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Theatre Royal, Drury Lane

The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, commonly known as Drury Lane, is a West End theatre and Grade I listed building in Covent Garden, London, England. The building faces Catherine Street (earlier named Bridges or Brydges Street) and backs onto Drury Lane. The building is the most recent in a line of four theatres which were built at the same location, the earliest of which dated back to 1663, making it the oldest theatre site in London still in use.[1] According to the author Peter Thomson, for its first two centuries, Drury Lane could "reasonably have claimed to be London's leading theatre".[2] For most of that time, it was one of a handful of patent theatres, granted monopoly rights to the production of "legitimate" drama in London (meaning spoken plays, rather than opera, dance, concerts, or plays with music).

Theatre Royal, Drury Lane
Exterior of venue during a production of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
AddressCatherine Street
London, WC2
England
Coordinates51°30′47″N 00°07′13″W / 51.51306°N 0.12028°W / 51.51306; -0.12028Coordinates: 51°30′47″N 00°07′13″W / 51.51306°N 0.12028°W / 51.51306; -0.12028
Public transit Covent Garden
OwnerLW Theatres
DesignationGrade I listed
Capacity1,996 (4 levels)
ProductionFrozen
Construction
Opened1663; 360 years ago (1663) (original structure)
Rebuilt
Website
lwtheatres.co.uk/theatres/theatre-royal-drury-lane/

The first theatre on the site was built at the behest of Thomas Killigrew in the early 1660s, when theatres were allowed to reopen during the English Restoration. Initially known as "Theatre Royal in Bridges Street", the theatre's proprietors hired prominent actors who performed at the theatre on a regular basis, including Nell Gwyn and Charles Hart. In 1672, the theatre caught fire and Killigrew built a larger theatre on the same plot, renamed the "Theatre Royal in Drury Lane"; it opened in 1674. This building lasted nearly 120 years, under the leaderships of Colley Cibber, David Garrick and Richard Brinsley Sheridan, the last of whom employed Joseph Grimaldi as the theatre's resident Clown.

In 1791, under Sheridan's management, the building was demolished to make way for a larger theatre which opened in 1794. This new Drury Lane survived for 15 years before burning down in 1809. The building that stands today opened in 1812. It has been the residency of well known actors including Edmund Kean, comedian Dan Leno and the musical composer and performer Ivor Novello. From the Second World War, the theatre has primarily hosted long runs of musicals, including Oklahoma!, My Fair Lady, 42nd Street and Miss Saigon, the theatre's longest-running show.[3] The theatre is owned by the composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. Since January 2019, the venue has had ongoing renovations, and in July 2021, the theatre reopened after over two years' of extensive work and closures related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Disney's Frozen made its West End debut at Drury Lane on 27 August, with general shows starting from 8 September 2021.

First theatre: Theatre Royal, Bridges Street (1663)

 
Thomas Killigrew as he appeared in 1650

A playhouse known as the Cockpit Theatre used by Queen Anne's Men on Drury Lane was targetted by rioting apprentices on 4 March 1617.[4] After the eleven-year-long Puritan Interregnum, which had seen the banning of pastimes regarded as frivolous, such as theatre, the English monarchy was restored to the throne with the return of Charles II in 1660. Soon after, Charles issued Letters Patent to two parties licensing the formation of new acting companies. One of these went to Thomas Killigrew, whose company became known as the King's Company, and who built a new theatre in Drury Lane. The Letters Patent also granted the two companies a shared monopoly on the public performance of legitimate drama in London; this monopoly was challenged in the 18th century by new venues and by a certain slipperiness in the definition of "legitimate drama," but remained legally in place until 1843.[5] The new playhouse, architect unknown, opened on 7 May 1663 and was known from the placement of the entrance as the "Theatre Royal in Bridges Street."[a] It went by other names as well, including the "King's Playhouse." The building was a three-tiered wooden structure, 112 ft (34 m) long and 59 ft (18 m) wide; it could hold an audience of 700.[6] Set well back from the broader streets, the theatre was accessed by narrow passages between surrounding buildings.[7]

The King himself frequently attended the theatre's productions, as did Samuel Pepys, whose private diaries provide much of what we know of London theatre-going in the 1660s. The day after the Theatre Royal opened, Pepys attended a performance of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher's The Humorous Lieutenant. He has this to say in his diary:

The house is made with extraordinary good contrivance, and yet hath some faults, as the narrowness of the passages in and out of the Pitt, and the distance from the stage to the boxes, which I am confident cannot hear; but for all other things it is well, only, above all, the musique being below, and most of it sounding under the very stage, there is no hearing of the bases at all, nor very well of the trebles, which sure must be mended.[8]

 
location of the Theatre Royal on a map of London from 1700; the inset shows the streets as they are in 2006.

Performances usually began at 3 pm to take advantage of the daylight: the main floor for the audience, the pit, had no roof in order to let in the light. A glazed dome was built over the opening, but according to one of Pepys' diary entries, the dome was not entirely effective at keeping out the elements: he and his wife were forced to leave the theatre to take refuge from a hail storm.[9] Green baize cloth covered the benches in the pit and served to decorate the boxes, additionally ornamented with gold-tooled leather, and even the stage itself.[10] The backless green benches in the pit were in a semicircular arrangement facing the stage, according to a May 1663 letter from one Monsieur de Maonconys: "All benches of the pit, where people of rank also sit, are shaped in a semi-circle, each row higher than the next."[11] The three galleries formed a semicircle around the floor seats; both the first and second galleries were divided up into boxes.[12]

The King's Company was forced to commission the technically advanced and expensive Theatre Royal playhouse by the success of the rival Duke's Company, which was drawing fascinated crowds with their "moveable" or "changeable" scenery and visually gorgeous productions at the former Lisle's Tennis Court at Lincoln's Inn Fields.[13][14] Imitating the innovations at Lincoln's Inn Fields, the Theatre Royal also featured moveable scenery with wings or shutters that could be smoothly changed between or even within acts. When not in use, the shutters rested out of sight behind the sides of the proscenium arch, which also served as a visual frame for the on-stage happenings.[15] The picture-frame-like separation between audience and performance was a new phenomenon in English theatre, though it had been found on the Continent earlier. Theatre design in London remained ambivalent about the merits of the "picture-box" stage, and for many decades to come, London theatres including Drury Lane had large forestages protruding beyond the arch,[16] often including the thrust stages found in the Elizabethan theatres. The players could still step forward and bridge the distance between performer and audience, and in addition, it was not unusual for audience members to mount the stage themselves.[17]

Killigrew's investment in the new playhouse put the two companies on a level as far as technical resources were concerned, but the offerings at the Theatre Royal nevertheless continued to be dominated by actor-driven "talk" drama, contrasting with William Davenant's baroque spectacles and operas at Lincoln's Inn Fields.[18] Internal power structures were the main reason for this difference: while Davenant skilfully commanded a docile young troupe, Killigrew's authority over his veteran actors was far from absolute.[19] Experienced actors Michael Mohun (who Pepys called "the best actor in the world"[20]) and Charles Hart held out for shares and good contracts in the King's Company. Such a division of power between the patentee, Killigrew, and his chief actors led to frequent conflicts that hampered the Theatre Royal as a business venture.[21] Nevertheless, it was mostly at the struggling Theatre Royal, rather than at the efficiently run Lincoln's Inn Fields, that the plays were acted that are classics today. This applies especially to the new form Restoration comedy, dominated in the 1660s by William Wycherley and the Theatre Royal's house dramatist John Dryden. Actors such as Hart and Charles II's mistress Nell Gwyn developed and refined the famous scenes of repartee, banter and flirtation in Dryden's and Wycherley's comedies.[22] With the appearance of actresses for the first time at Drury Lane and Lincoln's Inn Fields in the 1660s,[23] British playwrights wrote parts for outspoken female characters, daring love scenes and provocative breeches roles.[6][24] In any case, the competition between the King's Company and the Duke's was good for the rebirth and development of English drama.[25][26]

The Great Plague of London struck in the summer of 1665, and the Theatre Royal, along with all other public entertainment, was shut down by order of the Crown on 5 June. It remained closed for 18 months until the autumn of 1666, during which time it received at least a little interior renovation, including widening of the stage.[27] Located well to the west of the City boundary, the theatre was unaffected by the Great Fire of London, which raged through the City in September 1666, but it burned down six years later on 25 January 1672.[28]

Second theatre: Theatre Royal, Drury Lane (1674)

 
Unsigned longitudinal section showing a design attributed to Christopher Wren. 1: Proscenium arch. 2: Four pairs of shutters across the stage. 3: Pit. 4: Galleries. 5: Boxes.

During the 20th century, one illustration was repeatedly – and wrongly – published as "Christopher Wren, design for the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, 1674".[29] Since 1964, this presumption has been disputed by scholars.[30] Careful inspection of the drawing at All Souls' College, Oxford Library shows that it has one pencil inscription: "Play house" [sic], which may have been added by a librarian or by anyone else. No sign of a signature (by Wren or anyone else) or a date appears anywhere on the drawing.[31] Robert D. Hume of Penn State University explained that use of the drawing "rests almost entirely on the supposition that the so-called "Wren section" at All Souls represents this theatre. It could just as easily be a discarded sketch unconnected to Drury Lane in any way."[32]

Comparative evidence for Drury Lane's 1674 design can be found in the Theatre Royal, Bristol, built in 1766, whose design was modelled, in part, on Drury Lane's.[31][33] The site measured 112 ft (34 m) east-west and 59 ft (18 m) north-south. The building was smaller than this, as reliable surveys and maps of the period show three passageways measuring between 5 and 10 ft (1.5 and 3.0 m) wide surrounding the Theatre Royal on three sides. The building probably measured between 40 and 50 ft (12 and 15 m) wide (the average width of all "Restoration" Theatres) and between 90 and 100 ft (27 and 30 m) long. Architect Robert Adam designed Drury Lane's 1674 interior. The theatre was managed, from 1747 to Adam's retirement in the 1770s, by David Garrick.[31]

The King's Company never recovered financially from the loss of the old Theatre Royal Bridges Street. The cost of constructing the new theatre, replacing their costumes and scenery lost in the fire and competitive pressure from the rival Duke's Company contributed to its decline. Eventually, in 1682, the King's Company merged with the Duke's.[34] The 1674 Theatre Royal building contained a warren of rooms, including storage space and dressing rooms used by the management and performers, nearly seventy people in total, as well as some fifty technical staff members.[35] Additionally three rooms were provided for scripts, including a library for their storage, a separate room for copying actors' parts and a special library for the theatre's account books, ledger books and music scores. This jumble of rooms often made communication among various departments difficult, a problem that Garrick corrected during his tenure as manager. The entire complex occupied 13,134 sq ft (1,220 m2) bounded by Drury Lane (east), Brydges Street (west), Great Russell Street (north) and Little Russell Street (south).[36]

From 1674, theatregoers accessed the Drury Lane via a long ten foot wide passageway from Bridges Street. The passageway opened onto a yard (previously a "Riding Yard"[37]) in which the theatre stood. It's likely that the yard remained open to the sky at this date, on three sides of the Theatre Royal walls. Henri Misson, a visitor from France, offers a description of the theatre in 1698: his use of the word "amphitheatre" supports the view that Drury Lane had a circular line of boxes surrounding its pit:

The Pit is an Amphitheatre, fill'd with Benches without Backboards, and adorn'd and cover'd with green Cloth. Men of Quality, particularly the younger Sort, some Ladies of Reputation and Virtue, and abundance of Damsels that haunt for Prey, sit all together in this Place, Higgledy-piggledy, chatter, toy, play, hear, hear not. Farther up, against the Wall, under the first Gallery and just opposite to the Stage, rises another Amphitheatre, which is taken by persons of the best Quality, among whom are generally very few Men. The Galleries, whereof there are only two Rows, are fill'd with none but ordinary People, particularly the Upper one.[38]

