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Toole's Theatre

Toole's Theatre, was a 19th-century West End building in William IV Street, near Charing Cross, in the City of Westminster. A succession of auditoria had occupied the site since 1832, serving a variety of functions, including religious and leisure activities. The theatre at its largest, after reconstruction in 1881–82, had a capacity of between 650 and 700.

Toole's Theatre
1833 Lowther Rooms
1855 Polygraphic Hall
1869 Charing Cross Theatre
1876 Folly Theatre
1881 Toole's Theatre
Façade of Toole's Theatre, 1882
AddressWilliam IV Street[n 1]
Westminster, London
DesignationDemolished
TypePlayhouse
Capacity650–700[2]
Construction
Opened1833
Closed1895
Rebuilt1869 Arthur Evers[3]
1876 Thomas Verity[4]
1882 J. J. Thompson[5]

As the Charing Cross Theatre (1869–1876) the house became known for bills offering a mixture of drama, burlesque and operetta. Among the authors of its burlesques were W. S. Gilbert and H. B. Farnie. Its stars included Lydia Thompson, Lionel Brough and Willie Edouin. In 1876 Thompson and her husband, Alexander Henderson, became lessees of the theatre and renamed it the Folly Theatre. They continued the theatre's customary mix of operetta and burlesque. Their greatest successes were with English adaptations of French opéras bouffes and opéras comiques, most conspicuously Les cloches de Corneville, which began its record-breaking run (705 performances) at the Folly in 1878.

In 1879 the comic actor J. L. Toole took over the lease. In 1881 he changed the name to Toole's Theatre and had the building substantially reconstructed. He continued the policy of staging burlesques, but introduced more non-musical comedies and farces. Among the authors who wrote for the theatre were John Maddison Morton, F. C. Burnand and Henry Pottinger Stephens; composers included George Grossmith and Edward Solomon. The theatre was important for beginning the professional careers of many actors, writers and actor-managers. Among the playwrights whose early works were presented at Toole's were Arthur Wing Pinero and J. M. Barrie. Future stars who were members of the company as beginners included Kate Cutler, Florence Farr, Seymour Hicks, Irene and Violet Vanbrugh and Lewis Waller.

The lease of the theatre expired in 1895, and the lessor, the Charing Cross Hospital, did not renew it. The theatre was demolished in 1896.

History edit

Early years edit

 
1834 advertisement

The building opened as the Lowther Rooms in 1833[6] following the redevelopment of the area by the Commissioners of Woods and Forests under Lord Lowther.[7][n 2] Its early attractions included an exhibition by Madame Tussaud in 1834, patronised by royalty,[9] but the venue rapidly acquired a certain notoriety:[10] a later commentator wrote that it became "a favourite place of resort with the young men of the period, who were attracted thither by a dismal form of entertainment known as 'Blake's Masquerades'".[3] After Blake departed, the building was used for religious purposes, first as the Roman Catholic Oratory of Saint Philip Neri from 1848 to 1852,[n 3] and then as a Protestant institute and working men's club under the presidency of Lord Shaftesbury.[3]

 
W. S. Woodin in his Olio of Oddities, 1856

The premises were acquired by the entertainer William S. Woodin, who converted them, reopening as the Polygraphic Hall on 12 May 1855.[10] Woodin gave one-man comic shows, beginning with The Olio of Oddities.[12] He remained in possession of the hall for more than ten years, giving performances there between his provincial tours. When he was not in residence the hall was used for other one-man shows, lectures, amateur dramatic productions, and minstrel shows.[13]

The building was sold to a partnership, E. W. Bradwell and W. R. Field, who acquired the adjoining houses and reconstructed the premises as a small playhouse called the Charing Cross Theatre.[13] The Times reported that they converted the building "into a regular playhouse, of light and elegant appearance, with two tiers of boxes, abundant stalls, a limited pit and no gallery – altogether an edifice satisfactorily answering to the favourite word 'bijou', and well worth seeing".[14] Its capacity was 600.[15] The theatre opened on 19 June 1869 with a triple bill consisting of an operetta, a three-act drama and a burlesque, the last being W. S. Gilbert's The Pretty Druidess, a parody of Bellini's opera Norma.[16]

 
Lionel Brough, Lydia Thompson and Willie Edouin in Blue Beard, 1874

In 1872 an American manager, John S. Clarke, became proprietor.[n 4] Under his management the theatre was variously advertised as the Charing Cross Theatre and the Theatre Royal, Charing Cross.[4] He renovated the interior, receiving praise from The Sunday Times:

This theatre has undergone great alterations. These have been in excellent taste, and the house now is one of the prettiest in London. Its interior is as bright as may be, and the decorations have an unusually elegant and attractive effect. On the scenery, too, as well as before it, great pains have been bestowed and the manner in which the stage is turned to account reflects highest credit on the management.[17]

