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The Royal Lyceum Theatre is a 658-seat theatre in the city of Edinburgh, Scotland, named after the Theatre Royal Lyceum and English Opera House, the residence at the time of legendary Shakespearean actor Henry Irving.
In 1834, the present house opened slightly to the west, with a frontage on Wellington Street, [10] under the name Theatre Royal Lyceum and English Opera House. The theatre was again designed by Beazley and cost £40,000. The new house championed English opera rather than the Italian operas that had played earlier in the century. [11]
Lyceum Theatre, London, 2,000-seat West End theatre in the City of Westminster; Lyceum Theatre, Crewe, Edwardian period Grade II listed building and theatre; Lyceum Theatre, Sheffield, 1,068-seat theatre in Sheffield; Royal Lyceum Theatre, 658-seat theatre in Edinburgh; Lyceum Theatre, Sunderland (1854–1880), 1,800-seat theatre in Tyne and Wear
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Theatre_Royal_Lyceum_and_English_Opera_House&oldid=153995809"
Original cast of Local Hero. The play received its world premiere at the Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh in March 2019. [5] A co-production with The Old Vic, [6] the show has a book by the film's original screenwriter and director, Bill Forsyth, which has been adapted by Lyceum artistic director David Greig, [7] with direction by John Crowley, [8] movement direction by Lucy Hind, [9] set and ...
The Royal Lyceum was a small theatre in York Street, Sydney founded in 1854, which was redeveloped and renamed many times, finally as the Queen's Theatre, by which name it closed in 1882. History [ edit ]
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The theatre was taken over by R H Wyndham around 1860. The royal patent and title was then transferred to the Queen's Theatre and Operetta House in a site in Broughton Street, on an earlier Circus (previously the Adelphi Theatre). The manager of the theatre was Robert Henry Wyndham. It burned down and was rebuilt in 1865, 1875, and 1884, each ...