As Misson points out, the seating was divided by class, and tickets were priced accordingly. Box seats, used by the nobility and wealthy gentry, cost 5 shillings; the benches in the pit where some gentry sat, but also critics and scholars, cost 3 shillings; tradesmen and professionals occupied the first gallery with seats costing 2 shillings, while servants and other "ordinary people", as Misson refers to them, occupied the 1 shilling seats of the upper gallery. Seats were not numbered and were offered on a "first come, first served" basis, leading many members of the gentry to send servants to reserve seats well ahead of performances.[35] The stage was 45 ft (14 m) wide and 30 ft (9.1 m) deep with a raked floor from the footlights to the backdrop. The angle of the rake rose one inch for every 24 in (610 mm) of horizontal stage. The stage floor included grooves for wings and flats in addition to trap doors in the floor. The proscenium arch covered the stage equipment above the stage that included a pair of girondels – large wheels holding many candles used to counteract the light from the footlights. Towards the latter part of the 18th century, doors were placed on either side of the stage, and a series of small spikes traced the edge of the stage apron to prevent audiences from climbing onto the stage. At the very back of the stage, a wide door opened to reveal Drury Lane.[39]

An added difficulty for Killigrew and his sons Thomas and Charles was the political unrest of 1678–1684 with the Popish Plot and the Exclusion Bill crisis distracting potential audiences from things theatrical. This affected both the King's and the Duke's companies, but most of all the King's which had no profit margin to carry them through the lean years. In 1682, the companies merged, or rather, the King's was absorbed by the Duke's. Led at the time by Thomas Betterton, the United Company, as it was now called, chose Drury Lane as their production house, leaving the Duke's Company's theatre in Dorset Garden closed for a time. In 1688, Betterton was removed from managerial control by Alexander Davenant, son of William Davenant, the original patent holder for the Duke's Company. Davenant's management (with Charles Killigrew) proved brief and disastrous, and by 1693 he was fleeing to the Canary Islands in the wake of embezzlement charges. The Theatre Royal found itself in the hands of lawyer Christopher Rich for the next 16 years.[40]

Neither Davenant's nor Killigrew's sons were much better than crooks,[41] and Rich attempted to recoup their depredations of the company's resources by cost-cutting tyranny, pitting actor against actor and slashing salaries. By 1695, the actors, including day-to-day manager and acting legend Thomas Betterton, were alienated and humiliated enough to walk out and set up a cooperative company of their own. Nine men and six women departed, all of them established professional performers, including such draws as tragedian Elizabeth Barry and comedian Anne Bracegirdle, leaving the United Company – henceforth known as the "Patent Company" – in "a very despicable condition," according to an anonymous contemporary pamphlet:

The disproportion was so great at parting, that it was almost impossible, in Drury Lane, to muster up a sufficient number to take in all the parts of any play; and of them so few were tolerable, that a play must of necessity be damned, that had not extraordinary favour from the audience. No fewer than sixteen (most of the old standing) went away; and with them the very beauty and vigour of the stage; they who were left being for the most part learners, boys and girls, a very unequal match for them that revolted.[42]

 
David Garrick, the theatre manager 1747–1776, is portrayed in the title role of Richard III in this painting by William Hogarth.

A private letter from 19 November 1696 reported that Drury Lane "has no company at all, and unless a new play comes out on Saturday revives their reputation, they must break."[43] The new play is assumed to have been John Vanbrugh's The Relapse, and it turned out the success the company needed. Christopher Rich continued as its head until 1709, when the patent in question was actually revoked amid a complex tangle of political machinations. A lawyer named William Collier was briefly given the right to mount productions in Drury Lane, but by 1710 the troupe was in the hands of the actors Colley Cibber, Robert Wilks, and Thomas Doggett – a triumvirate that eventually found themselves sharply satirised in Alexander Pope's Dunciad.[44] In 1713, Barton Booth replaced Doggett.[45] On 2 March 1717 was the premiere of the ballet The Loves of Mars and Venus choreographed by John Weaver, and was the first ballet to be performed in England.

Cibber was the de facto leader of the triumvirate, and he led the theatre through a controversial but generally successful period until 1733, when he sold his controlling interest to John Highmore. It is likely that the sale was at a vastly inflated price and that Colley's goal was simply to get out of debts and make a profit (see Robert Lowe in his edition of Cibber's Apology). Members of the troupe at the time were most displeased; an actor's revolt was organised and executed; Charles Fleetwood came to control the theatre. Fleetwood's tenure was tumultuous; his abolition of the practice of allowing footmen free access to the upper gallery led to riots in 1737, and Fleetwood's gambling problems entangled the theatre in his own financial difficulties.[46] It was during this period that actor Charles Macklin (a native of Inishowen in County Donegal in Ulster) rose to fame, propelled by a singular performance as Shylock in an early 1741 production of The Merchant of Venice, in which he introduced a realistic, naturalistic style of acting, abandoning the artificial bombast typical of dramatic roles prior.[46]

 
The facade on Bridges Street. Added in 1775, this gave the theatre its first on-street entrance.

In 1747, Fleetwood's playhouse patent expired. The theatre and a patent renewal were purchased by actor David Garrick (who had trained under Macklin earlier) and partner James Lacy. Garrick served as manager and lead actor of the theatre until roughly 1766, and continued on in the management role for another ten years after that. He is remembered as one of the great stage actors and is especially associated with advancing the Shakespearean tradition in English theatre – during his time at Drury Lane, the company mounted at least 24 of Shakespeare's plays.[47] Some of Shakespeare's surge in popularity during this period can be traced to the Licensing Act of 1737, which mandated governmental approval of any play before it could be performed and thereby created something of a vacuum of new material to perform. Garrick shared the stage with company including Peg Woffington, Susannah Cibber, Hannah Pritchard, Kitty Clive, Spranger Barry, Richard Yates and Ned Shuter. It was under Garrick's management that spectators were for the first time barred from the stage itself.[48]

Garrick commissioned Robert Adam and his brother James to renovate the theatre's interior, which they did in 1775. Their additions included an ornate ceiling and a stucco facade facing Bridges Street. This facade was the first time any structure that might be considered part of the theatre proper actually abutted the street: the building, like the 1663 original, had been built in the centre of the block, hemmed in by other structures. The narrow passage from Bridges street to the theatre now became an interior hallway; some theatre office space also went up behind the new facade.[49]

 
The interior of the third and largest theatre to stand at Drury Lane, c. 1808

With a series of farewell performances, Garrick left the stage in 1776 and sold his shares in the theatre to the Irish playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Sheridan and his partners, Thomas Linley the elder and Doctor James Ford (court physician to King George III[50]), completed their purchase of Drury Lane two years later, and Sheridan owned it until 1809.[51] Sheridan premiered his own comedy of manners The School for Scandal in 1777. Active management of the theatre was carried out by several parties during Sheridan's ownership, including himself, his father Thomas, and, from 1788 to 1796 and 1800 to 1802, the popular actor John Philip Kemble.[52] Linley took up the post of Musical Director at the theatre, receiving a retainer of £500 per annum.[53]

Sheridan employed dozens of children as extras at Drury Lane including Joseph Grimaldi who made his stage debut at the theatre in 1780.[54] Grimaldi became best known for his development of the modern day white-face clown and popularised the role of Clown in many Pantomimes and Harlequinades.[55] Towards the end of the 1790s, Grimaldi starred in Robinson Crusoe, which confirmed him as a key Christmas pantomime performer. Many pantomimes followed, but his career at Drury Lane became turbulent, and he left the theatre for good in 1806.[56]

Third theatre (1794)

 
The theatre pictured as it was in 1809 (from an 1811 engraving). The view is from the north-east, looking down Russell Street at its intersection with Drury Lane. This shows the rear of the theatre with its dressing rooms and stage door.

The theatre was in need of updating by the end of the 18th century and was demolished in 1791, with the company moving temporarily to the new King's Theatre, in the Haymarket. A third theatre was designed by Henry Holland and opened on 12 March 1794. In the design of the theatre boxes, Henry Holland asked John Linnell for assistance. The designs by Linnell survive in the V&A Print Room – there are also designs by Henry Holland and Charles Heathcote Tatham who were involved in the design process. This was a cavernous theatre, accommodating more than 3,600 spectators.[57] The motivation behind building on such a large scale? In the words of one owner:

I was aware of the very popular notion that our theatres ought to be very small; but it appeared to me that if that very popular notion should be suffered to proceed too far it would in every way deteriorate our dramatic performances depriving the proprietors of that revenue which is indispensable to defray the heavy expenses of such a concern.[58]

New technology facilitated the expansion: iron columns replaced bulky wood, supporting five tiers of galleries. The stage was large, too: 83 ft (25 m) wide and 92 ft (28 m) deep. Holland, the architect, said it was "on a larger scale than any other theatre in Europe." Except for churches, it was the tallest building in London.[58]

The "very popular notion that our theatres ought to be very small" proved hard to overcome. Various accounts from the period bemoan the mammoth size of the new theatre, longing for the "warm close observant seats of Old Drury," as one May 1794 theatre-goer put it.[b] Actress Sarah Siddons, then part of the Drury Lane company, called it "a wilderness of a place" (and left Drury Lane along with her brother John Philip Kemble in 1803). Not only was any sense of intimacy and connection to the company on stage lost, but the very size of the theatre put a great deal of the audience at such a distance from the stage so as to make hearing a player's voice quite difficult. To compensate, the productions mounted in the new theatre tended more toward spectacle than the spoken word.[58] An example of such a spectacle is a 1794 production that featured real water flowing down a rocky stream into a lake large enough on which to row a boat. This water issued from tanks in the attics above the house, which were installed – along with a much-touted iron safety curtain – as proof against fire.[60]

 
After standing only 15 years, the third Drury Lane theatre building burned down on 24 February 1809. This painting from the period, artist unknown, shows the view of the fire from the Westminster Bridge.

