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The
country-wide economic optimism of the era prompted competing groups
of businessmen and civic reformers to address these shortcomings.
Mr Bligh of Cilmeri Park began work on what is now the Strand
Hall whilst wine merchant John Davies led a rival consortium called
the Builth Public Hall and Market Committee. With a capital of
£3,000 in £5 and £10 shares, they purchased the picturesque but
squalid cottages known as Bridge Row that butted onto the recently
renovated Builth Bridge and commissioned by public competition
a design for a covered market hall and assembly rooms. The winning
design by Haddon Bros. of Hereford was a handsome Italianate "town
hall" pastiche complete with terracotta medallions of Shakespeare,
Haydn and Mozart, the Builth coat of arms and the Welsh harp,
the company's chosen motif.
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Wyeside
in the 1880s
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The
old foyer
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In
the late 1960's Mrs Pugh, childless and now widowed, wishing to
leave the complex for the benefit of the area, discussed the future
of the building with her trustees, solicitor Donald Pryse Jones
and solicitors clerk Edward 'Eddie' Turner, and the idea for Wyeside
Arts Centre was born. Preliminary discussions took place with
the Welsh Arts Council and Theatre Projects Ltd.
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Thirteen
years after Wyeside's incorporation in 1976 - which included a
period as its de facto manager - Donald Jones retired from the
Chair in 1989, and was succeeded by Dr Terry Watson, a local GP
(and opera lover), who had chaired the Centre's Programme Committee
since 1978. During the 80's and 90's, the Arts Centre's programme
broadened and expanded whilst retaining traditional community
events, and the Centre became the home to successful Kidsfests
and the award winning Mid Powys Youth Theatre. In 1997 Dr Watson
handed over the Chairmanship of the Centre to Dr Bernard Jones,
Head of English at Builth Wells High School who, like his predecessor,
had served as Programme Committee chair. The scope of the Centre's
activities continued to develop as the Centre ran the biggest
Science Engineering and Technology events in Wales, and became
the acknowledged field-leader in Wales in the development of Information
Technology for the Arts.
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With
public funding for the arts facing continued restriction, the
challenges facing Wyeside are greater than ever. Yet the venue
continues to present an increasing range of live performances
and films, subsidises ticked prices for those aged 18 and under,
and is currently working to raise funds for a major restoration
of the Market Theatre downstairs. The Centre continues to have
ambitious plans for its future, but retains the working philosophy
that Donald Jones gave it at its birth – to bring the experience
of high-quality arts into the scope of the local community,
and particularly to offer an experience of culture to the young
people of the town and Mid-Wales.
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