Among Clarke's productions was a revival of Sheridan's The Rivals, featuring Mrs Stirling as Mrs Malaprop and Clarke as Bob Acres; it ran for more than 50 performances, an unheard-of run at the time for an old classic.[4]

In 1874 Lydia Thompson starred in H. B. Farnie's burlesque Blue Beard, in which she had played in the US nearly 500 times;[18] her co-stars were Lionel Brough and Willie Edouin.[18] The following year the theatre featured Kate Santley in a series of comic operas, and later Virginie Déjazet in a French season. John Hollingshead then presented burlesque, and in 1876 Thompson and her husband, Alexander Henderson (1828–1886) returned from a "farewell tour" of the US[n 5] and became proprietors of the theatre.[4]

Folly Theatre, 1876–1881 edit

 
Thompson as Robinson Crusoe

Henderson renamed the house the Folly Theatre. He said he meant to "shoot folly as it flies", and make the establishment the home of fun.[4][n 6] The premises were reconstructed and elaborately decorated under the supervision of Thomas Verity.[4] In his Dickens's Dictionary of London (1879), Charles Dickens Jr. described the Folly as "A little bandbox of a place, very prettily fitted up, and with a decided specialty for burlesque and opera bouffe".[22] It reopened on 16 October 1876, with a revival of Blue Beard.[4] At Christmas that year another Farnie burlesque was presented: Robinson Crusoe; it did well at the box-office, and Henderson continued to present opéra bouffe and burlesque. A triple bill of operettas by Hervé (Up the River), Lecocq (The Sea Nymphs) and Offenbach (The Creole) in 1877 featured Violet Cameron and Nelly Bromley, and was well received.[23] In 1878 the theatre had a tremendous success with Robert Planquette's Les cloches de Corneville, adapted by Farnie and Robert Reece, which (after transferring to the Globe Theatre and returning to the Folly) ran for 705 performances, setting a record that stood for nearly a decade.[4][24][n 7]

Thompson returned in Farnie and Reece's Stars and Garters in 1878, and continued with a series of burlesques including Tantalus; or, There's Many a Slip Twixt Cup and Lip and Carmen; or, Sold for a Song, until March 1879, when she and Henderson relinquished the management of the theatre.[26] It was then taken by the singer-manager Selina Dolaro; Offenbach's La Périchole was the highlight of her season.[4]

 
J. L. Toole in Ici on parle français

On 7 November 1879, the comic actor J. L. Toole took over the lease of the theatre. He opened with a triple bill of comedies: an early 19th-century "comedietta" called The Married Bachelor, H. J. Byron's three-act A Fool and His Money, and Ici on parle français, described by The Era as "the most successful farce of modern times", in which Toole played one of his most popular characters, Spriggins.[27] This was a financial success, and Toole followed it with Byron's comedy The Upper Crust, which remained in his repertoire for the rest of his career.[2] After presenting a revival of Dion Boucicault's Dickens adaption, Dot, based on The Cricket on the Hearth, and Hester's Mystery, an early play by Arthur Wing Pinero, as well as what the theatre historians Mander and Mitchenson describe as "some now forgotten pieces", Toole went on tour. In his absence R. C. Carton presented a summer season in 1881 that included Imprudence, Pinero's first three-act comedy.[2][28] When the season ended, Toole closed the theatre for substantial rebuilding; in December, while work was in progress, he announced a new name for the house: the Folly became Toole's Theatre,[29] the first in London to follow the common American practice of calling a theatre after its actor-manager or owner.[2]

Toole's Theatre, 1881–1896 edit

 
Toole's Theatre, 1882

Toole said that the rebuilding had cost him more than £10,000.[30] The capacity of the house was much enlarged:[30] Toole's held between 650 and 700 people.[2] The Morning Post observed that the building had "undergone so complete a process of renovation and embellishment that it may now be regarded as one of the handsomest theatres in the metropolis".[31] The Era praised the "spacious vestibule, the elegant foyer, the beautifully decorated staircases, the broad exits and entrances and the convenient verandah".[32] The paper also commented on the "startling metamorphosis" of the auditorium: "The consciousness that we were in an adapted lecture-room or Roman Catholic chapel has departed for ever, and we now behold a most commodious little theatre".[33] Toole did not emulate Richard D'Oyly Carte at the new Savoy Theatre by installing electric light:[34] the stage and front of house at Toole's remained gas-lit.[33]

Toole had intended to open his reconstructed theatre with a new comedy by Byron, but the playwright's health prevented him from completing the work, and Toole opened, on 16 February 1882, with a triple bill of two revivals – Paul Pry, one of the greatest successes in his repertoire, and Mark Lemon's farce, Domestic Economy – and a new "comedietta", "Waiting Consent", by May Holt.[32][35]

