Smock Alley Theatre, 1662 was the first custom built theatre in Dublin City and still remains in substantially the same form, making it one of the most important sites in European theatre history.
Smock Alley Theatre, 1662 was the first theatre outside London to receive the title of Theatre Royal, but, because it had been built on land reclaimed from the Liffey, the building was unstable and the gallery collapsed twice. It was rebuilt in 1735.
The theatre closed in 1787. The building was then used as a whiskey store until Father Michael Blake bought it to set up a church. When the bell tolled in 1811, 18 years before the Catholic Emancipation, the first Catholic bell to ring in Dublin in nearly 300 years was heard. The façade boasts ornate stained glass windows and the original ceiling plasterwork remain in the Smock Alley as a witness of this time.
After a six year renovation, Smock Alley Theatre, 1662 reopened its doors as Dublin’s oldest newest theatre in May 2012. With three gorgeous venues, Smock Alley is the perfect place to spend a cultural evening out. They partner with many arts and cultural festivals to welcome audiences, engage with artists and create exciting cultural events. From Dublin Theatre Festival to First Fortnight and from IMRAM to the Irish literature Festival these partnerships are a vital part of their annual programme.
- The Good Father
Arts and cultureThe Good Father In advance of its London run, Murmuration Studios and Resonate Film & Theatre present The Good Father by Christian O’Reilly at Smock Alley Theatre, Dublin this February.
- A Rose By Any Other Name
Arts and cultureA Rose By Any Other Name This one woman show charts Rose’s fascinating and life changing journey with Shakespeare from childhood to recent times.
- Francis Breen: WHITE
Arts and cultureFrancis Breen: WHITE The year is 2024, a white man does stand-up comedy? What?! In this case he’s a man in a cheap white suit daubed in white paint. For lovers of the absurd. In association with Fly Away Home productions.
- Áine Gallagher: For the Love of Milseáin
Arts and cultureÁine Gallagher: For the Love of Milseáin Award winning comedian and Ireland’s “queen of the offbeat” Áine Gallagher, is on a mission to prove that speaking Irish can be both accessible and hilarious.
- Making A Show of Myself
Arts and cultureMaking A Show of Myself Back by popular demand, following a sellout run in November/December 2023, an Irish raconteur shares the most ridiculous, hilarious and tragic episodes of her life, showing there’s a story in every stumble and a little magic in every story.