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stephen wischhusen

I think Beaumont's sexuality is irrelevant. He did a trendous job in bringing quality to the stage. Not always in the pkays, I grant you, but in settings and the way the productions were dressed. "H.M.Tennant Presents" on the top of a poster was generally the sign of a well made production. The Company ran the Globe and Queens Theatres as well as a non-profit ditributing exercise for a while at the Lyric Hammersmith, aided by the Arts Council, to give newer works a try. I think there was a rumo9ur about the funds generated not being always used for the right purpose. But if by being gay, Beaumont had the right eye what would look good on the stage and what would draw an audience, well then I believe that was to the betterment of the Theatre in general. In time of course his ideas no longer worked and were overtaken by more modern developments but please don't knock his concept of the well-made play. He kept a lot of people in work and a lot of theatres open. After his death, Helen Montague led Tennants for a while, still mainting standards. Later in went in to decline as the people at the helm lacked his skill. I think his sexuality was one of the things which gave him an edge, but it was part of the man, not the whole man.

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