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Wartime Entertainment
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Naval Signal promoting ENSA show
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Naval Signal promoting ENSA show

World War 2 saw a surge of interest in the arts. Many civilian and military audiences experienced drama, opera and ballet for the first time. Unlike audiences in the World War 1 who needed escapism, the audiences of the 1940s were looking for something more.

The Council for the Encouragement of Music and Arts, was set up to provide war-time entertainment and money was given to ballet, opera and drama companies to perform in military camps and to civilians.

ENSA Tickets
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ENSA Tickets

Comedy Postcards
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Comedy Postcards

During the war Sybil Thorndike and her husband Lewis Casson toured the mining villages of Wales performing Shakespeare and Greek tragedy and the Sadler's Wells Ballet, Sadler's Wells Opera and symphony orchestras performed in military camps across the country.

In London's West End serious plays were performed to full houses and at the Arts Theatre there were four ballet performances a day - Lunch Ballet, After-Lunch Ballet, Tea Ballet and Sherry Ballet when audiences could eat during the performance and then return to work.

1940s Lunch Time Ballet Audience
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1940s Lunch Time Ballet Audience

This popular interest in the arts led to the first government subsidy of the arts in Britain distributed through the Arts Council.

     

World War 2

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An international conflict lasting from 1939 until 1945. Britain and France allied against Nazi Germany, which, under the leadership of Adolf Hitler, was seeking to dominate Europe. Fighting spread to involve all parts of the globe when the United States entered the war to resist Japanese ambitions in the Pacific.

World War 1

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1914-1918, 'The Great War'. Most of Europe, Britain, Russia and the US, joined forces to defeat Imperial Germany and Austria. Battles were mostly fought using 'trench warfare' resulting in enormous casualties on both sides.

Arts Council

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The Arts Council of Great Britain, originally called the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts (C.E.M.A.), was formed in 1940 to develop accessibility to and greater knowledge, understanding, and practice of the arts. In 1994 it split into separate bodies to serve England, Scotland and Wales: (Northern Ireland already had its own Arts Council). The Arts Councils distribute public money from Government and, now, the National Lottery, to arts organisations. Between 2003 and 2006 the Arts Council of England will distribute around #2 billion.