Toole's staples were burlesque, light opera and comedies, including farces. Burlesques included Stage Dora; or, Who Killed Cock Robin, F. C. Burnand's parody of Sardou's Fédora (1883)[36] and Paw Claudian (1884) Burnand's lampoon of a recent costume drama Claudian by Henry Herman and W. G. Wills.[37] Comic operas included Mr. Guffin's Elopement[38] and The Great Tay-Kin,[39] both by Arthur Law and George Grossmith (1885), Billee Taylor by Henry Pottinger Stephens and Edward Solomon (1886),[40] and Lecocq's Pepita (1888, from his original La princesse des Canaries).[41]

 
Toole (seated, centre), with the cast of J. M. Barrie's Walker, London, 1892, including Mary Brough and Seymour Hicks (standing, left), and Mary Ansell and Irene Vanbrugh (seated, flanking Toole)[n 8]

There were new comedies as well as old favourites. Among them were Pinero's Girls and Boys (1882),[43] John Maddison Morton's final play, a three-act farcical comedy called Going It (1885),[44] Herman Charles Merivale's The Butler (1886)[45] and The Don (1888),[46] and Fred Horner's The Bungalow (1890), an English version of Eugène Medina's La Garçonnière.[47] Ibsen's Ghost (1891), a one-act lampoon of Henrik Ibsen's plays and disciples, starring Irene Vanbrugh and Toole, was J. M. Barrie's first London play.[48] In 1892 Toole directed the premiere of Barrie's Walker, London, which ran for 497 performances.[49] In Toole's absence on tour other managements took temporary charge at his theatre, including William Terriss,[37] Willie Edouin[37] Augustin Daly with his New York company in 1884,[50] and Violet Melnotte in 1890.[51]

Toole retained a stock company, and many newcomers had their first opportunities at Toole's under his management, including Mary Brough,[50] Kate Cutler,[52] Florence Farr,[53] Seymour Hicks,[50] Eva Moore,[50] Irene Vanbrugh,[50] Violet Vanbrugh[54] and Lewis Waller.[55]

In 1895 the expiry of Toole's lease was approaching, and his health was in decline.[50] His last piece was Thoroughbred by Ralph Lumley, which opened on 13 February. Within a week, Toole had to withdraw. His role was temporarily taken by Rutland Barrington[56] until Toole recovered sufficiently to finish the run in September.[50] The last night under his management was on 28 September; Toole made his farewell to London audiences, and after touring until the following year he retired.[50] Two weeks after the closure, The Era reported:

Toole's Theatre has not yet been disposed of by its owners, the Governors of Charing-cross Hospital. Mr Toole's lease was at a low rental, but he spent several thousand pounds in improving the property, and the "requisitions" of the London County Council will cost, if they are carried out, at least another £3,000. The Beefsteak Club, which occupies the top floor of the theatre, has been granted a yearly tenancy by the Hospital.[57]

No potential tenant willing to make the required outlay came forward, and a proposed plan for a redevelopment by the architect C. J. Phipps came to nothing.[58] The theatre's performance licence was withdrawn, and in the spring of 1896 the building was demolished. The hospital, which had for some time been expressing concern about the noise and the risk of fire from a theatre so close, used the site to build a new out-patients' department.[59]

Gallery edit

 
1881 playbill
 
Toole as Paw Claudian, 1884
 
Triple bill, 1885
 
The Bungalow, 1890

Notes, references and sources edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Known as "King William Street" when the building first opened.[1]
  2. ^ The Lowther Rooms were opposite the popular Lowther Arcade, a covered market for fancy goods, some 250 feet long and considered at that time "one of the sights of London".[8]
  3. ^ Here, in 1850, the Rev. (later Saint) J. H. Newman delivered his Lectures on Anglican Difficulties, after his conversion to Roman Catholicism.[11]
  4. ^ Clarke was the brother-in-law of John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of the US president Abraham Lincoln, which Clarke said he hoped would not count against him in Britain.[4]
  5. ^ It was billed as a farewell tour, but Thompson returned to the US several times over the next two decades.[19]
  6. ^ Henderson had "Shoot folly as it flies" – a quotation from Alexander Pope[20] – printed at the top of the programmes for the theatre.[21]
  7. ^ The record for the longest-running musical show was broken by Dorothy by Alfred Cellier and B. C. Stephenson, which ran for 931 performances from 1886 to 1889.[25]
  8. ^ Back row: Mary Brough as Penny; Seymour Hicks as Andrew McPhail; Eliza Johnstone as Sarah Rigg; C. M. Lowne as Kit Upjohn.
    Middle row: George Shelton as Ben; Mary Ansell as Nanny O'Brien; J. L. Toole as Jasper Phipps; Irene Vanbrugh as Bell Golightly; Effie Liston as Mrs Golightly.
    Front: Cecil Ramsey as W.G.[42]

