Genesis Theatre


Genesis Theatre were an amateur theatre group that existed from 1975 to 1982 in the Greater Manchester area. The name was taken from the book of Genesis, because when they started out they were literally at their beginning.
The group were known for attempting large productions more commonly associated with professional theatre groups as well as several original musicals. They had several premieres amongst their productions, some being Amateur World Premieres, others simply Amateur North West Premieres.
The two key members were Chris Fogg and Chris Dumigan. However the most well known former members are and .
MusicalYearComposer TypeWriter
Hair1975 and 1976CoverRagni, Rado and MacDermot
Stag1977 and 1979Genesis TheatreChris Fogg / Chris Dumigan
Demolition Man1977CoverJohn King
O Lucky Man1978CoverAlan Price / Lindsay Anderson
Tommy1978CoverPete Townshend
And Afterwards at...1978Genesis TheatreChris Hawley / Norman Partington/Bill Johnson
War of the Worlds 1980CoverJeff Wayne
You're a Good Man Charlie Brown1980 and 1981CoverClark Gesner
A Bit on the Side 1980Genesis TheatreChris Hawley / Norman Partington/Bill Johnson
Shakespeare's Greatest Hits1982Genesis TheatreAndrew Pastor
Marilyn1982Genesis TheatreChris Fogg / Chris Dumigan

The most critically well received show was the Who's Tommy, which was the first North West stage presentation of the concept album and was approved by Pete Townshend. At the same time Townshend had given his sanction for a Southern Amateur company to present Tommy; they beat Genesis Theatre to the stage by a matter of a few weeks. It was their production that Townshend saw and eventually took to the professional stage.
There was an aborted attempt to put on the first theatre performance of Jeff Wayne's the War of the Worlds at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester. This needed a reasonable budget and a sponsor was found in Renault. However two weeks before the initial performance Renault were taken over by a new company, who - refusing to pay towards any sponsorship - withdrew their funding, and the show was cancelled. It was never put onto the live stage until 2005, when Jeff Wayne finally toured with his own version of the complete musical.
The original musicals Stag and Marilyn are the ones discussed most often by former members.
In 1979 Mike Mansfield, who was well known at the time for TV programmes such as Supersonic, expressed an interest in the group. He provided the funding for the group to go into the studio and record Stag, this caught the attention of Robert Stigwood who was the then manager of the Bee Gees, who had recently peaked with their Saturday Night Fever album. There were reports that Chris Fogg and Chris Dumigan were about to be signed, but when the Bee Gees sued their manager, this stopped dead any hopes of Stigwood having the necessary cash to fund Stag, so the idea was permanently shelved.
Genesis Theatre effectively ended in 1982 when Chris Fogg moved from Greater Manchester to Somerset. It was generally felt that the group were no longer moving forward and had either missed their lucky break or it was never going to arrive after 7 years. Several principal members have since died, including Graham Brittain, Nicky Baird and Mike Bonwick.
Chris Dumigan still lives in the Greater Manchester area as do several other former members and there are regular reunions.
In 2003, Chris Dumigan wrote his memoirs of Genesis Theatre and can be found along with similar biographies by Chris Fogg, Guy Taylor, Alison Davis, Anita King and Alan Ratcliff on the website at www.genesistheatre.co.uk, along with hundreds of photographs of all the shows they did. There has also been some restoration work performed on the studio recordings of Stag and a live recording of Marilyn. Moreover, as most of the shows were recorded at least once during the live performances to stereo cassette, these have all now been transferred to a program that cleans up recordings, during which the recordings were de-hissed and maximised in a number of ways to make the end result as dynamic as possible.Then they have been transferred to CDs. Everyone of the shows listed above that were actually staged have at least one full live recording in the archives, and in the case of 'You're A Good Man Charlie Brown, the Royal Exchange performance exists on DVD. For any further information contact Chris Dumigan