Birmingham Youth Theatre

The Birmingham Youth Theatre was founded in 1971 in Birmingham, England by local teachers Derek Nicholls and Ray Speakman, and was based at the Midlands Arts Centre and Birmingham Repertory Theatre. From 1984 it was also run by teacher and director Malcolm Cleland, who also ran the Central Junior Television Workshop in Birmingham.

The company was funded by Birmingham City Council and West Midlands Arts for the purpose of giving 16 to 23 year olds from the wider local community access to drama and the theatre arts. Many successful actors and actresses began their careers in the youth theatre, most notably:

Andrew Tiernan,

Adrian Lester,

Tony Armatrading,

Lorna Laidlaw, Doctors (soap opera),

Nicolas Tennant, who has performed with the Royal National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company,

Joe Dixon (actor),

John White (Performance Historian),

Roy Mitchell, creator, scripwriter and producer of the BBC series New Tricks,

Richard Thomas., writer of 'Jerry Springer the Opera',

Stuart Blackburn, Writer and Series Producer of ITV soap opera Emmerdale.

Mark Swift, Production Manager/Producer for Dreamworks Animation, California, U.S.A.

As of 2009, Derek Nicholls is now the Chief Executive of Qdos Entertainment plc's HQ Theatres division.

Due to problems with funding, the company ceased to exist in 1987. It has no association with any company currently using the same name.

Famous quotes containing the words youth and/or theatre:

    Whenever a youth is ascertained to possess talents meriting an education which his parents cannot afford, he should be carried forward at the public expense.
    James Madison (1751–1836)

    The History of the world is not the theatre of happiness. Periods of happiness are blank pages in it, for they are periods of harmony—periods when the antithesis is in abeyance.
    Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831)