In 1977 the Black Swan opened with Shelagh Delaney’s play, A Taste of Honey, directed by James Edmondson. The theatre space was designed by Richard L. Hay, with assistance from technical director Duncan McKenzie. In an interview at the time the theatre opened, Hay described the intimate space as “an energy place, stripped for action.” The theatre seated 138 people, and in the 1976 program, Artistic Director Jerry Turner wrote that the theatre will “offer us the opportunity to explore work, both old and new, that cries for performance…The Black Swan will be a theatre where we can stretch muscles.”
Turner, in describing why the name was chosen said that “the Black Swan was a beautiful bird with an exotic color and a fierce temper. It’s a fitting emblem for what our third stage should be.” Lighting designer Steven A.
Maze had suggested the name.