Richard Sheridan continued as theatre owner during the entire lifetime of this third building. He had grown in stature as a statesman during this time, but troubled finances were to be his undoing. The 1794 rebuilding had cost double the original estimate of £80,000, and Sheridan bore the entirety of the debt. Productions were more expensive to mount in the larger structure, and increased audience revenues failed to make up the difference.[61]

An assassination attempt against King George III took place at the theatre on 15 May 1800. James Hadfield fired two pistol shots from the pit toward the King, sitting in the royal box. The shots missed by inches, Hadfield having been jostled by a Mr Dyte.[62] Hadfield was quickly subdued, and George, apparently unruffled, ordered the performance to continue.[63]

The comedy actor John Bannister became acting-manager in 1802. With Sheridan's son Tom, and in the circle of Richard Wroughton (stage-manager), William Dowton, Michael Kelly, Tom Dibdin and their likes, he helped to see the Theatre Royal through its next catastrophe.[64] On 24 February 1809, despite the previously mentioned fire safety precautions, the theatre burned down.[65] On being encountered drinking a glass of wine in the street while watching the fire, R.B. Sheridan was famously reported to have said: "A man may surely be allowed to take a glass of wine by his own fireside."[66] Already on the shakiest financial ground, Sheridan was ruined entirely by the loss of the building. He turned to brewer Samuel Whitbread, an old friend, for help.[67] As well as investing strongly in the project, Whitbread agreed to head a committee that would manage the company and oversee the rebuilding of the theatre, but asked Sheridan to withdraw from management himself, which he did entirely by 1811.[68]

Modern theatre (1812–present)

 
The present-day Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, sketched when it was new, in 1813

The present Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, designed by Benjamin Dean Wyatt on behalf of the committee led by Whitbread, opened on 10 October 1812 with a production of Hamlet featuring Robert Elliston in the title role. The new theatre made some concessions toward intimacy, seating 3,060 people, about 550 fewer than the earlier building (though this size is still considered an extremely large theatre). On 6 September 1817, gas lighting was extended from the audience area to the stage, making it the first British theatre to be gaslit throughout.[69] In 1820, the portico that still stands at the theatre's front entrance on Catherine Street was added, and in 1822 the interior underwent a significant remodelling. The colonnade running down the Russell Street side of the building was added in 1831.[70]

Productions relying more on scenery and effects than on dialogue and acting remained commonplace in the new facility. The 1823 production of Cataract of the Ganges had a finale featuring a horseback escape up a flowing cataract "with fire raging all around."[71] Effects for an 1829 production were produced by hydraulic apparatus that reportedly could discharge 39 tons of water.[72]

There were those concerned that the theatre was failing in its role as one of the very few permitted to show legitimate drama. Management of the theatre after it reopened in 1813 fell to Samuel James Arnold, overseen by an amateur board of directors and a subcommittee focusing on the theatre as a centre for national culture. (Lord Byron was briefly on this subcommittee, from June 1815 until leaving England in April 1816.)[73] Actor Edmund Kean was the on-stage highlight; like Macklin before him, he made his reputation as Shylock, premiering in the role in 1814. Kean remained until 1820 through praise and notorious disputes with local playwrights such as Charles Bucke.[74]

 
The last scene of an 1865 performance of Shakespeare's King John at the theatre, as depicted in the Illustrated London News

Elliston leased the theatre from 1819 until he went bankrupt in 1826. An American, Stephen Price of New York City's Park Theatre, followed from 1826 to 1830.

Through most of the remainder of the 19th century, Drury Lane passed quickly from one proprietor to another. A colonnade was added to the Russell Street frontage, in 1831, by architect Samuel Beazley.[75] In 1833, Alfred Bunn gained control of both Drury Lane and Covent Garden, managing the former from 1833 to 1839, and again from 1843 to 1850. Following the lead of the Lyceum Theatre, London, Bunn championed English opera, rather than the Italian operas that had played earlier at the theatre. These included Fair Rosamond and Farinelli by John Barnett; a series of twelve operas by Michael Balfe including The Maid of Artois and The Bohemian Girl; Maritana and others by William Vincent Wallace and several by Julius Benedict.[76] In 1837, actor-manager Samuel Phelps (1804–1878) joined the company at Drury Lane, appearing with William Charles Macready, the gifted actor-manager in several Shakespeare plays. He also created the role of Captain Channel in Douglas Jerrold's melodrama, The Prisoner of War (1842), and of Lord Tresham in Robert Browning's A Blot in the 'Scutcheon (1843).[77] Macready was briefly manager in 1841–1843, putting significant reforms in place. Nevertheless, most productions there were financial disasters.[78]

 
Pantomime characters from the Augustus Harris era including Dan Leno, Marie Lloyd and Little Tich by Phil May

The theatrical monopoly first bestowed by Royal Letters Patent 183 years earlier was abolished by the Theatres Act 1843, but the patent had been largely toothless for decades and this had little immediate effect. On the other hand, other theatres, used to presenting musical entertainments, continued to do so, and Drury Lane continued as one of the most accepted venues for legitimate theatre. The 19th-century run of financial and artistic failures at Drury Lane was interrupted by four plays produced over a twenty-five-year period by the actor-playwright Dion Boucicault: The Queen of Spades (1851), Eugenie (1855), Formosa (1869), and The Shaughraun (1875). But this period of general decline culminated with F. B. Chatterton's 1878 resignation; in his words, "Shakespeare spells ruin, and Byron bankruptcy."[46] During the 19th century, Drury Lane staged ballet as well, with performers including Italy's Carlotta Grisi.[79]

One famous musical director of Drury Lane was the eccentric French conductor and composer of light music Louis-Antoine Jullien (1812–1860), who successfully invited Berlioz to visit London and give concerts in the Theatre.[80]

The house's fortunes rose again under the management of Augustus Harris from 1879. In the 1880s and 1890s, the theatre hosted many of the productions of the Carl Rosa Opera Company. Harris focused increased resources on the theatre's annual pantomime, beginning at Christmas 1888, adding a well-known comedian, Dan Leno. These spectacular Christmas shows were a major success, often playing into March. They were choreographed by the theatre's dance master, John D'Auban. Many of the designs under Harris were created by the imaginative designer C. Wilhelm, including the spectacular drama, Armada (1888), and many of the pantomimes.[81] Productions relying on spectacle became the norm at Drury Lane under the managements first of Harris, from 1879 to 1896, and then of Arthur Collins from 1896 to 1923.[46] Examples include the 1909 play, The Whip, which featured not only a train crash, but also twelve horses recreating the 2,000 Guineas Stakes on an on-stage treadmill.[82] Jimmy Glover, Director of Music from 1893 to 1923, was a significant figure at the theatre during the Collins years and wrote books which record much more than its musical life.[83]

 
Oliver! billboard at the theatre in 2009

Interior renovation (1922)

In 1922, under the ownership of managing director Sir Alfred Butt, the theatre underwent its last major interior renovation of the 20th century.[84] At a cost of £150,000,[84] it became a four-tiered theatre able to seat just over 2,000 people.[85] It was decorated with one of the most notable interiors produced by the specialist ornamental plasterwork company of Clark and Fenn.[86] Composer and performer Ivor Novello, immensely popular in his time though little-remembered today, presented his musicals in Drury Lane from 1931 to 1939.

The theatre was closed in 1939 because of the outbreak of the Second World War. During the war, it served as the headquarters for the Entertainments National Service Association, sustaining some minor bomb damage. It reopened in 1946 with Noël Coward's Pacific 1860.[46]

The building was Grade I listed in February 1958.[87]

In 2000, Theatre Royal Drury Lane was purchased by Andrew Lloyd Webber.[88] Since 2014, it has been owned and managed by LW Theatres, Lloyd Webber's management company.[89] The seating plan for the theatre remains the same and the auditorium is still one of the largest in London's West End. It is one of the 40 theatres featured in the 2012 DVD documentary series Great West End Theatres, presented by Donald Sinden.[90]

350th anniversary renovation (2013)

On 15 May 2013, Lloyd Webber revealed a £4 million restoration of the theatre to mark its 350th anniversary.[91] Using a team of specialists,[92] the detailed restoration has returned the public areas of the Rotunda, Royal Staircases and Grand Saloon, all of which were part of the 1810 theatre, to their original Regency style.[91]

Major productions of the 20th and 21st centuries

Four of Rodgers and Hammerstein's musicals made their London debuts in Drury Lane, holding the stage almost continuously for nearly a decade, including Oklahoma! (1947–1950),[93] Carousel (1950–1951),[3] South Pacific (1951–1953) and The King and I (1953–1956).[94] American imports also included Lerner and Loewe's My Fair Lady, which began a five-year run in 1958.[46] Productions in the 1960s included Camelot (1964–1965), Hello, Dolly! (1965–1967) and The Great Waltz (1970–1972).[3] In 1974, Monty Python recorded an album at the theatre, Live at Drury Lane.[95]

Later long runs at the theatre include productions of A Chorus Line (1976–1979), 42nd Street (1984–1989), Miss Saigon (1989–1999, the theatre's longest-running show),[3] The Producers (2004–2007),[96] The Lord of the Rings (2007–2008),[97] Oliver! (2009–2011)[98] and Shrek The Musical (2011–2013).[99] Charlie and the Chocolate Factory the Musical played from 2013 through January 2017.[100]

Notable productions since 1919 have included:[101]

Hauntings

The author Tom Ogden calls the Theatre Royal one of the world's most haunted theatres.[104] The appearance of almost any one of the handful of ghosts that are said to frequent the theatre signals good luck for an actor or production. The most famous ghost is the "Man in Grey", who appears dressed as a nobleman of the late 18th century: powdered hair beneath a tricorne hat, a dress jacket and cloak or cape, riding boots and a sword. Legend says that the Man in Grey is the ghost of a knife-stabbed man whose skeletal remains were found within a walled-up side passage in 1848.[105] Various people have reported seeing the ghost, including W. J. MacQueen-Pope, who described its usual path as starting at the end of the fourth row in the upper circle and then proceeding via the rear gangway to the wall near the royal box, where the remains were found.[106]

The ghosts of actor Charles Macklin and clown Joseph Grimaldi are also supposed to haunt the theatre. Macklin appears backstage, wandering the corridor which now stands in the spot where, in 1735, he killed fellow actor Thomas Hallam in an argument over a wig ("Goddamn you for a blackguard, scrub, rascal!" he shouted, thrusting a cane into Hallam's face and piercing his left eye).[107] Grimaldi is reported to be a helpful apparition, purportedly guiding nervous actors skilfully about the stage on more than one occasion. The comedian Stanley Lupino said he had seen the ghost of Dan Leno in a dressing room.[108]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ The single roadway now named Catherine Street was for most of its history named Catherine Street in its southern portion and Bridges (or Brydges) street in its northern.
  2. ^ John Byng, later Viscount Torrington.[59]