References edit

  1. ^ "Public Amusements", The Morning Chronicle, 30 June 1834, p. 2
  2. ^ a b c d e Mander and Mitchenson, p. 228
  3. ^ a b c "Royal Charing Cross Theatre", The Morning Post, 21 June 1869, p. 2
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Mander and Mitchenson, p. 227
  5. ^ Mander and Mitchenson, p. 233
  6. ^ Classified advertisements, The Morning Post, 14 November 1833, p. 1; and The Standard, 14 November 1833, p. 1
  7. ^ "The Improvements near Charing-Cross", The Gentleman's Magazine, March 1831, p. 206
  8. ^ Thornbury, p. 132
  9. ^ Classified advertisements, The Morning Post, 9 July 1834, p. 1
  10. ^ a b Mander and Mitchenson, p. 222
  11. ^ Thornbury, p. 129
  12. ^ "Woodin's Olio of Oddities", The Morning Chronicle, 14 May 1855, p. 5
  13. ^ a b Mander and Mitchenson, p. 224
  14. ^ "Charing Cross Theatre", The Times, 24 June 1869, p. 6
  15. ^ "Capacity of London Theatres", The Orchestra, 17 June 1870, p. 199
  16. ^ Mander and Mitchenson, p. 225
  17. ^ The Sunday Times, 5 January 1873, quoted in Mander and Mitchenson, p. 227
  18. ^ a b "Charing-Cross Theatre", The Morning Post, 21 September 1874, p. 6
  19. ^ Lawrence, W. J., and J. Gilliland. "Thompson, Lydia (1838–1908), dancer and actress", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 8 July 2020 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  20. ^ "Alexander Pope", Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, edited by Knowles, Elizabeth, Oxford University Press, 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2020 (subscription required)
  21. ^ "The Folly Theatre", Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, 28 October 1876, p. 102
  22. ^ Dickens, p. 103
  23. ^ "Folly Theatre", The Era, 23 September 1877, p. 6
  24. ^ Gänzl and Lamb, p. 356
  25. ^ Gaye, pp. 1370, 1380 and 1525–1526
  26. ^ "Folly Theatre", The Era, 2 March 1879, p. 5
  27. ^ "The Theatres", The Pall Mall Gazette, 17 November 1879, p. 11
  28. ^ Dawick, p. 404
  29. ^ "Toole's", The Times, 27 December 1881, p. 6
  30. ^ a b Toole, p. 274
  31. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Morning Post, 13 February 1882, p. 2
  32. ^ a b "Opening of Toole's Theatre", The Era, 18 February 1882, p. 8
  33. ^ a b "Toole's Theatre", The Era, 4 February 1882, p. 8
  34. ^ "Savoy Theatre", The Times, 28 December 1881, p. 4
  35. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Standard, 17 February 1882, p. 3
  36. ^ "The Theatre", Pall Mall Gazette, 28 May 1883, p 2
  37. ^ a b c "Toole's Theatre", The Morning Post, 19 June 1884, p. 3
  38. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Standard, 9 October 1882, p. 2
  39. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Daily News, 1 May 1885, p. 6
  40. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Morning Post, 2 August 1886, p. 6
  41. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Morning Post, 31 August 1888, p. 5
  42. ^ "Studio photograph of the cast of Walker, London", Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 10 July 2020
  43. ^ "Theatres", The Graphic, 4 November 1882, p. 10
  44. ^ "Death of Mr Maddison Morton", The Era, 26 December 1891, p. 10
  45. ^ "New Plays of the Month", The Era, 8 January 1887, p. 14
  46. ^ "London Theatres", The Era, 10 March 1888, p. 14
  47. ^ "The London Theatres", The Era, 12 October 1889, p. 14
  48. ^ Jack, R. D. S. "Barrie, Sir James Matthew, baronet (1860–1937), playwright and novelist", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 9 July 2020 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  49. ^ Wearing, J. P. "The London West End Theatre in the 1890s", Educational Theatre Journal, October 1977, p. 320 (subscription required)
  50. ^ a b c d e f g h Mander and Mitchenson, p. 230
  51. ^ "Players of the Period", The Era, 30 March 1895, p. 9
  52. ^ "Miss Kate Cutler", The Times, 18 May 1955, p. 13
  53. ^ Hyde, Virginia Crosswhite. "Farr (married name Emery), Florence Beatrice (performing name Mary Lester) (1860–1917), author and mystic", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 9 July 2020 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  54. ^ Littlewood, S. R. "Vanbrugh, Violet (real name Violet Augusta Mary Barnes) (1867–1942), actress", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 9 July 2020 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  55. ^ Emeljanow, Victor. "Waller, Lewis (real name William Waller Lewis) (1860–1915), actor and theatre manager", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 9 July 2020 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  56. ^ "Toole's Theatre", The Morning Post, 11 May 1895, p. 4
  57. ^ "Theatrical Gossip", The Era, 12 October 1895, p. 10
  58. ^ Mander and Mitchenson, pp. 230–231
  59. ^ Mander and Mitchenson, p. 231

