Batley Variety Club

Batley Variety Club was a variety club in Batley, West Yorkshire, England. During its heyday the club staged concerts by performers including Louis Armstrong, Shirley Bassey, Tom Jones, Roy Orbison, Eartha Kitt, Morecambe and Wise, Gene Pitney, Neil Sedaka, Ken Dodd and many more.[1] At the peak of its success, the club had 300,000 members. It closed in about 1978 and reopened as "Crumpets" night club. It closed again shortly afterwards and its contents were auctioned off. It reopened as "The Frontier" in the early 1980s and this eventually closed in 2016.

Batley Variety Club
Iconic sign at Batley Variety Club
Batley Variety Club interior
General information
AddressBradford Road, Batley, West Yorkshire
CountryUnited Kingdom
Construction startedJanuary 1967
CompletedMarch 1967

On hearing the news that the building was no longer to be used as a venue, singer Shirley Bassey commented, "I have many happy memories of singing at the Batley Variety Club so sorry to hear it is closing." The building was converted to a gym in 2017.[2]

Origins

The club was designed and built by James and Betty Corrigan in early 1967 on top of a disused sewage site on Bradford Road in Batley.[3] The build took three months from start to finish, with floodlights erected so construction workers could work through the night to hit the deadline for opening on Easter Sunday. The build was interrupted when local authority inspectors discovered that the building was six inches too close to the road. Demolition took place and work continued but, despite this setback, the club managed to open on 27 March 1967 as planned. The headline act on opening night was The Bachelors.[4]

James and Betty Corrigan had traveled to Las Vegas to research how the clubs worked there in order to work out a design for Batley. The ground floor of the club was excavated so that on entering, the public would walk down to their tables which would be arranged in tiers, five in all, forming a horseshoe embracing the stage from the bottom up, thus giving the audience unobstructed views. The ceilings were low, offering an intimate atmosphere, and the resident band was situated at the back of the stage rather than in a traditional orchestra pit so that the artistes could be closer to the audience. The club held 1,750 people seated, with standing room for more, and it was this large capacity which facilitated low admission prices for top quality acts. Food was served in baskets with plastic cutlery to avoid clinking noises that could disturb the acts on stage. There were two long bars than ran down either side of the club.[5]

Heyday

The club was known as the ‘Las Vegas of the North’ and attracted the best acts in show business, both from the UK and USA. Proprietor James Corrigan traveled with booking agent Bernard Hinchcliffe to the USA to attract major acts, and famously offered Dean Martin's manager £45,000 for a booking, but the manager replied that Martin wouldn't 'get out of bed for a piss for that amount'. Undeterred, Corrigan and Hinchliffe travelled to New York to meet Joe Glaser of Associated Booking Corporation and secured the booking of Louis Armstrong for £27,000. Corrigan revealed this figure to the press and later claimed that this was a big mistake as it led other agents to believe that 'Batley had very deep pockets' and would ask for bigger fees for their artists and subsequently cause problems for the club.[6] When Corrigan traveled to Capri to bring Gracie Fields out of semi-retirement to play at the club, Fields asked Cilla Black what fee she thought she should ask for. Cilla Black’s husband Bobby Willis recommended that she asked for 'the same as Satchmo got'.[7]

The format of the nights would generally be a specialty support act followed by the headline act, and all would be held together by a compère. The regular compère at Batley Variety Club was Jerry Brooke.[8] Headline artists would be booked for a week-long run, from Sunday night to the following Saturday, sometimes longer. The biggest draw to the club, Shirley Bassey, was sometimes booked for three-week runs.[9]

Many of the artistes stayed as guests of the Corrigans at their home in Batley, Oaks Cottage. Dame Vera Lynn and Eartha Kitt cooked for their hosts.[10] During her stay in Batley, Eartha Kitt sampled tripe at the local market and joined the shoppers in a chorus of "On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at".[11] During one of Shirley Bassey's appearances, James Corrigan invited her out for dinner, and she got dressed up in a fur coat thinking she was being taken to a restaurant, but instead it was a fish and chip shop she was driven to in the back of Corrigan's Rolls-Royce.[6]

The club acted as a boost to the local economy, with nearby restaurants, flower shops, clothes shops and taxi firms benefiting financially from the attraction of the club.[6]

Roy Orbison's album Live From Batley Variety Club was recorded on 9 May 1969. It was re-released as Roy Orbison - Authorized Bootleg Collection by Orbison Records in 1999.[12] BBC Radio recorded a performance from the first week of Gracie Fields' first performance, which was broadcast on 5 January 1969, and Philips made a recording of a performance from the second week, with a view to a commercial issue, which Fields later rejected. Her original Philips demonstration disc is now part of a private Gracie collection. The only song not broadcast by the BBC was Fields’ encore of "There'll Always Be an England". Some of the recording made by the BBC was later issued on the album, The Best of the BBC Broadcasts.

In 1974, Maurice Gibb of the Bee Gees met his future wife Yvonne Spenceley while he was playing at the club and she was working as a waitress. Gibb said "I just saw her eyes and said to myself, 'This is the woman I'm going to marry'." A week later Spenceley handed in her notice at the club and announced she was going on tour with the band.[13]

In 1977 the club hosted Katharine, Duchess of Kent for a charity night to raise funds for the Queen’s Silver Jubilee Appeal.[14]

Closure

Batley Variety Club closed its doors for the final time in 1978 when James and Betty Corrigan separated. The club re-opened briefly as ‘Crumpets’ night club by Betty Corrigan and her son Jamie, before reopening as the Frontier Club in the early 1980s. The Frontier remained open until 2016. The building still stands and has been converted to a gym.[15]

There is a campaign for civic recognition for the contribution that James Corrigan and Batley Variety Club made to the area.[16]

A Facebook group has been created to facilitate patrons of the club to share their memories.[17]

King of Clubs

The 2017 published book, King of Clubs, by Maureen Prest, told the inside story of James Corrigan and Batley Variety Club.[18] Prest was the promotions manager at the club and a lifelong friend of Corrigan. The book told the story of Corrigan's early life on a travelling fairground, the development of the Batley Variety Club and his turbulent marriage to Betty. Prest describes the book as 'A story of rags to riches and back to rags. With a twist.'[19]

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References

  1. "STARRY STARRY NIGHTS AT THE VARIETY CLUB". Batleynews.co.uk. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  2. "Famous variety club hosts final night". Bbc.co.uk. 31 July 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  3. "Batley Variety Club - Yorkshire Reporter". Yorkshirereporter.co.uk. 22 March 2014. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  4. Media, Quba New. "King of Clubs : Route Online". Route-online.com. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  5. "The variety club that made Batley the 'Las Vegas of the North'". Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  6. "Remembering variety club legend Jerry Brooke". Wakefieldexpress.co.uk. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  7. "STARRY STARRY NIGHTS AT THE VARIETY CLUB". Batleynews.co.uk. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  8. "Roy Orbison - Authorized Bootleg Collection". Discogs.com. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  9. "Wife who mourns Bee Gee Maurice". Dewsburyreporter.co.uk. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  10. "My Royal Flower". Batleynews.co.uk. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  11. "Famous variety club hosts final night". Bbc.co.uk. 31 July 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  12. "Book tells the story of Mr Variety Club". Thepressnews.co.uk. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  13. "Batley Variety Club". Facebook.com. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  14. Maureen Prest (26 March 2017). King of Clubs. Route Publishing. ISBN 978-1901927702.
  15. "King of Clubs". Kingofclubs.wordpress.com. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
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