Citations

  1. ^ "Information from". Victorian Web. 9 May 2007. from the original on 15 April 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  2. ^ Thomson 1995, p. 309
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Fox, Mark. . The Really Useful Group. Archived from the original on 17 September 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  4. ^ Elizabeth McClure Thomson, The Chamberlain Letters (London, 1966), p. 140.
  5. ^ Milhous 1979, pp. 4–7
  6. ^ a b Beauclerk 2005, pp. 59–60
  7. ^ Hartnoll 1983. See also this , crediting Richard Leacroft, The Development of the English Playhouse, Eyre Methuen Ltd 1973, p. 83.
  8. ^ Pepys diary for May 1663 4 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. From www.pepys.info.
  9. ^ Beauclerk 2005, p. 60
  10. ^ . 19 April 2008. Archived from the original on 19 April 2008. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  11. ^ . 19 April 2008. Archived from the original on 19 April 2008. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  12. ^ MacQueen-Pope 1945, p. 33
  13. ^ Dobbs 1972, pp. 26–28
  14. ^ Langhans, p. 16
  15. ^ Dobbs 1972, p. 41
  16. ^ Kliman 2008, p. xvii
  17. ^ "V&A · The story of theatre". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  18. ^ Milhous 1979, pp. 15–26
  19. ^ "Apparently the King's Company had no strong, centralized management ... Of course Killigrew would have had trouble getting Mohun's troupe to accept the kind of absolute control Davenant was able to impose upon his fledglings. But squabbles over management and shares were to characterize the King's Company throughout its stormy career, and ultimately they led to its downfall".Milhous 1979, p. 12
  20. ^ Dobbs 1972, p. 26
  21. ^ Dobbs 1972, pp. 52–54, 58
  22. ^ Dobbs 1972, pp. 38–42
  23. ^ Dobbs 1972, p. 27
  24. ^ Greenfield, Anne Leah (6 October 2015). Interpreting Sexual Violence, 1660–1800. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-31884-2.
  25. ^ Hume 1976, pp. 19–21
  26. ^ Milhous 1979, p. ix
  27. ^ Pepys' 19 March 1666 s:Diary of Samuel Pepys/1666/March#19th describes a visit to the play house during the renovations, noting "God knows when they will begin to act again." For the royal order closing the playhouses see Latham & Matthews 'Diary of Samuel Pepys,' vol vii (1666), p. 76 note 5.
  28. ^ Dobbs 1972, p. 51
  29. ^ It was published by Hamilton Bell, "Contributions to the History of the English Playhouse," Architectural Record XXXIII (1913) in plate 5a in Volume 35 of The Survey of London; Peter Holland, The Ornament of Action (1979), 30; J. L. Styan, Restoration Comedy in Performance 1986, 20; and Richard Leacroft, The Development of the English Playhouse (1970). David Wilmore (Theatresearch) and Professor David Thomas recorded a television programme, from inside the current Drury Lane auditorium, claiming to show how the Theatre Royal might have looked upon its opening in 1674, based on the drawing. During the programme, Thomas repeatedly described this drawing as "by Wren", without noting that Wren's signature does not appear on the drawing. Most recently, for example, supervisors of Graduate College of Bowling Green State University allowed Hope Celeste Bernar to inadvertently reproduce it on page 108 of her "Playing (with) Space in the Author on the Wheel." Diss. PhD. May 2009 as "Wren's drawing provides detailed evidence of Theatre Royal Drury Lane's design.
  30. ^ E. A. Langhans "Wren's Restoration Playhouse", Theatre Notebook 18 (1964), 98; Graham Barlow "From Tennis Courts to Opera House", PhD thesis, 1983, University of Glasgow, 100; Mark A. Howell "On proscenium doors", Theatre Notebook 49.1 (1995), 52–3; Robert D. Hume (Penn State University), 2007; Tim Keenan '"Scaenes With Four Doors": Real And Virtual Doors On Early Restoration Stages', Theatre Notebook, 65.2, (2011), 62–81 have each separately weighed the evidence, concluding that the theatre shown in the drawing was probably never built.
  31. ^ a b c Howell-Meri, Mark (May 2009). "Acting Spaces and Carpenters' Tools: from the Fortune to the Theatre Royal, Bristol". New Theatre Quarterly. 25 (2): 148–158. doi:10.1017/S0266464X09000244. ISSN 1474-0613. S2CID 190735704.
  32. ^ Hume, Robert D. "Theatre History 1660–1800: Aims, Materials, Methodology", in Players, Playwrights, Playhouses: Investigating Performance, 1660–1800, ed. Michael Cordner and Peter Holland, Palgrave Macmillan (2007), p. 23
  33. ^ "The Theatre Royal: Buildings | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  34. ^ Kathman, David (January 2008). "Hart, Charles (bap. 1625, d. 1683)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/12473. from the original on 20 November 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2015. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  35. ^ a b Stone & Kahrl 1979, p. 82
  36. ^ Stone & Kahrl 1979, p. 80
  37. ^ The Survey of London, Volume 35, London: Athlone Press, University of London (1970), p. 30
  38. ^ Nagler 1959, p. 208
  39. ^ Stone & Kahrl 1979, pp. 80–81
  40. ^ . 10 September 2003. Archived from the original on 10 September 2003. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  41. ^ Milhous 1979, pp. 37–40, 56–57
  42. ^ Gildon, Charles (1702). A Comparison Between the Two Stages. quoted by Milhous 1979, p. 82
  43. ^ Milhous 1979, p. 82
  44. ^ "Theatre Royal Drury Lane". britishtheatre.com. from the original on 13 December 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  45. ^ Dobbs 1972, pp. 62, 74, 79–85
  46. ^ a b c d e f g Hartnoll 1983
  47. ^ "David Garrick". www.theatrehistory.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  48. ^ Mackintosh 1993, p. 20
  49. ^ King, David (2001). Complete Works of Robert and James Adam and Unbuilt Adam. Architectural Press. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-0-7506-4468-6.
  50. ^ "Local judges". St George-in-the-East Church. from the original on 2 January 2015. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  51. ^ "Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)". www.theatrehistory.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  52. ^ Auburn 1995, p. 42
  53. ^ Aspden, Suzanne (2004). "Linley, Thomas (1733–1795)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16737. from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 28 December 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  54. ^ McConnell Stott 2009, pp. 45–46
  55. ^ McConnell Stott 2009, pp. 117–118
  56. ^ Grimaldi (Boz edition), pp. 117–119.
  57. ^ Thomson 1995, p. 310 specifies 3611.
  58. ^ a b c Mackintosh 1993, p. 34
  59. ^ Mackintosh 1993, p. 35
  60. ^ Bradby, James & Sharratt 1981, p. 92
  61. ^ Auburn 1995, p. 44
  62. ^ "This day, May 15, in Jewish history". Cleveland Jewish News. from the original on 19 May 2014.
  63. ^ Fraser, Antonia (2000). The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England. University of California Press. p. 287. ISBN 978-0-520-22460-5.
  64. ^ H. van Thal (ed), Solo Recital: The Reminiscences of Michael Kelly, abridged with a Biographical Index (Folio Society, London 1972), pp. 282–288.
  65. ^ Wright, Patrick (28 October 2009). Iron Curtain: From Stage to Cold War. OUP Oxford. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-19-162284-7.
  66. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, OUP (1999). Michael Kelly (Memoirs, ed. van Thal 1972, p. 283) states that Sheridan was engaged in a debate in the House when the news of the fire came, but although on his behalf it was moved that the House should adjourn, he insisted that 'Public duty ought to precede all private interest' and remained there with Roman fortitude while his theatre burned.
  67. ^ Morning Chronicle, 7 July 1815.
  68. ^ Auburn 1995, p. 45
  69. ^ "Theatres Compete in Race to Install Gas Illumination – 1817" (PDF). Over The Footlights. (PDF) from the original on 20 May 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  70. ^ Details in this paragraph from Thomson 1995, p. 310
  71. ^ Bradby, James & Sharratt 1981, pp. 103–104
  72. ^ Bradby, James & Sharratt 1981, p. 103
  73. ^ Bone, Drummond, ed. (2004). The Cambridge Companion to Byron. Cambridge University Press. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-521-78676-8.
  74. ^ Byron, George Gordon Byron Baron (1903). The Works of Lord Byron. J. Murray.
  75. ^ Earl & Sell 2000, p. 268
  76. ^ Gordon-Powell, Robin. Ivanhoe, full score, Introduction, vol. I, p. VII, 2008, The Amber Ring
  77. ^ "Profile of the theatre from". Victorian Web. 9 May 2007. from the original on 15 April 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  78. ^ Thomson 1995, p. 310
  79. ^ Pasi, Mario; et al. (1980). Aguilar (ed.). El Ballet Enciclopedia del Arte Coreográfico. Aguilar.
  80. ^ . Louisjullien.site.voila.fr. Archived from the original on 11 January 2010. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  81. ^ "Mr. Pitcher's Art" – Obituary, The Times, 3 March 1925
  82. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum, Digital Media webmaster@vam ac uk (26 January 2011). "404 - Page not found". www.vam.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2023. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  83. ^ Peter Gammond, ed., The Oxford Companion to Popular Music (Oxford University Press, 1991), p. 228
  84. ^ a b "The Theatre Royal: Management | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  85. ^ "Historic Machinery Restoration | The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane". www.dorothearestorations.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  86. ^ Joseph Bernard Clark (1868–1940) – Master Plasterer 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Friends of West Norwood Cemetery.
  87. ^ . 30 October 2007. Archived from the original on 30 October 2007. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  88. ^ Hogejan, Warren (10 January 2000). "A Major New Role As Theater Mogul For Lloyd Webber". The New York Times. from the original on 4 February 2018.
  89. ^ "Lord Lloyd-Webber splits theatre group to expand on a global stage". www.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  90. ^ "Film/Video review: Great West End Theatres - Theatre Royal Haymarket". British Theatre Guide. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  91. ^ a b "Andrew Lloyd Webber reveals £4m restoration of Drury Lane's Theatre Royal". www.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  92. ^ FIS (31 October 2013). "Locker & Riley complete restoration at Drury Lane". SpecFinish magazine. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  93. ^ a b The show transferred in 1950 to the Stoll Theatre to finish its long run. Ellacott, Vivyan. "London Musicals 1945–1949: Oklahoma!" (PDF). Over the Footlights. (PDF) from the original on 13 March 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  94. ^ a b c Hischak 2007, pp. 150, 263
  95. ^ Palin, Michael. Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years. p. 178.
  96. ^ a b "The Producers at Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, 2004–2007". Thisistheatre.com. from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  97. ^ a b "Lord of the Rings musical to close". Metro. 14 March 2008. from the original on 20 May 2010. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  98. ^ a b Paddock, Terri (23 June 2010). "Oliver! Closes at Drury Lane 8 Jan, Moody Guests". Whatsonstage.com. from the original on 11 August 2015. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  99. ^ a b Paddock, Terri (31 August 2012). "Shrek closes on 24 Feb, Charlie moves Chocolate Factory to Drury Lane". from the original on 11 August 2015. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  100. ^ a b Porteous, Jacob (13 October 2015). "Charlie And The Chocolate Factory Celebrates 1000th Performance, Extends Booking Period". from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  101. ^ "Theatre Royal Drury Lane History and Timeline". London Theatres. London. from the original on 18 March 2019.
  102. ^ Wood, Alex; Hewis, Ben (13 July 2018). "Bonnie Langford joins cast of 42nd Street and closing date announced". Whatsonstage.com. from the original on 24 October 2021. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  103. ^ "Frozen confirms new opening plans from August 2021". www.whatsonstage.com. from the original on 24 October 2021. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  104. ^ All haunting details from Ogden, Tom (1999). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Ghosts and Hauntings. Alpha Books. pp. 232–233. ISBN 978-0-02-863659-7.
  105. ^ Morley, Sheridan (27 April 2006). Theatre's Strangest Acts. Pavilion Books. ISBN 978-1-86105-674-0.
  106. ^ Underwood 2013, pp. 55–56
  107. ^ Celebrated Trials of All Countries, and Remarkable Cases of Criminal Jurisprudence. J. Harding. 1847.
  108. ^ Donati, William (11 February 2000). Ida Lupino: A Biography. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-0982-4.

Bibliography

  • Auburn, Mark S. (1995). "Theatre in the age of Garrick and Sheridan". In Morwood, James; Crane, David (eds.). Sheridan Studies. Cambridge University Press. pp. 7–46. ISBN 978-0-521-46466-6.
  • Beauclerk, Charles (2005). Nell Gwyn: Mistress to a King. Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 978-0-87113-926-9.
  • Bradby, David; James, Louis; Sharratt, Bernard, eds. (1981). Performance and Politics in Popular Drama. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-28524-7.
  • Dobbs, Brian (1972). Drury Lane: Three Centuries of the Theatre Royal, 1663–1971. Cassell.
  • Earl, John; Sell, Michael (2000). Guide to British Theatres 1750–1950. Theatres Trust. pp. 107–8. ISBN 978-0-7136-5688-6.
  • Faul, Michel (2006). Louis Jullien: musique, spectacle et folie au XIXe siècle (in French). Atlantica. ISBN 978-2-35165-038-7.
  • Greenfield, Anne Leah, ed. (2015). Interpreting Sexual Violence, 1660–1800. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-31884-2.
  • Hartnoll, Phyllis, ed. (1983). The Oxford Companion to the Theatre (4th ed.). London: Oxford University Press. pp. 230–232. ISBN 978-0-19-211546-1.
  • Hischak, Thomas S. (2007). The Rodgers and Hammerstein Encyclopedia. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-34140-3.
  • Hume, Robert D. (1976). The Development of English Drama in the Late Seventeenth Century (1990 ed.). Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-811799-5.
  • Kliman, Bernice W. (2008). Tragedy of Hamlet of Denmark. Indiana: Focus Publishing. ISBN 978-1-58510-513-7.
  • Leacroft, Richard (1973). The Development of the English Playhouse. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-0750-5.
  • Mackintosh, Iain (1993). Architecture, Actor and Audience. Routledge UK. ISBN 978-0-415-03183-7.
  • McConnell Stott, Andrew (2009). The Pantomime Life of Joseph Grimaldi. Edinburgh: Canongate Books. ISBN 978-1-84767-761-7.
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  • Milhous, Judith (1979). Thomas Betterton and the Management of Lincoln's Inn Fields 1695–1708. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-0906-1.
  • Nagler, Alois M. (1959). A Source Book in Theatrical History. Courier Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-20515-1.
  • Smith, John Harrington (1948). The Gay Couple in Restoration Comedy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
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  • Thomson, Peter (1995). "Drury Lane, Theatre Royal". In Banham, Martin (ed.). The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge University Press. pp. 309–311. ISBN 978-0-521-43437-9.
  • Underwood, Peter (2013). "Theatre Royal, Drury Lane". Haunted London. Amberley. pp. 55–61. ISBN 978-1-4456-2859-2.

