Palace Theatre
Palace Theatre Shaftesbury Avenue, London, UK W1D 5AY
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Palace Theatre Shaftesbury Avenue, London, UK W1D 5AY
Location Map: |
View Location Map |
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| Leicester Square (approx. 150m) | |
Bus Routes: |
14, 19, 24, 29, 38, 40, 176 |
| MasterPark at China Town. NCP at Upper St Martin’s Lane. |
| Journey Planner: | Powered by Transport for London |
| Total Seats: | 1400 |
| No of Bars: | 4 |
| Guide dogs allowed inside the auditorium, alternatively staff can dog-sit (maximum of 2 guide dogs per performance). | |
| Infra-red system with 6 headsets, available from Box Office. Induction loop at box office. | |
| No steps to the auditorium through a side EXIT on Shaftesbury Avenue. One 3cm step into the theatre and a slight incline to the Stalls which has 1 space for a wheelchair/scooter user and their companion at W27. Transfer seating available to any Stalls aisle seat (maximum of 4 wheelchairs and 1 scooter can be stored at back of Stalls). | |
| Adapted toilet by wheelchair users’ entrance. | |
| Adapted toilet by wheelchair users entrance. | |
| 2 steps up to the foyer, through a set of double swing doors. Box Office level access through first door on Shaftesbury Avenue. Box office with lowered counter for easy wheelchair access. All stairs have highlights and handrails on both sides. 3 steps down from the foyer to the Stalls, 30 steps up to the Dress Circle, 56 to the Upper Circle, 77 to the Balcony, which is very steep. Theatre open 45 mins before performance. | |
| 4 licensed bars. No level access to bars – drinks brought to disabled customers in the auditorium. All bars have moveable seats. Stalls bar down 15 steps from the Stalls; the Dress Circle bar is level with the Dress Circle. Further bars at Upper Circle and Balcony levels. Drinks can be brought to disabled customers in the auditorium. | |
| No | |
| Palace Theatre London Ltd |
The Palace Theatre, is a West End theatre in the City of Westminster. It is an imposing red-brick building that dominates the west side of Cambridge Circus, and is located near the intersection of Shaftesbury Avenue and Charing Cross Road.
Commissioned by impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte in the late
1880s, it was designed by Thomas Collcutt. Carte intended it to be the home of
English grand opera, much as his Savoy Theatre had been built as a home for
English light opera, beginning with the Gilbert and Sullivan series. The
foundation stone, laid by his wife Helen in 1888, can still be seen on the
fatade of the theatre, almost at ground level to the right of the entrance. The
Palace Theatre's current capacity is 1,400.
The theatre opened as the "Royal English Opera House" in January 1891 with
Arthur Sullivan's Ivanhoe. No expense was spared to make the production a
success, including a double cast and "every imaginable effect of scenic
splendour" (Hesketh Pearson, Gilbert and Sullivan). It ran for 160 performances.
However, this was not enough to sustain the venture. Sir Henry Wood, who had
been rTpTtiteur for the production, recalled in his autobiography that "[if]
Carte had had a repertory of six operas instead of only one, I believe he would
have established English opera in London for all time. Towards the end of the
run of Ivanhoe I was already preparing the Flying Dutchman with EugFne Oudin in
the name part. He would have been superb. However, plans were altered and the
Dutchman was shelved." ('My Life of Music', Victor Gollancz Ltd, London 1938)
Carte sold the theatre within a year, and it was renamed the Palace Theatre of
Varieties.
The name of the theatre was finally changed to The Palace Theatre in 1911. On
March 11, 1925, the musical comedy No, No, Nanette opened at the Palace Theatre
starring Binnie Hale and George Grossmith, Jr.. The run of 665 performances made
it the third longest running West End musical of the 1920s. The Palace Theatre
was also the venue for Fred Astaire's final stage musical Gay Divorce which
opened there on November 2, 1933.
The last decades of the twentieth century saw two exceptional runs at The
Palace: Jesus Christ Superstar and Les MisTrables. The latter ran for eighteen
years, having transferred from the Barbican Centre on December 4, 1985. The show
is still running at the Queen's Theatre just 100 metres further up Shaftesbury
Avenue, having transferred there in April 2004. On October 8, 2006, it became
the longest running musical in the world, overtaking the former record set by
CATS.
In August 1983, Andrew Lloyd-Webber announced that he had purchased the freehold
of the theatre for ú1.3 million and subsequently set out on a series of works to
restore the theatre. During work on the auditorium, a layer of plum-coloured
paint was removed, revealing the famous marble and onyx panels to be untouched.
Following the transfer of Les Miserables, the theatre was greatly refurbished,
marble walls uncovered, restored, repainted, new chandeliers, cleaned etc. This
was followed by a short 6-week season of illusionist Derren Brown following his
successful UK tour. Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Woman in White received its world
premiere on 15 September 2004 and ran for 19 months to 25 February 2006. The
show outlived the Broadway version, playing at Broadway's Marquis Theatre, where
it opened in November 2005, by 6 days. Bill Kenwright's production of Andrew
Lloyd Webber and Jim Steinman's musical Whistle Down The Wind played from 15
March - 12 August 2006.
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