Ok, the time has come to wade in and express my views on this one as a bit of a counterpart to my West Yorkshire Playhouse review. So, buckle up and let's get into it.
While the WYP seems to enjoy a fantastic reputation despite putting on a fair few less than stellar shows; the Carriageworks seems to be met with the exact opposite response. Every single season their brochure gets filled with a more exciting portfolio of shows than the last and yet people seem to turn their noses up at the place. Why?
Well actually there are some pretty good reasons, despite the current run of really high quality shows, the Carriageworks has a slightly checkered past. When it was opened by the council in 2005 no-one knew what they wanted it to be and it become for a short while the defacto amateur venue of choice, hurting its reputation as a professional venue. If you mix in the fact that very few people knew where it was (despite its prime millennium square location as there was no clear signage) and some "inertesting" design decisions (see below) this theatre's fate seemed sealed. But all this in the past.
The good mix of cutting edge contemporary shows, stand up comedy, panto, new writing and occasional (and well labeled) amateur work makes well rounded venue. If you mix this with their artistic development programs such as the "Emerge Festival" and "Freshly Picked" season, you can see a bright future for this theatre.
It isn't all sunshine though, they have the least welcoming foyer I've ever seen consisting of a nondescript stairwell evoking the most drab office block in the world, suggesting nothing which even relates to artistic endeavour. The bar is pretty rubbish, sitting at the top of 3 flights of stairs and adopting the same sterile design ethic as the rest of the building, you wouldn't just pop in for a drink. However, if you can see past that you may well end up seeing some of the most interesting performances available in Leeds in the not too distant future.
Give this place a chance and your life could very well be richer for it.
P.s. choose wisely, the program whilst getting peppered with more and more gems each season, will always still have a couple of shaky experiences here and there. "Freshly Picked" or the "performance" sections of the brochure are probably a good place to start. read more