External links

theatre, royal, drury, lane, commonly, known, drury, lane, west, theatre, grade, listed, building, covent, garden, london, england, building, faces, catherine, street, earlier, named, bridges, brydges, street, backs, onto, drury, lane, building, most, recent, . The Theatre Royal Drury Lane commonly known as Drury Lane is a West End theatre and Grade I listed building in Covent Garden London England The building faces Catherine Street earlier named Bridges or Brydges Street and backs onto Drury Lane The building is the most recent in a line of four theatres which were built at the same location the earliest of which dated back to 1663 making it the oldest theatre site in London still in use 1 According to the author Peter Thomson for its first two centuries Drury Lane could reasonably have claimed to be London s leading theatre 2 For most of that time it was one of a handful of patent theatres granted monopoly rights to the production of legitimate drama in London meaning spoken plays rather than opera dance concerts or plays with music Theatre Royal Drury LaneExterior of venue during a production of Charlie and the Chocolate FactoryAddressCatherine StreetLondon WC2EnglandCoordinates51 30 47 N 00 07 13 W 51 51306 N 0 12028 W 51 51306 0 12028 Coordinates 51 30 47 N 00 07 13 W 51 51306 N 0 12028 W 51 51306 0 12028Public transitCovent GardenOwnerLW TheatresDesignationGrade I listedCapacity1 996 4 levels ProductionFrozenConstructionOpened1663 360 years ago 1663 original structure Rebuilt1674 1794 Henry Holland 1812 Benjamin Dean Wyatt Websitelwtheatres wbr co wbr uk wbr theatres wbr theatre royal drury lane wbr The first theatre on the site was built at the behest of Thomas Killigrew in the early 1660s when theatres were allowed to reopen during the English Restoration Initially known as Theatre Royal in Bridges Street the theatre s proprietors hired prominent actors who performed at the theatre on a regular basis including Nell Gwyn and Charles Hart In 1672 the theatre caught fire and Killigrew built a larger theatre on the same plot renamed the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane it opened in 1674 This building lasted nearly 120 years under the leaderships of Colley Cibber David Garrick and Richard Brinsley Sheridan the last of whom employed Joseph Grimaldi as the theatre s resident Clown In 1791 under Sheridan s management the building was demolished to make way for a larger theatre which opened in 1794 This new Drury Lane survived for 15 years before burning down in 1809 The building that stands today opened in 1812 It has been the residency of well known actors including Edmund Kean comedian Dan Leno and the musical composer and performer Ivor Novello From the Second World War the theatre has primarily hosted long runs of musicals including Oklahoma My Fair Lady 42nd Street and Miss Saigon the theatre s longest running show 3 The theatre is owned by the composer Andrew Lloyd Webber Since January 2019 the venue has had ongoing renovations and in July 2021 the theatre reopened after over two years of extensive work and closures related to the COVID 19 pandemic Disney s Frozen made its West End debut at Drury Lane on 27 August with general shows starting from 8 September 2021 Contents 1 First theatre Theatre Royal Bridges Street 1663 2 Second theatre Theatre Royal Drury Lane 1674 3 Third theatre 1794 4 Modern theatre 1812 present 4 1 Interior renovation 1922 4 2 350th anniversary renovation 2013 5 Major productions of the 20th and 21st centuries 6 Hauntings 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 9 Bibliography 10 External linksFirst theatre Theatre Royal Bridges Street 1663 Edit Thomas Killigrew as he appeared in 1650 A playhouse known as the Cockpit Theatre used by Queen Anne s Men on Drury Lane was targetted by rioting apprentices on 4 March 1617 4 After the eleven year long Puritan Interregnum which had seen the banning of pastimes regarded as frivolous such as theatre the English monarchy was restored to the throne with the return of Charles II in 1660 Soon after Charles issued Letters Patent to two parties licensing the formation of new acting companies One of these went to Thomas Killigrew whose company became known as the King s Company and who built a new theatre in Drury Lane The Letters Patent also granted the two companies a shared monopoly on the public performance of legitimate drama in London this monopoly was challenged in the 18th century by new venues and by a certain slipperiness in the definition of legitimate drama but remained legally in place until 1843 5 The new playhouse architect unknown opened on 7 May 1663 and was known from the placement of the entrance as the Theatre Royal in Bridges Street a It went by other names as well including the King s Playhouse The building was a three tiered wooden structure 112 ft 34 m long and 59 ft 18 m wide it could hold an audience of 700 6 Set well back from the broader streets the theatre was accessed by narrow passages between surrounding buildings 7 The King himself frequently attended the theatre s productions as did Samuel Pepys whose private diaries provide much of what we know of London theatre going in the 1660s The day after the Theatre Royal opened Pepys attended a performance of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher s The Humorous Lieutenant He has this to say in his diary The house is made with extraordinary good contrivance and yet hath some faults as the narrowness of the passages in and out of the Pitt and the distance from the stage to the boxes which I am confident cannot hear but for all other things it is well only above all the musique being below and most of it sounding under the very stage there is no hearing of the bases at all nor very well of the trebles which sure must be mended 8 location of the Theatre Royal on a map of London from 1700 the inset shows the streets as they are in 2006 Performances usually began at 3 pm to take advantage of the daylight the main floor for the audience the pit had no roof in order to let in the light A glazed dome was built over the opening but according to one of Pepys diary entries the dome was not entirely effective at keeping out the elements he and his wife were forced to leave the theatre to take refuge from a hail storm 9 Green baize cloth covered the benches in the pit and served to decorate the boxes additionally ornamented with gold tooled leather and even the stage itself 10 The backless green benches in the pit were in a semicircular arrangement facing the stage according to a May 1663 letter from one Monsieur de Maonconys All benches of the pit where people of rank also sit are shaped in a semi circle each row higher than the next 11 The three galleries formed a semicircle around the floor seats both the first and second galleries were divided up into boxes 12 The King s Company was forced to commission the technically advanced and expensive Theatre Royal playhouse by the success of the rival Duke s Company which was drawing fascinated crowds with their moveable or changeable scenery and visually gorgeous productions at the former Lisle s Tennis Court at Lincoln s Inn Fields 13 14 Imitating the innovations at Lincoln s Inn Fields the Theatre Royal also featured moveable scenery with wings or shutters that could be smoothly changed between or even within acts When not in use the shutters rested out of sight behind the sides of the proscenium arch which also served as a visual frame for the on stage happenings 15 The picture frame like separation between audience and performance was a new phenomenon in English theatre though it had been found on the Continent earlier Theatre design in London remained ambivalent about the merits of the picture box stage and for many decades to come London theatres including Drury Lane had large forestages protruding beyond the arch 16 often including the thrust stages found in the Elizabethan theatres The players could still step forward and bridge the distance between performer and audience and in addition it was not unusual for audience members to mount the stage themselves 17 Killigrew s investment in the new playhouse put the two companies on a level as far as technical resources were concerned but the offerings at the Theatre Royal nevertheless continued to be dominated by actor driven talk drama contrasting with William Davenant s baroque spectacles and operas at Lincoln s Inn Fields 18 Internal power structures were the main reason for this difference while Davenant skilfully commanded a docile young troupe Killigrew s authority over his veteran actors was far from absolute 19 Experienced actors Michael Mohun who Pepys called the best actor in the world 20 and Charles Hart held out for shares and good contracts in the King s Company Such a division of power between the patentee Killigrew and his chief actors led to frequent conflicts that hampered the Theatre Royal as a business venture 21 Nevertheless it was mostly at the struggling Theatre Royal rather than at the efficiently run Lincoln s Inn Fields that the plays were acted that are classics today This applies especially to the new form Restoration comedy dominated in the 1660s by William Wycherley and the Theatre Royal s house dramatist John Dryden Actors such as Hart and Charles II s mistress Nell Gwyn developed and refined the famous scenes of repartee banter and flirtation in Dryden s and Wycherley s comedies 22 With the appearance of actresses for the first time at Drury Lane and Lincoln s Inn Fields in the 1660s 23 British playwrights wrote parts for outspoken female characters daring love scenes and provocative breeches roles 6 24 In any case the competition between the King s Company and the Duke s was good for the rebirth and development of English drama 25 26 The Great Plague of London struck in the summer of 1665 and the Theatre Royal along with all other public entertainment was shut down by order of the Crown on 5 June It remained closed for 18 months until the autumn of 1666 during which time it received at least a little interior renovation including widening of the stage 27 Located well to the west of the City boundary the theatre was unaffected by the Great Fire of London which raged through the City in September 1666 but it burned down six years later on 25 January 1672 28 Second theatre Theatre Royal Drury Lane 1674 Edit Unsigned longitudinal section showing a design attributed to Christopher Wren 1 Proscenium arch 2 Four pairs of shutters across the stage 3 Pit 4 Galleries 5 Boxes During the 20th century one illustration was repeatedly and wrongly published as Christopher Wren design for the Theatre Royal Drury Lane 1674 29 Since 1964 this presumption has been disputed by scholars 30 Careful inspection of the drawing at All Souls College Oxford Library shows that it has one pencil inscription Play house sic which may have been added by a librarian or by anyone else No sign of a signature by Wren or anyone else or a date appears anywhere on the drawing 31 Robert D Hume of Penn State University explained that use of the drawing rests almost entirely on the supposition that the so called Wren section at All Souls represents this theatre It could just as easily be a discarded sketch unconnected to Drury Lane in any way 32 Comparative evidence for Drury Lane s 1674 design can be found in the Theatre Royal Bristol built in 1766 whose design was modelled in part on Drury Lane s 31 33 The site measured 112 ft 34 m east west and 59 ft 18 m north south The building was smaller than this as reliable surveys and maps of the period show three passageways measuring between 5 and 10 ft 1 5 and 3 0 m wide surrounding the Theatre Royal on three sides The building probably measured between 40 and 50 ft 12 and 15 m wide the average width of all Restoration Theatres and between 90 and 100 ft 27 and 30 m long Architect Robert Adam designed Drury Lane s 1674 interior The theatre was managed from 1747 to Adam s retirement in the 1770s by David Garrick 31 The King s Company never recovered financially from the loss of the old Theatre Royal Bridges Street The cost of constructing the new theatre replacing their costumes and scenery lost in the fire and competitive pressure from the rival Duke s Company contributed to its decline Eventually in 1682 the King s Company merged with the Duke s 34 The 1674 Theatre Royal building contained a warren of rooms including storage space and dressing rooms used by the management and performers nearly seventy people in total as well as some fifty technical staff members 35 Additionally three rooms were provided for scripts including a library for their storage a separate room for copying actors parts and a special library for the theatre s account books ledger books and music scores This jumble of rooms often made communication among various departments difficult a problem that Garrick corrected during his tenure as manager The entire complex occupied 13 134 sq ft 1 220 m2 bounded by Drury Lane east Brydges Street west Great Russell Street north and Little Russell Street south 36 From 1674 theatregoers accessed the Drury Lane via a long ten foot wide passageway from Bridges Street The passageway opened onto a yard previously a Riding Yard 37 in which the theatre stood