Sources edit

  • Dawick, John (1993). Pinero: A Theatrical Life. Niwot: University of Colorado Press. ISBN 978-0-87081-302-3.
  • Dickens, Charles Jr. (1879). Dictionary of London: An Unconventional Handbook. London: C. Dickens & Evans. OCLC 914462893.
  • Gänzl, Kurt; Andrew Lamb (1988). Gänzl's Book of the Musical Theatre. London: The Bodley Head. OCLC 966051934.
  • Gaye, Freda, ed. (1967). Who's Who in the Theatre (fourteenth ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons. OCLC 5997224.
  • Mander, Raymond; Joe Mitchenson (1968). Lost Theatres of London. London: Rupert Hart-Davis. OCLC 41974.
  • Thornbury, Walter (1887). Old and New London : A Narrative of its History, its People and its Places. London: Cassell. OCLC 1049974157.
  • Toole, J. L. (1889). Joseph Hatton (ed.). Reminiscences of J. L. Toole, Volume 1. London: Hurst and Blackett. OCLC 876874718.

51°30′27″N 0°07′23″W / 51.507466°N 0.122981°W / 51.507466; -0.122981

toole, theatre, this, article, about, former, theatre, london, named, time, charing, cross, theatre, nearby, music, hall, that, name, charing, cross, music, hall, 19th, century, west, building, william, street, near, charing, cross, city, westminster, successi. This article is about the former theatre in London named for a time the Charing Cross Theatre For the nearby music hall of that name see Charing Cross Music Hall Toole s Theatre was a 19th century West End building in William IV Street near Charing Cross in the City of Westminster A succession of auditoria had occupied the site since 1832 serving a variety of functions including religious and leisure activities The theatre at its largest after reconstruction in 1881 82 had a capacity of between 650 and 700 Toole s Theatre1833 Lowther Rooms1855 Polygraphic Hall1869 Charing Cross Theatre1876 Folly Theatre1881 Toole s TheatreFacade of Toole s Theatre 1882AddressWilliam IV Street n 1 Westminster LondonDesignationDemolishedTypePlayhouseCapacity650 700 2 ConstructionOpened1833Closed1895Rebuilt1869 Arthur Evers 3 1876 Thomas Verity 4 1882 J J Thompson 5 As the Charing Cross Theatre 1869 1876 the house became known for bills offering a mixture of drama burlesque and operetta Among the authors of its burlesques were W S Gilbert and H B Farnie Its stars included Lydia Thompson Lionel Brough and Willie Edouin In 1876 Thompson and her husband Alexander Henderson became lessees of the theatre and renamed it the Folly Theatre They continued the theatre s customary mix of operetta and burlesque Their greatest successes were with English adaptations of French operas bouffes and operas comiques most conspicuously Les cloches de Corneville which began its record breaking run 705 performances at the Folly in 1878 In 1879 the comic actor J L Toole took over the lease In 1881 he changed the name to Toole s Theatre and had the building substantially reconstructed He continued the policy of staging burlesques but introduced more non musical comedies and farces Among the authors who wrote for the theatre were John Maddison Morton F C Burnand and Henry Pottinger Stephens composers included George Grossmith and Edward Solomon The theatre was important for beginning the professional careers of many actors writers and actor managers Among the playwrights whose early works were presented at Toole s were Arthur Wing Pinero and J M Barrie Future stars who were members of the company as beginners included Kate Cutler Florence Farr Seymour Hicks Irene and Violet Vanbrugh and Lewis Waller The lease of the theatre expired in 1895 and the lessor the Charing Cross Hospital did not renew it The theatre was demolished in 1896 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Folly Theatre 1876 1881 1 3 Toole s Theatre 1881 1896 2 Gallery 3 Notes references and sources 3 1 Notes 3 2 References 3 3 SourcesHistory editEarly years edit nbsp 1834 advertisement The building opened as the Lowther Rooms in 1833 6 following the redevelopment of the area by the Commissioners of Woods and Forests under Lord Lowther 7 n 2 Its early attractions included an exhibition by Madame Tussaud in 1834 patronised by royalty 9 but the venue rapidly acquired a certain notoriety 10 a later commentator wrote that it became a favourite place of resort with the young men of the period who were attracted thither by a dismal form of entertainment known as Blake s Masquerades 3 After Blake departed the building was used for religious purposes first as the Roman Catholic Oratory of Saint Philip Neri from 1848 to 1852 n 3 and then as a Protestant institute and working men s club under the presidency of Lord Shaftesbury 3 nbsp W S Woodin in his Olio of Oddities 1856 The premises were acquired by the entertainer William S Woodin who converted them reopening as the Polygraphic Hall on 12 May 1855 10 Woodin gave one man comic shows beginning with The Olio of Oddities 12 He remained in possession of the hall for more than ten years giving performances there between his provincial tours When he was not in residence the hall was used for other one man shows lectures amateur dramatic productions and minstrel shows 13 The building was sold to a partnership E W Bradwell and W R Field who acquired the adjoining houses and