Rosemary Squire

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Dame Rosemary Squire
DBE
Rosemary Squire.jpg
Squire in 2011
Born
Rosemary Anne Squire

(1956-05-27) 27 May 1956 (age 65)
Nottingham, England
OccupationTheatre owner and producer
Spouse(s)Sir Howard Panter
Children3

Dame Rosemary Anne Squire, DBE (born 27 May 1956) is a British commercial theatre owner and entrepreneur. She was founder, co-owner and joint chief executive of the Ambassador Theatre Group (ATG) Ltd. Squire and her husband/business partner, Howard Panter, are the second largest shareholder of ATG.

Squire is co-founder, Joint CEO and Executive Chair of Trafalgar Entertainment.

Biography

Early life and education

Squire was born in Nottingham, England, on 27 May 1956. From 1967 to 1974, Squire attended Nottingham Girls' High School. She studied at Southampton University between 1975 and 1979, gaining a First Class BA in Spanish with Catalan and French – working at the University of Barcelona in 1977–78 as an English language assistant as part of her studies. Squire then studied at Brown University (USA) in 1979–80 on a postgraduate scholarship.

Career

Squire arrived in Theatreland in 1980. Throughout the decade, she held various administrative roles at Wyndham's Theatres Ltd. In 1984, she was a general manager of Maxbox Group plc, the second largest group of West End Theatres, which was then owned by Associated Newspapers. In 1988, she became the general manager of the theatre production company Turnstyle Group Ltd, of which she became executive director in the 90s, co-producing (amongst others) the 1991 West End revival of the award-winning musical Carmen Jones.

With the backing of Sir Eddie Kulukundis and brothers Sir John and Peter Beckwith, Squire and her husband Panter established the Ambassador Theatre Group in 1992, with the acquisitions of the Duke of York's Theatre and a management contract of the Ambassadors Theatre and a cinema complex in Woking. In 1995, the expansion of ATG continued with the acquisition of the Ambassadors Theatre, subsequently renamed New Ambassadors Theatre in 1999. Between 1996 and 1997, the group expanded further with management contracts for the newly built Milton Keynes Theatre and the Regent Theatre, as well as Victoria Hall in Stoke-on-Trent. In 1997, Squire became executive director of the Ambassador Theatre Group.

2000s

In 2000, Squire and Panter acquired further regional venues such as Churchill Theatre in Bromley and Richmond Theatre in Surrey and purchased ACT Theatres (which then included the Albery Theatre, Donmar Warehouse, Fortune Theatre, Phoenix Theatre, Piccadilly Theatre, Comedy Theatre, Whitehall Theatre – renamed Trafalgar Studios in 2004 – and Wyndhams), as well as the Playhouse Theatre and Theatre Royal Brighton, which were acquired in the same year. Squire also joined the board of management of the Society of London Theatres and the advisory panel of Arts Council Capital. Her work continued the following years, co-producing 25 shows in 2003, and with the acquisition of Squire's first two Scottish venues (King's Theatre and Theatre Royal Glasgow) and the reopening and rebranding of the New Wimbledon Theatre in 2004. She was also elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and joined the board of Donmar Warehouse Productions.

In June 2005, Squire became the first democratically elected president of the Society of London Theatre (the trade organisation of London's theatre owners and managers), and the second only female president in the organisation's 100-year history. She campaigned to improve the West End theatre-going environment, and to secure vital funding for capital improvements to protect the long-term future of London's historic theatres. After completing her three-year term in July 2008, she served a further three years as vice-president. She was a member of The Arts Council of England Lottery Advisory Panel from 2000 to 2005 and is a member of the Theatrical Management Association.[citation needed]

In 2009, Squire was appointed a National Member of the Arts Council England Board. She was Chair of Great Ormond Street Hospital's Theatres for Theatres Appeal and vice-chairman of Dance Umbrella, an international contemporary dance festival. She is also a Trustee of The Hall of Cornwall. In February 2009, ATG was awarded the contract to run the new Aylesbury Waterside Theatre. In November 2009, Squire and Panter realigned their share holding to bring in private equity group Exponent for a deal to secure the funding for the acquisition of Live Nation's UK Theatre portfolio. ATG became the largest theatre group in the UK. Panter remained a joint-owner, and became joint Chief Executive and Creative Director. Greg Dyke became the Executive Chairman of the larger group.

2010s

In 2010, Squire and Panter opened the Aylesbury Waterside Theatre, which was their 42nd theatre. In the same year, London's Evening Standard named Squire and her husband jointly as the most influential people in British theatre in the newspaper's list of "London's 1000 most influential people 2010". In 2011, Squire and Panter (as ATG) launched their Manchester Gets it First (MGiF) initiative. In February 2013, Squire appeared at number 16 on the inaugural BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Power List, intended to serve as a snapshot of the 100 most powerful British women, or women operating in the UK.

In 2014, Panter and Squire topped The Stage 100 list for the fifth consecutive year, equalling the record-breaking run previously set by Andrew Lloyd Webber. From 2010 to 2016, Squire and Panter topped the list a record-breaking seven consecutive times. This list, compiled annually, recognises British theatremakers for their achievements.

In March 2015, Squire launched The SPACe (the Squire Performing Arts Centre) at Nottingham Girl's High School which is named in her family's honour by her former school. Alongside its Patron, Stella Rimington, Squire was Chair of the 'Raise the Curtain' Development Board which was created to oversee the project. Squire officially opened The SPACe in April 2017.

In 2016, Panter and Squire stepped down from their roles at Ambassador Theatre Group to concentrate on new projects They co-founded a new live entertainment business, Trafalgar Entertainment, and acquired the two-space West End theatre, Trafalgar Studios.

In December 2017, Squire was appointed Chair of Arts Council South West.

Personal life

Squire married Alan Brodie in 1982. They had two children, Jenny (born 1986) and Daniel (born 1987). Their marriage was dissolved in 1994. Squire is currently married to her business partner Howard Panter. The couple first met in 1979 at the Queen's Theatre, London where Squire was working in the box office during Panter's production of And a Nightingale Sang. They married in 1994. They had their first child Kate in 2002. Panter is step-father to Squire's children, Jenny and Daniel.

Productions

Produced by Rosemary Squire unless otherwise noted.

Honours and awards

  • 2006 – Squire won the CBI Real Business First Women Award for Tourism and Leisure, recognising her commercial success and the breakthroughs she made in promoting equal opportunities for women;
  • 2007 – appointed an OBE for Services to Theatre
  • 2008 – Entrepreneur of the Year – Regional Finalist (with Howard Panter)
  • 2012 – named one of the 250 of the most influential people in Greater Manchester (shared with Panter) at the Manchester Evening News Awards
  • 2013 – Squire and Panter were listed first in the Evening Standard 'Power 1000' Theatre section.
  • In February 2013 she was assessed as the 16th most powerful woman in the United Kingdom by Woman's Hour on BBC Radio 4.
  • In October 2014, Squire was named the UK Overall Winner at the UK Finals of the EY Entrepreneur of the Year.
  • In the 2018 New Year Honours, Squire was named Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire.
  • In 2019, Woking Borough Council bestowed Honorary Freedom of the Borough upon Squire and Panter, both long-serving members of the community.

This page was last updated at 2022-02-10 07:59 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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