It s likely that the yard remained open to the sky at this date on three sides of the Theatre Royal walls Henri Misson a visitor from France offers a description of the theatre in 1698 his use of the word amphitheatre supports the view that Drury Lane had a circular line of boxes surrounding its pit The Pit is an Amphitheatre fill d with Benches without Backboards and adorn d and cover d with green Cloth Men of Quality particularly the younger Sort some Ladies of Reputation and Virtue and abundance of Damsels that haunt for Prey sit all together in this Place Higgledy piggledy chatter toy play hear hear not Farther up against the Wall under the first Gallery and just opposite to the Stage rises another Amphitheatre which is taken by persons of the best Quality among whom are generally very few Men The Galleries whereof there are only two Rows are fill d with none but ordinary People particularly the Upper one 38 As Misson points out the seating was divided by class and tickets were priced accordingly Box seats used by the nobility and wealthy gentry cost 5 shillings the benches in the pit where some gentry sat but also critics and scholars cost 3 shillings tradesmen and professionals occupied the first gallery with seats costing 2 shillings while servants and other ordinary people as Misson refers to them occupied the 1 shilling seats of the upper gallery Seats were not numbered and were offered on a first come first served basis leading many members of the gentry to send servants to reserve seats well ahead of performances 35 The stage was 45 ft 14 m wide and 30 ft 9 1 m deep with a raked floor from the footlights to the backdrop The angle of the rake rose one inch for every 24 in 610 mm of horizontal stage The stage floor included grooves for wings and flats in addition to trap doors in the floor The proscenium arch covered the stage equipment above the stage that included a pair of girondels large wheels holding many candles used to counteract the light from the footlights Towards the latter part of the 18th century doors were placed on either side of the stage and a series of small spikes traced the edge of the stage apron to prevent audiences from climbing onto the stage At the very back of the stage a wide door opened to reveal Drury Lane 39 An added difficulty for Killigrew and his sons Thomas and Charles was the political unrest of 1678 1684 with the Popish Plot and the Exclusion Bill crisis distracting potential audiences from things theatrical This affected both the King s and the Duke s companies but most of all the King s which had no profit margin to carry them through the lean years In 1682 the companies merged or rather the King s was absorbed by the Duke s Led at the time by Thomas Betterton the United Company as it was now called chose Drury Lane as their production house leaving the Duke s Company s theatre in Dorset Garden closed for a time In 1688 Betterton was removed from managerial control by Alexander Davenant son of William Davenant the original patent holder for the Duke s Company Davenant s management with Charles Killigrew proved brief and disastrous and by 1693 he was fleeing to the Canary Islands in the wake of embezzlement charges The Theatre Royal found itself in the hands of lawyer Christopher Rich for the next 16 years 40 Neither Davenant s nor Killigrew s sons were much better than crooks 41 and Rich attempted to recoup their depredations of the company s resources by cost cutting tyranny pitting actor against actor and slashing salaries By 1695 the actors including day to day manager and acting legend Thomas Betterton were alienated and humiliated enough to walk out and set up a cooperative company of their own Nine men and six women departed all of them established professional performers including such draws as tragedian Elizabeth Barry and comedian Anne Bracegirdle leaving the United Company henceforth known as the Patent Company in a very despicable condition according to an anonymous contemporary pamphlet The disproportion was so great at parting that it was almost impossible in Drury Lane to muster up a sufficient number to take in all the parts of any play and of them so few were tolerable that a play must of necessity be damned that had not extraordinary favour from the audience No fewer than sixteen most of the old standing went away and with them the very beauty and vigour of the stage they who were left being for the most part learners boys and girls a very unequal match for them that revolted 42 David Garrick the theatre manager 1747 1776 is portrayed in the title role of Richard III in this painting by William Hogarth A private letter from 19 November 1696 reported that Drury Lane has no company at all and unless a new play comes out on Saturday revives their reputation they must break 43 The new play is assumed to have been John Vanbrugh s The Relapse and it turned out the success the company needed Christopher Rich continued as its head until 1709 when the patent in question was actually revoked amid a complex tangle of political machinations A lawyer named William Collier was briefly given the right to mount productions in Drury Lane but by 1710 the troupe was in the hands of the actors Colley Cibber Robert Wilks and Thomas Doggett a triumvirate that eventually found themselves sharply satirised in Alexander Pope s Dunciad 44 In 1713 Barton Booth replaced Doggett 45 On 2 March 1717 was the premiere of the ballet The Loves of Mars and Venus choreographed by John Weaver and was the first ballet to be performed in England Cibber was the de facto leader of the triumvirate and he led the theatre through a controversial but generally successful period until 1733 when he sold his controlling interest to John Highmore It is likely that the sale was at a vastly inflated price and that Colley s goal was simply to get out of debts and make a profit see Robert Lowe in his edition of Cibber s Apology Members of the troupe at the time were most displeased an actor s revolt was organised and executed Charles Fleetwood came to control the theatre Fleetwood s tenure was tumultuous his abolition of the practice of allowing footmen free access to the upper gallery led to riots in 1737 and Fleetwood s gambling problems entangled the theatre in his own financial difficulties 46 It was during this period that actor Charles Macklin a native of Inishowen in County Donegal in Ulster rose to fame propelled by a singular performance as Shylock in an early 1741 production of The Merchant of Venice in which he introduced a realistic naturalistic style of acting abandoning the artificial bombast typical of dramatic roles prior 46 The facade on Bridges Street Added in 1775 this gave the theatre its first on street entrance In 1747 Fleetwood s playhouse patent expired The theatre and a patent renewal were purchased by actor David Garrick who had trained under Macklin earlier and partner James Lacy Garrick served as manager and lead actor of the theatre until roughly 1766 and continued on in the management role for another ten years after that He is remembered as one of the great stage actors and is especially associated with advancing the Shakespearean tradition in English theatre during his time at Drury Lane the company mounted at least 24 of Shakespeare s plays 47 Some of Shakespeare s surge in popularity during this period can be traced to the Licensing Act of 1737 which mandated governmental approval of any play before it could be performed and thereby created something of a vacuum of new material to perform Garrick shared the stage with company including Peg Woffington Susannah Cibber Hannah Pritchard Kitty Clive Spranger Barry Richard Yates and Ned Shuter It was under Garrick s management that spectators were for the first time barred from the stage itself 48 Garrick commissioned Robert Adam and his brother James to renovate the theatre s interior which they did in 1775 Their additions included an ornate ceiling and a stucco facade facing Bridges Street This facade was the first time any structure that might be considered part of the theatre proper actually abutted the street the building like the 1663 original had been built in the centre of the block hemmed in by other structures The narrow passage from Bridges street to the theatre now became an interior hallway some theatre office space also went up behind the new facade 49 The interior of the third and largest theatre to stand at Drury Lane c 1808 With a series of farewell performances Garrick left the stage in 1776 and sold his shares in the theatre to the Irish playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan Sheridan and his partners Thomas Linley the elder and Doctor James Ford court physician to King George III 50 completed their purchase of Drury Lane two years later and Sheridan owned it until 1809 51 Sheridan premiered his own comedy of manners The School for Scandal in 1777 Active management of the theatre was carried out by several parties during Sheridan s ownership including himself his father Thomas and from 1788 to 1796 and 1800 to 1802 the popular actor John Philip Kemble 52 Linley took up the post of Musical Director at the theatre receiving a retainer of 500 per annum 53 Sheridan employed dozens of children as extras at Drury Lane including Joseph Grimaldi who made his stage debut at the theatre in 1780 54 Grimaldi became best known for his development of the modern day white face clown and popularised the role of Clown in many Pantomimes and Harlequinades 55 Towards the end of the 1790s Grimaldi starred in Robinson Crusoe which confirmed him as a key Christmas pantomime performer Many pantomimes followed but his career at Drury Lane became turbulent and he left the theatre for good in 1806 56 Third theatre 1794 Edit The theatre pictured as it was in 1809 from an 1811 engraving The view is from the north east looking down Russell Street at its intersection with Drury Lane This shows the rear of the theatre with its dressing rooms and stage door The theatre was in need of updating by the end of the 18th century and was demolished in 1791 with the company moving temporarily to the new King s Theatre in the Haymarket A third theatre was designed by Henry Holland and opened on 12 March 1794 In the design of the theatre boxes Henry Holland asked John Linnell for assistance The designs by Linnell survive in the V amp A Print Room there are also designs by Henry Holland and Charles Heathcote Tatham who were involved in the design process This was a cavernous theatre accommodating more than 3 600 spectators 57 The motivation behind building on such a large scale In the words of one owner I was aware of the very popular notion that our theatres ought to be very small but it appeared to me that if that very popular notion should be suffered to proceed too far it would in every way deteriorate our dramatic performances depriving the proprietors of that revenue which is indispensable to defray the heavy expenses of such a concern 58 New technology facilitated the expansion iron columns replaced bulky wood supporting five tiers of galleries The stage was large too 83 ft 25 m wide and 92 ft 28 m deep Holland the architect said it was on a larger scale than any other theatre in Europe Except for churches it was the tallest building in London 58 The very popular notion that our theatres ought to be very small proved hard to overcome Various accounts from the period bemoan the mammoth size of the new theatre longing for the warm close observant seats of Old Drury as one May 1794 theatre goer put it b Actress Sarah Siddons then part of the Drury Lane company called it a wilderness of a place and left Drury Lane along with her brother John Philip Kemble in 1803 Not only was any sense of intimacy and connection to the company on stage lost but the very size of the theatre put a great deal of the audience at such a distance from the stage so as to make hearing a player s voice quite difficult To compensate the productions mounted in the new theatre tended more toward spectacle than the spoken word 58 An example of such a spectacle is a 1794 production that featured real water flowing down a rocky stream into a lake large enough on which to row a boat This water issued from tanks in the attics above the house which were installed along with a much touted iron safety curtain as proof against fire 60 After standing only 15 years the third Drury Lane theatre building burned down on 24 February 1809 This painting from the period artist unknown shows the view of the fire from the Westminster Bridge Richard Sheridan continued as theatre owner during the entire lifetime of this third building He had grown in stature as a statesman during this time but troubled finances were to be his undoing The 1794 rebuilding had cost double the original estimate of 80 000 and Sheridan bore the entirety of the debt Productions were more expensive to mount in the larger structure and increased audience revenues failed to make up the difference 61 An assassination attempt against King George III took place at the theatre on 15 May 1800 James Hadfield fired two pistol shots from the pit toward the King sitting in the royal box The shots missed by inches Hadfield having been jostled by a Mr Dyte 62 Hadfield was quickly