The collection includes scripts, press cuttings, minutes, festival programmes, correspondence and financial statements.
Part of the collection relates to the 1960s and the relationship between the Unity Theatre Trust and the Unity Theatre Society.
The collection includes scripts, press cuttings, minutes, festival programmes, correspondence and financial statements.
Part of the collection relates to the 1960s and the relationship between the Unity Theatre Trust and the Unity Theatre Society.
Unity Theatre developed from workers' drama groups in the 1930s. From the beginning Unity saw itself as the people's theatre. Many of its productions sought to dramatise the lives and struggles of ordinary working people. Its aims were to bring theatre to the masses and in doing so help in the struggles for world peace and better social and economic order. Unity was a product of the turbulent 1930s and the rising threat of Fascism. It had strong links with the Communist Party of Great Britain and the Left Book Club Theatre Guild.
By the outbreak of World War II there were 250 branches loosely linked with the Left Book Club Theatre Guild. After the war 50 branches became more closely organised into the Unity Theatre Society Limited which was largely amateur. Local branches of Unity Theatres provided venues for left-wing theatre. However by the 1960s the movement went into decline as the abolition of licensing meant that mainstream theatres could more readily meet the demand for radical productions.
The arrangement reflects the original filing system and has been arranged chronologically
Access by appointment.
The Unity Theatre Collection was deposited in the National Museum of Labour History when the museum was located in Limehouse, London. The exact date of deposit is not known. In 1990 People's History Museum (formerly National Museum of Labour History) moved to Manchester. The collection is now held at the Labour History Archives and Study Centre, which is based at the head office of the People's History Museum and managed by the John Rylands University Library of Manchester.
Collection level description created by Janette Martin.
A file list of the Unity Theatre collection is available for consultation at the Labour History Archive and Study Centre.
Unity Theatre ephemera and photographs are also held by the People's History Museum in Manchester.
Photocopies and photographic copies of material in the archive can be supplied for private study purposes only, depending on the condition of the documents. Prior written permission must be obtained from the Archive for publication or reproduction of any material within the Archive. Please contact the Labour History Archive and Study Centre, 103 Princess Street, Manchester, M1 6DD Tel.: +44 (0)161 834 5343.
No appraisal, destruction or scheduling has taken place.
Accruals are not expected.
The Story of Unity Theatre, by Colin Chambers (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1989)