reconstructed the premises as a small playhouse called the Charing Cross Theatre 13 The Times reported that they converted the building into a regular playhouse of light and elegant appearance with two tiers of boxes abundant stalls a limited pit and no gallery altogether an edifice satisfactorily answering to the favourite word bijou and well worth seeing 14 Its capacity was 600 15 The theatre opened on 19 June 1869 with a triple bill consisting of an operetta a three act drama and a burlesque the last being W S Gilbert s The Pretty Druidess a parody of Bellini s opera Norma 16 nbsp Lionel Brough Lydia Thompson and Willie Edouin in Blue Beard 1874 In 1872 an American manager John S Clarke became proprietor n 4 Under his management the theatre was variously advertised as the Charing Cross Theatre and the Theatre Royal Charing Cross 4 He renovated the interior receiving praise from The Sunday Times This theatre has undergone great alterations These have been in excellent taste and the house now is one of the prettiest in London Its interior is as bright as may be and the decorations have an unusually elegant and attractive effect On the scenery too as well as before it great pains have been bestowed and the manner in which the stage is turned to account reflects highest credit on the management 17 Among Clarke s productions was a revival of Sheridan s The Rivals featuring Mrs Stirling as Mrs Malaprop and Clarke as Bob Acres it ran for more than 50 performances an unheard of run at the time for an old classic 4 In 1874 Lydia Thompson starred in H B Farnie s burlesque Blue Beard in which she had played in the US nearly 500 times 18 her co stars were Lionel Brough and Willie Edouin 18 The following year the theatre featured Kate Santley in a series of comic operas and later Virginie Dejazet in a French season John Hollingshead then presented burlesque and in 1876 Thompson and her husband Alexander Henderson 1828 1886 returned from a farewell tour of the US n 5 and became proprietors of the theatre 4 Folly Theatre 1876 1881 edit nbsp Thompson as Robinson Crusoe Henderson renamed the house the Folly Theatre He said he meant to shoot folly as it flies and make the establishment the home of fun 4 n 6 The premises were reconstructed and elaborately decorated under the supervision of Thomas Verity 4 In his Dickens s Dictionary of London 1879 Charles Dickens Jr described the Folly as A little bandbox of a place very prettily fitted up and with a decided specialty for burlesque and opera bouffe 22 It reopened on 16 October 1876 with a revival of Blue Beard 4 At Christmas that year another Farnie burlesque was presented Robinson Crusoe it did well at the box office and Henderson continued to present opera bouffe and burlesque A triple bill of operettas by Herve Up the River Lecocq The Sea Nymphs and Offenbach The Creole in 1877 featured Violet Cameron and Nelly Bromley and was well received 23 In 1878 the theatre had a tremendous success with Robert Planquette s Les cloches de Corneville adapted by Farnie and Robert Reece which after transferring to the Globe Theatre and returning to the Folly ran for 705 performances setting a record that stood for nearly a decade 4 24 n 7 Thompson returned in Farnie and Reece s Stars and Garters in 1878 and continued with a series of burlesques including Tantalus or There s Many a Slip Twixt Cup and Lip and Carmen or Sold for a Song until March 1879 when she and Henderson relinquished the management of the theatre 26 It was then taken by the singer manager Selina Dolaro Offenbach s La Perichole was the highlight of her season 4 nbsp J L Toole in Ici on parle francais On 7 November 1879 the comic actor J L Toole took over the lease of the theatre He opened with a triple bill of comedies an early 19th century comedietta called The Married Bachelor H J Byron s three act A Fool and His Money and Ici on parle francais described by The Era as the most successful farce of modern times in which Toole played one of his most popular characters Spriggins 27 This was a financial success and Toole followed it with Byron s comedy The Upper Crust which remained in his repertoire for the rest of his career 2 After presenting a revival of Dion Boucicault s Dickens adaption Dot based on The Cricket on the Hearth and Hester s Mystery an early play by Arthur Wing Pinero as well as what the theatre historians Mander and Mitchenson describe as some now forgotten pieces Toole went on tour In his absence R C Carton presented a summer season in 1881 that included Imprudence Pinero s first three act comedy 2 28 When the season ended Toole closed the theatre for substantial rebuilding in December while work was in progress he announced a new name for the house the Folly became Toole s Theatre 29 the first in London to follow the common American practice of calling a theatre after its actor manager or owner 2 Toole s Theatre 1881 1896 edit nbsp Toole s Theatre 1882 Toole said that the rebuilding had cost him more than 10 000 30 The capacity of the house was much enlarged 30 Toole s held between 650 and 700 people 2 The Morning Post observed that the building had undergone so complete a process of renovation and embellishment that it may now be