subdued and George apparently unruffled ordered the performance to continue 63 The comedy actor John Bannister became acting manager in 1802 With Sheridan s son Tom and in the circle of Richard Wroughton stage manager William Dowton Michael Kelly Tom Dibdin and their likes he helped to see the Theatre Royal through its next catastrophe 64 On 24 February 1809 despite the previously mentioned fire safety precautions the theatre burned down 65 On being encountered drinking a glass of wine in the street while watching the fire R B Sheridan was famously reported to have said A man may surely be allowed to take a glass of wine by his own fireside 66 Already on the shakiest financial ground Sheridan was ruined entirely by the loss of the building He turned to brewer Samuel Whitbread an old friend for help 67 As well as investing strongly in the project Whitbread agreed to head a committee that would manage the company and oversee the rebuilding of the theatre but asked Sheridan to withdraw from management himself which he did entirely by 1811 68 Modern theatre 1812 present Edit The present day Theatre Royal in Drury Lane sketched when it was new in 1813 The present Theatre Royal in Drury Lane designed by Benjamin Dean Wyatt on behalf of the committee led by Whitbread opened on 10 October 1812 with a production of Hamlet featuring Robert Elliston in the title role The new theatre made some concessions toward intimacy seating 3 060 people about 550 fewer than the earlier building though this size is still considered an extremely large theatre On 6 September 1817 gas lighting was extended from the audience area to the stage making it the first British theatre to be gaslit throughout 69 In 1820 the portico that still stands at the theatre s front entrance on Catherine Street was added and in 1822 the interior underwent a significant remodelling The colonnade running down the Russell Street side of the building was added in 1831 70 Productions relying more on scenery and effects than on dialogue and acting remained commonplace in the new facility The 1823 production of Cataract of the Ganges had a finale featuring a horseback escape up a flowing cataract with fire raging all around 71 Effects for an 1829 production were produced by hydraulic apparatus that reportedly could discharge 39 tons of water 72 There were those concerned that the theatre was failing in its role as one of the very few permitted to show legitimate drama Management of the theatre after it reopened in 1813 fell to Samuel James Arnold overseen by an amateur board of directors and a subcommittee focusing on the theatre as a centre for national culture Lord Byron was briefly on this subcommittee from June 1815 until leaving England in April 1816 73 Actor Edmund Kean was the on stage highlight like Macklin before him he made his reputation as Shylock premiering in the role in 1814 Kean remained until 1820 through praise and notorious disputes with local playwrights such as Charles Bucke 74 The last scene of an 1865 performance of Shakespeare s King John at the theatre as depicted in the Illustrated London News Elliston leased the theatre from 1819 until he went bankrupt in 1826 An American Stephen Price of New York City s Park Theatre followed from 1826 to 1830 Through most of the remainder of the 19th century Drury Lane passed quickly from one proprietor to another A colonnade was added to the Russell Street frontage in 1831 by architect Samuel Beazley 75 In 1833 Alfred Bunn gained control of both Drury Lane and Covent Garden managing the former from 1833 to 1839 and again from 1843 to 1850 Following the lead of the Lyceum Theatre London Bunn championed English opera rather than the Italian operas that had played earlier at the theatre These included Fair Rosamond and Farinelli by John Barnett a series of twelve operas by Michael Balfe including The Maid of Artois and The Bohemian Girl Maritana and others by William Vincent Wallace and several by Julius Benedict 76 In 1837 actor manager Samuel Phelps 1804 1878 joined the company at Drury Lane appearing with William Charles Macready the gifted actor manager in several Shakespeare plays He also created the role of Captain Channel in Douglas Jerrold s melodrama The Prisoner of War 1842 and of Lord Tresham in Robert Browning s A Blot in the Scutcheon 1843 77 Macready was briefly manager in 1841 1843 putting significant reforms in place Nevertheless most productions there were financial disasters 78 Pantomime characters from the Augustus Harris era including Dan Leno Marie Lloyd and Little Tich by Phil May The theatrical monopoly first bestowed by Royal Letters Patent 183 years earlier was abolished by the Theatres Act 1843 but the patent had been largely toothless for decades and this had little immediate effect On the other hand other theatres used to presenting musical entertainments continued to do so and Drury Lane continued as one of the most accepted venues for legitimate theatre The 19th century run of financial and artistic failures at Drury Lane was interrupted by four plays produced over a twenty five year period by the actor playwright Dion Boucicault The Queen of Spades 1851 Eugenie 1855 Formosa 1869 and The Shaughraun 1875 But this period of general decline culminated with F B Chatterton s 1878 resignation in his words Shakespeare spells ruin and Byron bankruptcy 46 During the 19th century Drury Lane staged ballet as well with performers including Italy s Carlotta Grisi 79 One famous musical director of Drury Lane was the eccentric French conductor and composer of light music Louis Antoine Jullien 1812 1860 who successfully invited Berlioz to visit London and give concerts in the Theatre 80 The house s fortunes rose again under the management of Augustus Harris from 1879 In the 1880s and 1890s the theatre hosted many of the productions of the Carl Rosa Opera Company Harris focused increased resources on the theatre s annual pantomime beginning at Christmas 1888 adding a well known comedian Dan Leno These spectacular Christmas shows were a major success often playing into March They were choreographed by the theatre s dance master John D Auban Many of the designs under Harris were created by the imaginative designer C Wilhelm including the spectacular drama Armada 1888 and many of the pantomimes 81 Productions relying on spectacle became the norm at Drury Lane under the managements first of Harris from 1879 to 1896 and then of Arthur Collins from 1896 to 1923 46 Examples include the 1909 play The Whip which featured not only a train crash but also twelve horses recreating the 2 000 Guineas Stakes on an on stage treadmill 82 Jimmy Glover Director of Music from 1893 to 1923 was a significant figure at the theatre during the Collins years and wrote books which record much more than its musical life 83 Oliver billboard at the theatre in 2009 Interior renovation 1922 Edit In 1922 under the ownership of managing director Sir Alfred Butt the theatre underwent its last major interior renovation of the 20th century 84 At a cost of 150 000 84 it became a four tiered theatre able to seat just over 2 000 people 85 It was decorated with one of the most notable interiors produced by the specialist ornamental plasterwork company of Clark and Fenn 86 Composer and performer Ivor Novello immensely popular in his time though little remembered today presented his musicals in Drury Lane from 1931 to 1939 The theatre was closed in 1939 because of the outbreak of the Second World War During the war it served as the headquarters for the Entertainments National Service Association sustaining some minor bomb damage It reopened in 1946 with Noel Coward s Pacific 1860 46 The building was Grade I listed in February 1958 87 In 2000 Theatre Royal Drury Lane was purchased by Andrew Lloyd Webber 88 Since 2014 update it has been owned and managed by LW Theatres Lloyd Webber s management company 89 The seating plan for the theatre remains the same and the auditorium is still one of the largest in London s West End It is one of the 40 theatres featured in the 2012 DVD documentary series Great West End Theatres presented by Donald Sinden 90 350th anniversary renovation 2013 Edit On 15 May 2013 Lloyd Webber revealed a 4 million restoration of the theatre to mark its 350th anniversary 91 Using a team of specialists 92 the detailed restoration has returned the public areas of the Rotunda Royal Staircases and Grand Saloon all of which were part of the 1810 theatre to their original Regency style 91 Major productions of the 20th and 21st centuries EditFour of Rodgers and Hammerstein s musicals made their London debuts in Drury Lane holding the stage almost continuously for nearly a decade including Oklahoma 1947 1950 93 Carousel 1950 1951 3 South Pacific 1951 1953 and The King and I 1953 1956 94 American imports also included Lerner and Loewe s My Fair Lady which began a five year run in 1958 46 Productions in the 1960s included Camelot 1964 1965 Hello Dolly 1965 1967 and The Great Waltz 1970 1972 3 In 1974 Monty Python recorded an album at the theatre Live at Drury Lane 95 Later long runs at the theatre include productions of A Chorus Line 1976 1979 42nd Street 1984 1989 Miss Saigon 1989 1999 the theatre s longest running show 3 The Producers 2004 2007 96 The Lord of the Rings 2007 2008 97 Oliver 2009 2011 98 and Shrek The Musical 2011 2013 99 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory the Musical played from 2013 through January 2017 100 Notable productions since 1919 have included 101 Cinderella 1919 Rose Marie 1924 1927 Showboat 1928 1929 Noel Coward s Cavalcade 1931 1932 Three Sisters 1934 Oklahoma 1947 1950 93 Carousel 1950 1951 3 South Pacific 1951 1953 94 The King and I 1953 1956 94 My Fair Lady 1958 1963 46 Camelot 1964 1965 3 Hello Dolly 1965 1967 3 Mame 1969 1970 The Great Waltz 1970 1972 3 Gone with the Wind 1972 1973 Billy 1974 1976 A Chorus Line 1976 1979 Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street 1980 The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas 1981 1983 42nd Street 1984 1989 Miss Saigon 1989 1999 The Witches of Eastwick 2001 My Fair Lady revival 2001 2003 Anything Goes revival 2003 2004 The Producers 2004 2007 96 The Lord of the Rings The Musical 2007 2008 97 Oliver revival 2009 2011 98 Shrek The Musical 2011 2013 99 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 2013 2017 100 42nd Street revival 2017 2019 102 Frozen 2021 present 103 Hauntings EditThe author Tom Ogden calls the Theatre Royal one of the world s most haunted theatres 104 The appearance of almost any one of the handful of ghosts that are said to frequent the theatre signals good luck for an actor or production The most famous ghost is the Man in Grey who appears dressed as a nobleman of the late 18th century powdered hair beneath a tricorne hat a dress jacket and cloak or cape riding boots and a sword Legend says that the Man in Grey is the ghost of a knife stabbed man whose skeletal remains were found within a walled up side passage in 1848 105 Various people have reported seeing the ghost including W J MacQueen Pope who described its usual path as starting at the end of the fourth row in the upper circle and then proceeding via the rear gangway to the wall near the royal box where the remains were found 106 The ghosts of actor Charles Macklin and clown Joseph Grimaldi are also supposed to haunt the theatre Macklin appears backstage wandering the corridor which now stands in the spot where in 1735 he killed fellow actor Thomas Hallam in an argument over a wig Goddamn you for a blackguard scrub rascal he shouted thrusting a cane into Hallam s face and piercing his left eye 107 Grimaldi is reported to be a helpful apparition purportedly guiding nervous actors skilfully about the stage on more than one occasion The comedian Stanley Lupino said he had seen the ghost of Dan Leno in a dressing room 108 See also EditEuropean Route of Historic Theatres Rose TheatreReferences EditNotes Edit The single roadway now named Catherine Street was for most of its history named Catherine Street in its southern portion and Bridges or Brydges street in its northern John Byng later Viscount Torrington 59 Citations Edit Information from Victorian Web 9 May 2007 Archived from the original on 15 April 2012 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Thomson 1995 p 309 a b c d e f g h Fox Mark Theatre Royal Drury Lane History The Really Useful Group Archived from the original on 17 September 2014 Retrieved 24 September 2014 Elizabeth McClure Thomson The Chamberlain Letters London 1966 p 140 Milhous 1979 pp 4 7 a b Beauclerk 2005 pp 59 60 Hartnoll 1983 See also this scale reconstruction crediting Richard Leacroft The Development of the English Playhouse Eyre Methuen Ltd 1973 p 83 Pepys diary for May 1663 Archived 4 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine From www pepys info Beauclerk 2005 p 60 Theatres 19 April 2008 Archived from the original on 19 April 2008 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Theatres 19 April 2008 Archived from the original on 19 April 2008 Retrieved 23 February 2023 MacQueen Pope 1945 p 33 Dobbs 1972 pp 26 28 Langhans p 16 Dobbs 1972 p 41 Kliman 2008 p xvii V amp A The story of theatre Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 23 February 