"Adrian Noble (artistic director) asked me
to return to the Royal Shakespeare Company and I was close to agreeing to live in
Stratford-upon-Avon again. But I had been away from home too much of late and so I
accepted Peter Hall's counter invitation to act for the first time with the National
Theatre on the south bank of the river Thames, 2 miles from my home in London.

Royal National Theatre
South Bank, London
"The NT is the only British Theatre founded by an act of parliament,
following a 130 year-long campaign for an institution to match the great European theatre
companies which predate it. When Denys Lasdun's design was completed in 1976, its three
theatres, Lyttelton (proscenium), Cottesloe (adaptable studio) and Olivier (open stage)
were named after the NT's first chairman, the chairman of the South Bank Board Lord
Cottesloe, and artistic director Laurence Olivier.
"By then, Peter Hall had replaced Laurence Olivier and guided the NT a
little north from its temporary home at the Old Vic for the lavish complex of workshops,
rehearsal rooms and offices at the south side of Waterloo Bridge. The policy of playing in
repertoire continued." |

Sir Peter Hall and Lord Olivier on the terrace of the National Theatre
"In 1984, the NT's was funded mainly by the Arts Council of Great
Britain's government grant, the late Greater London Council and the proceeds from tickets,
bookshop and catering. Some would say that the NT's modestly paid employers also made
their contribution. Throughout this time my salary, made up from a basic fee plus extra
for each performance, never topped 500 pounds sterling."
"After three productions, Peter Hall's invitation to head a group of
actors within the NT repertoire re-established the partnership with Edward Petherbridge
which had initiated the Actors' Company." -- Ian McKellen, October 1999

Ian McKellen, and Edward Pethebridge, 1980s
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