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On 1 August 2024, it was announced that the musical will have its world premiere at the Theatre Royal, Bath, Somerset beginning previews on 22 March 2025 (with a press night on 25 March), running until 12 April. John Doyle will direct the production and it will be produced by the Theatre Royal Bath in association with Universal Theatrical Group.
The ceremonial re-opening was performed on-stage by actors Penelope Keith and Peter Bowles, [40] who were starring in the Theatre Royal's own production of The Rivals, Richard Brinsley Sheridan's classic Restoration comedy, set in and around 18th-century Bath. In 2011, the theatre won a British Construction Industry Award Conservation Award. [41]
You may want to book a ticket for Thomas Ostermeier’s production of Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People. ... Theatre Royal Bath, 16 Feb to 16 March. Nye.
Mrs Henderson Presents is a musical comedy with music by George Fenton and Simon Chamberlain, with lyrics by Don Black and a book by Terry Johnson.Based on the 2005 film Mrs Henderson Presents, the musical received its world premiere at the Theatre Royal, Bath in 2015 and transferred to the West End's Noël Coward Theatre in February 2016.
On 10 February 2023, it was announced that the play will embark on a UK tour starting at the Theatre Royal, Bath on 1 September with dates until May 2024. [18] The tour cast includes Joe Absolom as Ben, Charlene Boyd as Lauren, Nathanial Curtis as Sam, and Louisa Lytton as Jenny until 2 December.
In 1705 the first theatre opened in Bath. The building by George Trim was small and cramped and made little profit in the years before its demolition in 1738. The site it was on is now the Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases. A New Theatre opened in Kingsmead Street in 1723 and operated until 1751. [2] [3]
The play was profiled in the William Goldman book The Season: A Candid Look at Broadway. A UK revival of the play was staged from August 9 to August 25, 2018 at the Theatre Royal, Bath to mark the 50th anniversary of the original run.
Henderson voice was deemed ‘woolly’, [1] but eventually David Garrick auditioned him and suggested he might be suitable for a provincial theatre, recommending him to John Palmer of Bath. Palmer managed the Old Orchard Street Theatre which became the Theatre Royal Bath in 1768.