2023 Milhous 1979 pp 15 26 Apparently the King s Company had no strong centralized management Of course Killigrew would have had trouble getting Mohun s troupe to accept the kind of absolute control Davenant was able to impose upon his fledglings But squabbles over management and shares were to characterize the King s Company throughout its stormy career and ultimately they led to its downfall Milhous 1979 p 12 Dobbs 1972 p 26 Dobbs 1972 pp 52 54 58 Dobbs 1972 pp 38 42 Dobbs 1972 p 27 Greenfield Anne Leah 6 October 2015 Interpreting Sexual Violence 1660 1800 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 31884 2 Hume 1976 pp 19 21 Milhous 1979 p ix Pepys 19 March 1666 s Diary of Samuel Pepys 1666 March 19th describes a visit to the play house during the renovations noting God knows when they will begin to act again For the royal order closing the playhouses see Latham amp Matthews Diary of Samuel Pepys vol vii 1666 p 76 note 5 Dobbs 1972 p 51 It was published by Hamilton Bell Contributions to the History of the English Playhouse Architectural Record XXXIII 1913 in plate 5a in Volume 35 of The Survey of London Peter Holland The Ornament of Action 1979 30 J L Styan Restoration Comedy in Performance 1986 20 and Richard Leacroft The Development of the English Playhouse 1970 David Wilmore Theatresearch and Professor David Thomas recorded a television programme from inside the current Drury Lane auditorium claiming to show how the Theatre Royal might have looked upon its opening in 1674 based on the drawing During the programme Thomas repeatedly described this drawing as by Wren without noting that Wren s signature does not appear on the drawing Most recently for example supervisors of Graduate College of Bowling Green State University allowed Hope Celeste Bernar to inadvertently reproduce it on page 108 of her Playing with Space in the Author on the Wheel Diss PhD May 2009 as Wren s drawing provides detailed evidence of Theatre Royal Drury Lane s design E A Langhans Wren s Restoration Playhouse Theatre Notebook 18 1964 98 Graham Barlow From Tennis Courts to Opera House PhD thesis 1983 University of Glasgow 100 Mark A Howell On proscenium doors Theatre Notebook 49 1 1995 52 3 Robert D Hume Penn State University 2007 Tim Keenan Scaenes With Four Doors Real And Virtual Doors On Early Restoration Stages Theatre Notebook 65 2 2011 62 81 have each separately weighed the evidence concluding that the theatre shown in the drawing was probably never built a b c Howell Meri Mark May 2009 Acting Spaces and Carpenters Tools from the Fortune to the Theatre Royal Bristol New Theatre Quarterly 25 2 148 158 doi 10 1017 S0266464X09000244 ISSN 1474 0613 S2CID 190735704 Hume Robert D Theatre History 1660 1800 Aims Materials Methodology in Players Playwrights Playhouses Investigating Performance 1660 1800 ed Michael Cordner and Peter Holland Palgrave Macmillan 2007 p 23 The Theatre Royal Buildings British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 23 February 2023 Kathman David January 2008 Hart Charles bap 1625 d 1683 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12473 Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Retrieved 20 November 2015 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Stone amp Kahrl 1979 p 82 Stone amp Kahrl 1979 p 80 The Survey of London Volume 35 London Athlone Press University of London 1970 p 30 Nagler 1959 p 208 Stone amp Kahrl 1979 pp 80 81 Theatre Companies 10 September 2003 Archived from the original on 10 September 2003 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Milhous 1979 pp 37 40 56 57 Gildon Charles 1702 A Comparison Between the Two Stages quoted by Milhous 1979 p 82 Milhous 1979 p 82 Theatre Royal Drury Lane britishtheatre com Archived from the original on 13 December 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2014 Dobbs 1972 pp 62 74 79 85 a b c d e f g Hartnoll 1983 David Garrick www theatrehistory com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Mackintosh 1993 p 20 King David 2001 Complete Works of Robert and James Adam and Unbuilt Adam Architectural Press pp 50 51 ISBN 978 0 7506 4468 6 Local judges St George in the East Church Archived from the original on 2 January 2015 Retrieved 2 January 2015 Richard Brinsley Sheridan 1751 1816 www theatrehistory com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Auburn 1995 p 42 Aspden Suzanne 2004 Linley Thomas 1733 1795 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 16737 Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 28 December 2014 Subscription or UK public library membership required McConnell Stott 2009 pp 45 46 McConnell Stott 2009 pp 117 118 Grimaldi Boz edition pp 117 119 Thomson 1995 p 310 specifies 3611 a b c Mackintosh 1993 p 34 Mackintosh 1993 p 35 Bradby James amp Sharratt 1981 p 92 Auburn 1995 p 44 This day May 15 in Jewish history Cleveland Jewish News Archived from the original on 19 May 2014 Fraser Antonia 2000 The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England University of California Press p 287 ISBN 978 0 520 22460 5 H van Thal ed Solo Recital The Reminiscences of Michael Kelly abridged with a Biographical Index Folio Society London 1972 pp 282 288 Wright Patrick 28 October 2009 Iron Curtain From Stage to Cold War OUP Oxford p 65 ISBN 978 0 19 162284 7 The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations OUP 1999 Michael Kelly Memoirs ed van Thal 1972 p 283 states that Sheridan was engaged in a debate in the House when the news of the fire came but although on his behalf it was moved that the House should adjourn he insisted that Public duty ought to precede all private interest and remained there with Roman fortitude while his theatre burned Morning Chronicle 7 July 1815 Auburn 1995 p 45 Theatres Compete in Race to Install Gas Illumination 1817 PDF Over The Footlights Archived PDF from the original on 20 May 2014 Retrieved 20 May 2014 Details in this paragraph from Thomson 1995 p 310 Bradby James amp Sharratt 1981 pp 103 104 Bradby James amp Sharratt 1981 p 103 Bone Drummond ed 2004 The Cambridge Companion to Byron Cambridge University Press p 135 ISBN 978 0 521 78676 8 Byron George Gordon Byron Baron 1903 The Works of Lord Byron J Murray Earl amp Sell 2000 p 268 Gordon Powell Robin Ivanhoe full score Introduction vol I p VII 2008 The Amber Ring Profile of the theatre from Victorian Web 9 May 2007 Archived from the original on 15 April 2012 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Thomson 1995 p 310 Pasi Mario et al 1980 Aguilar ed El Ballet Enciclopedia del Arte Coreografico Aguilar Jullien biographical site Louisjullien site voila fr Archived from the original on 11 January 2010 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Mr Pitcher s Art Obituary The Times 3 March 1925 Victoria and Albert Museum Digital Media webmaster vam ac uk 26 January 2011 404 Page not found www vam ac uk Retrieved 23 February 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help Peter Gammond ed The Oxford Companion to Popular Music Oxford University Press 1991 p 228 a b The Theatre Royal Management British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 23 February 2023 Historic Machinery Restoration The Theatre Royal Drury Lane www dorothearestorations com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Joseph Bernard Clark 1868 1940 Master Plasterer Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Friends of West Norwood Cemetery Detailed Record 30 October 2007 Archived from the original on 30 October 2007 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Hogejan Warren 10 January 2000 A Major New Role As Theater Mogul For Lloyd Webber The New York Times Archived from the original on 4 February 2018 Lord Lloyd Webber splits theatre group to expand on a global stage www telegraph co uk Retrieved 23 February 2023 Film Video review Great West End Theatres Theatre Royal Haymarket British Theatre Guide Retrieved 23 February 2023 a b Andrew Lloyd Webber reveals 4m restoration of Drury Lane s Theatre Royal www telegraph co uk Retrieved 23 February 2023 FIS 31 October 2013 Locker amp Riley complete restoration at Drury Lane SpecFinish magazine Retrieved 23 February 2023 a b The show transferred in 1950 to the Stoll Theatre to finish its long run Ellacott Vivyan London Musicals 1945 1949 Oklahoma PDF Over the Footlights Archived PDF from the original on 13 March 2014 Retrieved 24 September 2014 a b c Hischak 2007 pp 150 263 Palin Michael Diaries 1969 1979 The Python Years p 178 a b The Producers at Theatre Royal Drury Lane 2004 2007 Thisistheatre com Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 24 September 2014 a b Lord of the Rings musical to close Metro 14 March 2008 Archived from the original on 20 May 2010 Retrieved 24 September 2014 a b Paddock Terri 23 June 2010 Oliver Closes at Drury Lane 8 Jan Moody Guests Whatsonstage com Archived from the original on 11 August 2015 Retrieved 24 September 2014 a b Paddock Terri 31 August 2012 Shrek closes on 24 Feb Charlie moves Chocolate Factory to Drury Lane Archived from the original on 11 August 2015 Retrieved 24 September 2014 a b Porteous Jacob 13 October 2015 Charlie And The Chocolate Factory Celebrates 1000th Performance Extends Booking Period Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 17 October 2015 Theatre Royal Drury Lane History and Timeline London Theatres London Archived from the original on 18 March 2019 Wood Alex Hewis Ben 13 July 2018 Bonnie Langford joins cast of 42nd Street and closing date announced Whatsonstage com Archived from the original on 24 October 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Frozen confirms new opening plans from August 2021 www whatsonstage com Archived from the original on 24 October 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2021 All haunting details from Ogden Tom 1999 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Ghosts and Hauntings Alpha Books pp 232 233 ISBN 978 0 02 863659 7 Morley Sheridan 27 April 2006 Theatre s Strangest Acts Pavilion Books ISBN 978 1 86105 674 0 Underwood 2013 pp 55 56 Celebrated Trials of All Countries and Remarkable Cases of Criminal Jurisprudence J Harding 1847 Donati William 11 February 2000 Ida Lupino A Biography University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 0982 4 Bibliography EditAuburn Mark S 1995 Theatre in the age of Garrick and Sheridan In Morwood James Crane David eds Sheridan Studies Cambridge University Press pp 7 46 ISBN 978 0 521 46466 6 Beauclerk Charles 2005 Nell Gwyn Mistress to a King Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 978 0 87113 926 9 Bradby David James Louis Sharratt Bernard eds 1981 Performance and Politics in Popular Drama Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 28524 7 Dobbs Brian 1972 Drury Lane Three Centuries of the Theatre Royal 1663 1971 Cassell Earl John Sell Michael 2000 Guide to British Theatres 1750 1950 Theatres Trust pp 107 8 ISBN 978 0 7136 5688 6 Faul Michel 2006 Louis Jullien musique spectacle et folie au XIXe siecle in French Atlantica ISBN 978 2 35165 038 7 Greenfield Anne Leah ed 2015 Interpreting Sexual Violence 1660 1800 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 31884 2 Hartnoll Phyllis ed 1983 The Oxford Companion to the Theatre 4th ed London Oxford University Press pp 230 232 ISBN 978 0 19 211546 1 Hischak Thomas S 2007 The Rodgers and Hammerstein Encyclopedia Westport Conn Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 34140 3 Hume Robert D 1976 The Development of English Drama in the Late Seventeenth Century 1990 ed Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 811799 5 Kliman Bernice W 2008 Tragedy of Hamlet of Denmark Indiana Focus Publishing ISBN 978 1 58510 513 7 Leacroft Richard 1973 The Development of the English Playhouse Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 0750 5 Mackintosh Iain 1993 Architecture Actor and Audience Routledge UK ISBN 978 0 415 03183 7 McConnell Stott Andrew 2009 The Pantomime Life of Joseph Grimaldi Edinburgh Canongate Books ISBN 978 1 84767 761 7 MacQueen Pope Walter 1945 Theatre Royal Drury Lane W H Allen amp Co Milhous Judith 1979 Thomas Betterton and the Management of Lincoln s Inn Fields 1695 1708 Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0 8093 0906 1 Nagler Alois M 1959 A Source Book in Theatrical History Courier Dover ISBN 978 0 486 20515 1 Smith John Harrington 1948 The Gay Couple in Restoration Comedy Cambridge Harvard University Press Spiers Rupert 2002 Restoration Theatre Archived from the original on 1 September 2008 Retrieved 2 March 2014 Stone George Winchester Kahrl George M 1979 David Garrick A Critical Biography Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0 8093 0931 3 Thomson Peter 1995 Drury Lane Theatre Royal In Banham Martin ed The Cambridge Guide to Theatre Cambridge University Press pp 309 311 ISBN 978 0 521 43437 9 Underwood Peter 2013 Theatre Royal Drury Lane Haunted London Amberley pp 55 61 ISBN 978 1 4456 2859 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Theatre Royal Drury Lane Official website Drury Lane Theatre New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theatre Royal Drury Lane amp oldid 1141059133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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