Ghost Tales from the Theatre (1970's)
This is one of the many stories and accounts of ghosts of the Bath Theatre Royal.
This one, strangely has only ever been seen by people who were performing at the Theatre or attached to a live show.
It was never seen by any of the staff members and seemed to always allude one of the male workers there.
The apparition is described as being an odd looking chap who would just stand in the foyer dressed in an old fashioned tricorn hat, a long-tailed jacket with big brass buttons and the doublet and hose.
He would just be stood in the foyer staring out in front of him and not taking any notice of the people around him.
The male staff member was starting to get fed up of people saying that they had seen him and thought it was just someone messing around.
Once, on a hot summer's day, an actor came into the foyer saying "It's hot today, how does the man stand out there with all those clothes on? and the staff member replied "What are you talking about ? and the actor said "That bloke out there, all dressed up in old fashioned clothes"
So the staff member says "Is he there now? the actor says "Yes"
The staff member says "Right I'll have him now" and rushes around the bar to look and yet again it was empty.... he had vanished.
At the time the staff member thought it was just somebody around there and didn't actually realise that it was a ghost until one afternoon.
He was just going about his usual daily chores and a young couple came through into the foyer and he heard them remark, "Why is he standing there ?
The staff member looks around, because he hadn't seen anybody else there and as far as he was concerned the foyer was empty, apart from him.
So he asked who they meant and the woman waved her arm towards the empty part of the foyer, "That man there"
He says "What are you talking about ? There's no one there ...
The girl smiling, turned around and looked at the empty space and said "Why him"
She then suddenly pales and repeatedly says "Oh my God. Oh my God" and was in quite a distressed state.
She later revealed after a stiff drink, that she had actually witnessed the spirit and it disappeared in front of her.
She described the man exactly as others described him before, but with buckled shoes and also a red wig.
A man with a red wig has been witnessed at the Garrick's Head next door.
So that is the mystery of the man in the Foyer, nobody knows who he was and why he only appears to members of the cast or other people that don't work at the theatre and he's never been seen by any of the staff over the years.
The events above happened in the late 1970s, but there have now been some changes and that area of the foyer has actually changed so it would be interesting to know whether he is still seen today although time of the writing of the book there had been no further reported sightings of him.
Thoughts -
He is clearly a residual spirit, and maybe it was just coincidence that he was only seen by cast members.
Could it be Beau Nash? passing through from his old house and gambling club next door, The Garricks Head ?
In 1704, Nash became Master of Ceremonies in Bath, a position he retained until he died.
He played a leading role in making Bath the most fashionable resort in 18th-century England
The man in the red wig spotted at the Garricks Head, walks through the doorway made to connect the pub & theatre.
He is thought to be David Garrick, an actor who was a later tenant and made this doorway for his ease of use.
Changing the layout of the foyer wouldn't necessarily stop the apparition as a residual ghost is unaware of its surroundings, hence why some are seen halfway up walls or going through doorways that don't exist etc.
It would be interesting to see an old floorplan with the spot marked out and the new floor plan.
So was he an original Regency Dandy? Beau Nash or an old actor in costume?
My money is on Beau Nash or maybe David Garrick as they seem the most feasible and had strong ties to the location.
Source - Paranormal Bath - Malcolm Cadey
Available to buy on Amazon
Rewritten - P Wallace
Photo - Main - Credit - John Rawlings c1950 (Bath Chronicle Memories Cutting) Bath in Time (Inner Foyer 1964), Beau Nash - British Museum & Map 1887 Insurance maps