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Samuel Foote Haymarket Theatre, ca. 1900. In 1754, John Potter, who had been rated (i.e. paid property tax) for the theatre since its opening, was succeeded by John Whitehead. [10] In 1758 Theophilus Cibber obtained from William Howard, then the Lord Chamberlain, a general licence under which Foote tried to establish the Haymarket as a regular ...
Theatre Royal, Dumfries: Dumfries 29 September 1792 500–600 Theatre Royal, Drury Lane: Drury Lane, London 1660 2,196 Owner – Really Useful Theatres: Theatre Royal, Edinburgh: Edinburgh 1769; destroyed by fire 1946 Theatre Royal, Exeter: Exeter 1889; closed 1962 Theatre Royal, Glasgow: Glasgow 1867 1,541 Theatre Royal, Haymarket: Haymarket ...
Theatre Royal, Aldershot, Aldershot, built in 1891 and demolished in 1959 Theatre Royal, Aston, Birmingham, later Alpha Television Theatre Royal, Barnwell, Cambridge
The theatre, c. 1774–1779, in a watercolour painting attributed to Hubert Cornish Playbill from December 1844 advertising events in January 1845. The Theatre Royal, until 1807 the New Street Theatre, [1] or, colloquially, New Theatre, [2] was a 2,000-seat theatre located on New Street in Birmingham, England. It was erected in 1774 and ...
Officially confirmed on 19 September 2013, [7] with tickets going on sale the following day [8] the play began previews on 8 March 2014, [9] before making its world premiere at the Theatre Royal Haymarket [10] on 25 March, [11] for a fifteen-week run [12] booking until 21 June 2014. [13]
Ethel Barrymore Theatre, Broadway 2001: The Royal Family: Fanny Cavendish: Theatre Royal Haymarket: 2002: The Breath of Life: Frances: Theatre Royal Haymarket 2003: All's Well That Ends Well: The Countess: Stratford (RSC) and Gielgud (2004) 2006: Hay Fever: Judith Bliss: Theatre Royal Haymarket The Merry Wives of Windsor: Mistress Quickly ...
Waters of the Moon is a 1951 stage play by N. C. Hunter which originally ran for two years at the Theatre Royal Haymarket from 1951 to 1953. [1] [2] It was adapted into a 1961 TV play broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
The musical made its world premiere at the Theatre Royal Haymarket on 9 February 2019, before opening officially on February 19, 2019. The production was directed and choreographed by Caroline Jay Ranger, with musical supervision, orchestrations and arrangements by Stuart Morely.