Royal Avenue Theatre Avenue Theatre |
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My Name Is Rachel Corrie at the Playhouse Theatre in 2006
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Address | Craven Street London, WC2 United Kingdom |
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Coordinates | 51°30′25″N 0°07′25″W / 51.506944°N 0.123611°W |
Public transit |
Charing Cross; Embankment Charing Cross |
Owner | Ambassador Theatre Group |
Operator | Ambassador Theatre Group |
Designation | Grade II listed |
Type | West End theatre |
Capacity | 786 on 3 levels |
Construction | |
Opened | 11 March 1882 |
Rebuilt | 1907 (Blow and Billerey) |
Architect | F. H. Fowler & Hill |
Website | |
Playhouse Theatre at Ambassador Theatre Group |
The Playhouse Theatre is a West End theatre in the City of Westminster, located in Northumberland Avenue, near Trafalgar Square. The Theatre was built by F. H. Fowler and Hill with a seating capacity of 1,200. It was rebuilt in 1907 and still retains its original substage machinery. Its current seating capacity is 786.
Built by Sefton Henry Parry as the Royal Avenue Theatre, it opened on 11 March 1882 with 1200 seats. The first production at the theatre was Jacques Offenbach's Madame Favart. In its early seasons, the theatre hosted comic operas, burlesques and farces for several years. For much of this time, the low comedian Arthur Roberts, a popular star of the music halls, starred at the theatre. By the 1890s, the theatre was presenting drama, and in 1894 Annie Horniman, the tea heiress, anonymously sponsored the actress Florence Farr in a season of plays at the theatre. Farr's first production was unsuccessful, and so she prevailed upon her friend, George Bernard Shaw, to hurry and make his West End début at the theatre with Arms and the Man in 1894. It was successful enough to allow him to discontinue music criticism to focus full-time on play writing. The legendary actress Gladys Cooper managed the theatre for some years.
The theatre was rebuilt in 1905 to the designs of Blow and Billerey. During the work, part of the roof of the adjacent Charing Cross railway station collapsed. The roof and girders fell across the train lines but part of the station's western wall also fell and crashed through the roof and wall of the theatre. This resulted in the deaths of three people in the station, and three workmen on the theatre site and injuries to many more. The theatre was repaired and re-opened as The Playhouse on 28 January 1907 with a one-act play called The Drums of Oudh and a play called Toddles, by Tristan Bernard and Andre Godferneaux. Shaw wrote a sketch entitled The Interlude at the Playhouse for the occasion.