The company which is handling the future of the Derby Playhouse has said it is looking for a buyer.
On Thursday afternoon the theatre shut its doors after meetings failed to secure a financial rescue package.
Now Tenon Recovery, brought in as liquidators to sell off assets, said their role had changed to administrators for a viable business.
A spokesman said it was even possible that the current production, Treasure Island, could be restarted.
Sixty people lost their jobs when the theatre went into voluntary liquidation after the board was advised the Playhouse was insolvent.
A final performance of Treasure Island went ahead on Thursday evening when actors and staff decided the show had to go on.
It had been feared that liquidation would mean the Playhouse and contents being sold off piecemeal.
But the theatre's board, which includes members of the city council, said that after looking at the business they decided administration was a better option.
Dillip Dattani from Tenon Recovery said: "Liquidation would have effectively been a burial situation where assets would have been sold off.
"Administration would be a rescue of the business in its entirety if possible."
Financial support
He added: "Reopening the venue with the current show is a possibility but we are looking at the options.
"If there is a viable strategy or proposition that enables it to open again then we will consider that option."
The doors would remain shut for at least the next few days while the situation was clarified, he said.
The Playhouse shut after a loan from the artistic director, Stephen Edwards, was effectively blocked by the city council amid doubts over the theatre's management.
At that moment Mr Edwards said the theatre could reopen if it received donations totalling £500,000.
The Arts Council said it had pumped in £1m over the basic £700,000 backing it provided.
A spokesman for the city council denied they wanted to demolish the Playhouse and committed itself to providing a theatre "in some form".
See Original Article
Is your business struggling with debt. We can help. Call us now to put your mind at rest before Christmas.
Call us on: 0800 071 1616
Email us on: info@debtsgone.co.uk
Website: www.debtsgone.co.uk
Sunday, 2 December 2007
Posted by Debtsgone LTD at Sunday, December 02, 2007
Labels: Hopes rise for theatre's future
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2007
(260)
-
▼
December
(21)
- Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year from all of u...
- They are now responsible for 60 per cent of petiti...
- A predicted golden age for distressed debt hedge f...
- The proportion of households paying more than 20pc...
- HER Majesty’s Revenue & Customs (HMRC) is taking a...
- Banks are being accused of pressuring customers wh...
- The full scale of the shutdown in debt markets aro...
- The profession is set to weather the storm of the ...
- Scotland's oldest ski centre has been taken over i...
- The number of companies becoming insolvent in 2008...
- UK firms are preparing for a busy year of insolven...
- Corporate insolvencies are set to hit seven-year h...
- Accountants predict rise in insolvenciesPeter Stif...
- Many young Britons are committing financial suicid...
- Borrowers who believe rising house prices or insol...
- Banks are bracing themselves for more bad news on ...
- The company behind Plymouth's scrapped Girls Aloud...
- No one likes going into a negotiation naked, relyi...
- Investors in BBI Holdings, a healthcare business t...
- The company which is handling the future of the De...
- ONE in four people is now struggling with unmanage...
-
▼
December
(21)
No comments:
Post a Comment