regarded as one of the handsomest theatres in the metropolis 31 The Era praised the spacious vestibule the elegant foyer the beautifully decorated staircases the broad exits and entrances and the convenient verandah 32 The paper also commented on the startling metamorphosis of the auditorium The consciousness that we were in an adapted lecture room or Roman Catholic chapel has departed for ever and we now behold a most commodious little theatre 33 Toole did not emulate Richard D Oyly Carte at the new Savoy Theatre by installing electric light 34 the stage and front of house at Toole s remained gas lit 33 Toole had intended to open his reconstructed theatre with a new comedy by Byron but the playwright s health prevented him from completing the work and Toole opened on 16 February 1882 with a triple bill of two revivals Paul Pry one of the greatest successes in his repertoire and Mark Lemon s farce Domestic Economy and a new comedietta Waiting Consent by May Holt 32 35 Toole s staples were burlesque light opera and comedies including farces Burlesques included Stage Dora or Who Killed Cock Robin F C Burnand s parody of Sardou s Fedora 1883 36 and Paw Claudian 1884 Burnand s lampoon of a recent costume drama Claudian by Henry Herman and W G Wills 37 Comic operas included Mr Guffin s Elopement 38 and The Great Tay Kin 39 both by Arthur Law and George Grossmith 1885 Billee Taylor by Henry Pottinger Stephens and Edward Solomon 1886 40 and Lecocq s Pepita 1888 from his original La princesse des Canaries 41 nbsp Toole seated centre with the cast of J M Barrie s Walker London 1892 including Mary Brough and Seymour Hicks standing left and Mary Ansell and Irene Vanbrugh seated flanking Toole n 8 There were new comedies as well as old favourites Among them were Pinero s Girls and Boys 1882 43 John Maddison Morton s final play a three act farcical comedy called Going It 1885 44 Herman Charles Merivale s The Butler 1886 45 and The Don 1888 46 and Fred Horner s The Bungalow 1890 an English version of Eugene Medina s La Garconniere 47 Ibsen s Ghost 1891 a one act lampoon of Henrik Ibsen s plays and disciples starring Irene Vanbrugh and Toole was J M Barrie s first London play 48 In 1892 Toole directed the premiere of Barrie s Walker London which ran for 497 performances 49 In Toole s absence on tour other managements took temporary charge at his theatre including William Terriss 37 Willie Edouin 37 Augustin Daly with his New York company in 1884 50 and Violet Melnotte in 1890 51 Toole retained a stock company and many newcomers had their first opportunities at Toole s under his management including Mary Brough 50 Kate Cutler 52 Florence Farr 53 Seymour Hicks 50 Eva Moore 50 Irene Vanbrugh 50 Violet Vanbrugh 54 and Lewis Waller 55 In 1895 the expiry of Toole s lease was approaching and his health was in decline 50 His last piece was Thoroughbred by Ralph Lumley which opened on 13 February Within a week Toole had to withdraw His role was temporarily taken by Rutland Barrington 56 until Toole recovered sufficiently to finish the run in September 50 The last night under his management was on 28 September Toole made his farewell to London audiences and after touring until the following year he retired 50 Two weeks after the closure The Era reported Toole s Theatre has not yet been disposed of by its owners the Governors of Charing cross Hospital Mr Toole s lease was at a low rental but he spent several thousand pounds in improving the property and the requisitions of the London County Council will cost if they are carried out at least another 3 000 The Beefsteak Club which occupies the top floor of the theatre has been granted a yearly tenancy by the Hospital 57 No potential tenant willing to make the required outlay came forward and a proposed plan for a redevelopment by the architect C J Phipps came to nothing 58 The theatre s performance licence was withdrawn and in the spring of 1896 the building was demolished The hospital which had for some time been expressing concern about the noise and the risk of fire from a theatre so close used the site to build a new out patients department 59 Gallery edit nbsp Les cloches de Corneville 1878 nbsp 1881 playbill nbsp Toole as Paw Claudian 1884 nbsp Triple bill 1885 nbsp The Bungalow 1890Notes references and sources editNotes edit Known as King William Street when the building first opened 1 The Lowther Rooms were opposite the popular Lowther Arcade a covered market for fancy goods some 250 feet long and considered at that time one of the sights of London 8 Here in 1850 the Rev later Saint J H Newman delivered his Lectures on Anglican Difficulties after his conversion to Roman Catholicism 11 Clarke was the brother in law of John Wilkes Booth the assassin of the US president Abraham Lincoln which Clarke said he hoped would not count against him in Britain 4 It was billed as a farewell tour but Thompson returned to the US several times over the next two decades 19 Henderson had Shoot folly as it flies a quotation from Alexander Pope 20 printed at the top of the programmes for the theatre 21 The record for the longest running musical show was broken by Dorothy by Alfred Cellier and B C Stephenson which ran for 931 