope, to build on them into the future as well.”
NUI Galway is the home to numerous Irish theatre archives,
all of which are stored in custom-built facilities at the University’s James
Hardiman Library. These include the archives of Druid Theatre, the Lyric
Players Theatre, Thomas Kilroy, John Arden and Margaretta D’Arcy and Siobhán
McKenna, as well as online access to the Abbey Theatre Digital Archive. These
resources make available almost 1,000 videos of Irish theatre productions since
the 1980s and thousands of scripts, photographs and other files. Archival
material from prior to that period is currently stored at Northwestern
University, Illinois.
Susan FitzGerald |
To mark this exciting project with the Gate, NUI Galway is
announcing the establishment of a new MA in Irish Theatre History and Archives.
Students on this course will have full access to resources like the Gate
Theatre Digital Archive, and will get hands-on training in the use of theatre
archives, including internships.
Professor Lonergan added that the digitisation process will
preserve the Gate’s archive for future generations. “Digitisation allows us to
use archival material in new ways, to search through it quickly, to
cross-reference it, and so on. But crucially it also protects the Gate’s
material, ensuring that this national treasure will be available in Ireland for
future generations.”
John Cox, University Librarian at the James Hardiman Library
at NUI Galway, said: “By connecting the Gate collection to its existing
archival material on the Abbey, Druid and other theatres, NUI Galway’s status
as the leading international centre for the study of Irish theatre will be
further enhanced. The University will also have access to an extraordinarily
large dataset for several major Irish cultural institutions, opening up
opportunities for new research through text and data mining.”
The digitisation of the Gate Theatre archive commenced on
February 1, 2016 at the James Hardiman Library. Digitisation will take 18
months. The project will encompass 200,000 pages, 20,000 images, 150 hours of
audio and 750 hours of video, representing a comprehensive archive of material
since 1983. The digital archive will be available for use in the Archives and
Special Collections Reading Room at NUI Galway.For further details visit: www.nuigalway.ie/gatetheatre
The digitisation of the Gate Theatre archive commenced on 1
February 2016 at the James Hardiman Library, NUI Galway. Digitisation
will take 18 months. The project will encompass 200,000 pages, 20,000 images,
150 hours of audio and 750 hours of video, representing a comprehensive archive
of material since 1983. The digital archive will be available for use in the
Archives and Special Collections Reading Room at NUI Galway.
Further news on the project partnership is available in The
Irish Times
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