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| Wednesday, September 23, 1998 Published at 14:46 GMT 15:46 UK Entertainment A man who is tired of London ![]() Sir Ian: returning to repertory theatre The respected stage actor Sir Ian McKellen has said that he may leave the London stage for good. Disenchanted with audiences in the capital, the actor said that he plans instead to spend the next seven months in Leeds working at the West Yorkshire Playhouse. In an interview with the Independent newspaper Sir Ian complained that there were too few black faces in the audiences at the National Theatre in London. He also said that few people in the audience even seemed to speak English. The left wing actor said he preferred Leeds because the council had "old socialist principles" and he felt "welcomed into the life of the city". "I'm going back to rep, with local audiences and a community of actors. These shows will be for the people of Leeds, and we won't be bringing them back to London," he said. Sir Ian will appear at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in Shakespeare's The Tempest, Noel Coward's Present Laughter and The Seagull by Chekov. | Entertainment Contents
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