Famous club says farewell as 4,000 turn out for final bash
The Bradford Road venue’s almost 50-year history as an entertainment spot ended on Saturday when around 4,000 punters turned out for a night of nostalgia.
Club manager Nick Westwell said: “It was all a blur. A phenomenal success – it was just mad crazy. It was a great end to 50 years.”
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Hide AdThe venue, which started as the world famous Batley Variety Club in 1967, announced it would close earlier this month.
A new club, T-B-C, will open at the former Hitsville site at the junction of Bradford Road and Hick Lane in Batley tomorrow.
“It’s all go,” said Mr Westwell. “We’re working away like crazy but it will be ready.
“I think people will be in for a bit of a shock and a surprise because it has 40 years of experience going into it.”
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Hide AdBut during the Frontier’s last night, people from the Variety Club days such as promotions officer Maureen Prest and manager Allan Clegg remembered old times.
Maureen, of Nutter Lane, Birstall, said afterwards: “It’s sad that it’s the end of its life as an entertainment venue. That place is part of the social history of Batley. I feel it’s sacrilege for it to be turned into a gym.”
She added: “In Batley back in the day, life was very grey. The mills were clattering away, the chimneys were churning out smoke – you couldn’t hang your washing out.
“It was a black and white world and it changed that significantly.”
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Hide AdDuring the Batley Variety Club’s heydey, owners James and Betty Corrigan hosted musical stars such as Roy Orbison, Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, Dusty Springfield, Shirley Bassey, Louis Armstrong, Tom Jones, Lulu and The Bee Gees. Mr and Mrs Corrigan, who later parted, have both since died.
Maureen said: “On reflection it was really a piece of social engineering because it changed people’s lifestyles and put happiness back into the place.
“wIt was a phenomenal thing for James to do.
“There were no grants for this and grants for that.
“We were all part of a can-do generation.”
The Variety Club opened in 1967 and was changed into the Frontier by Derek Smith in the 1980s.
Since then it continued as a live music venue and ran club nights.