performances from 1886 to 1889 25 Back row Mary Brough as Penny Seymour Hicks as Andrew McPhail Eliza Johnstone as Sarah Rigg C M Lowne as Kit Upjohn Middle row George Shelton as Ben Mary Ansell as Nanny O Brien J L Toole as Jasper Phipps Irene Vanbrugh as Bell Golightly Effie Liston as Mrs Golightly Front Cecil Ramsey as W G 42 References edit Public Amusements The Morning Chronicle 30 June 1834 p 2 a b c d e Mander and Mitchenson p 228 a b c Royal Charing Cross Theatre The Morning Post 21 June 1869 p 2 a b c d e f g h i j Mander and Mitchenson p 227 Mander and Mitchenson p 233 Classified advertisements The Morning Post 14 November 1833 p 1 and The Standard 14 November 1833 p 1 The Improvements near Charing Cross The Gentleman s Magazine March 1831 p 206 Thornbury p 132 Classified advertisements The Morning Post 9 July 1834 p 1 a b Mander and Mitchenson p 222 Thornbury p 129 Woodin s Olio of Oddities The Morning Chronicle 14 May 1855 p 5 a b Mander and Mitchenson p 224 Charing Cross Theatre The Times 24 June 1869 p 6 Capacity of London Theatres The Orchestra 17 June 1870 p 199 Mander and Mitchenson p 225 The Sunday Times 5 January 1873 quoted in Mander and Mitchenson p 227 a b Charing Cross Theatre The Morning Post 21 September 1874 p 6 Lawrence W J and J Gilliland Thompson Lydia 1838 1908 dancer and actress Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 8 July 2020 subscription or UK public library membership required Alexander Pope Oxford Dictionary of Quotations edited by Knowles Elizabeth Oxford University Press 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2020 subscription required The Folly Theatre Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News 28 October 1876 p 102 Dickens p 103 Folly Theatre The Era 23 September 1877 p 6 Ganzl and Lamb p 356 Gaye pp 1370 1380 and 1525 1526 Folly Theatre The Era 2 March 1879 p 5 The Theatres The Pall Mall Gazette 17 November 1879 p 11 Dawick p 404 Toole s The Times 27 December 1881 p 6 a b Toole p 274 Toole s Theatre The Morning Post 13 February 1882 p 2 a b Opening of Toole s Theatre The Era 18 February 1882 p 8 a b Toole s Theatre The Era 4 February 1882 p 8 Savoy Theatre The Times 28 December 1881 p 4 Toole s Theatre The Standard 17 February 1882 p 3 The Theatre Pall Mall Gazette 28 May 1883 p 2 a b c Toole s Theatre The Morning Post 19 June 1884 p 3 Toole s Theatre The Standard 9 October 1882 p 2 Toole s Theatre The Daily News 1 May 1885 p 6 Toole s Theatre The Morning Post 2 August 1886 p 6 Toole s Theatre The Morning Post 31 August 1888 p 5 Studio photograph of the cast of Walker London Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 10 July 2020 Theatres The Graphic 4 November 1882 p 10 Death of Mr Maddison Morton The Era 26 December 1891 p 10 New Plays of the Month The Era 8 January 1887 p 14 London Theatres The Era 10 March 1888 p 14 The London Theatres The Era 12 October 1889 p 14 Jack R D S Barrie Sir James Matthew baronet 1860 1937 playwright and novelist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 9 July 2020 subscription or UK public library membership required Wearing J P The London West End Theatre in the 1890s Educational Theatre Journal October 1977 p 320 subscription required a b c d e f g h Mander and Mitchenson p 230 Players of the Period The Era 30 March 1895 p 9 Miss Kate Cutler The Times 18 May 1955 p 13 Hyde Virginia Crosswhite Farr married name Emery Florence Beatrice performing name Mary Lester 1860 1917 author and mystic Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 9 July 2020 subscription or UK public library membership required Littlewood S R Vanbrugh Violet real name Violet Augusta Mary Barnes 1867 1942 actress Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 9 July 2020 subscription or UK public library membership required Emeljanow Victor Waller Lewis real name William Waller Lewis 1860 1915 actor and theatre manager Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 9 July 2020 subscription or UK public library membership required Toole s Theatre The Morning Post 11 May 1895 p 4 Theatrical Gossip The Era 12 October 1895 p 10 Mander and Mitchenson pp 230 231 Mander and Mitchenson p 231 Sources edit Dawick John 1993 Pinero A Theatrical Life Niwot University of Colorado Press ISBN 978 0 87081 302 3 Dickens Charles Jr 1879 Dictionary of London An Unconventional Handbook London C Dickens amp Evans OCLC 914462893 Ganzl Kurt Andrew Lamb 1988 Ganzl s Book of the Musical Theatre London The Bodley Head OCLC 966051934 Gaye Freda ed 1967 Who s Who in the Theatre fourteenth ed London Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons OCLC 5997224 Mander Raymond Joe Mitchenson 1968 Lost Theatres of London London Rupert Hart Davis OCLC 41974 Thornbury Walter 1887 Old and New London A Narrative of its History its People and its Places London Cassell OCLC 1049974157 Toole J L 1889 Joseph Hatton ed Reminiscences of J L Toole Volume 1 London Hurst and Blackett OCLC 876874718 51 30 27 N 0 07 23 W 51 507466 N 0 122981 W 51 507466 0 122981 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Toole 27s Theatre amp oldid 1220999205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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