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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, 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, London 4 July 1821 888 Owner – Leonard Blavatnik: Theatre Royal, Lincoln: Lincoln 1893 475 Theatre Royal, Newcastle: Newcastle upon Tyne 20 February ...
Theatre Royal, Aldershot, Aldershot, built in 1891 and demolished in 1959 Theatre Royal, Aston, Birmingham, later Alpha Television Theatre Royal, Barnwell, Cambridge
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]
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 ...
Victoria Wood decided to revive the original concept to satirise musical theatre with Acorn Antiques: The Musical!, with the intent to give people a "lovely, happy night in the theatre.". [1] It was directed by Trevor Nunn, and opened at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket in February 2005 for a three-month sell-out run. [2]
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.
New Wimbledon Theatre, 1-9 March; Opera House Manchester, 14-23 March; Noel Coward Theatre, 1 April to 2 June Opening Night Sheridan Smith returns to the West End in 2024 (Oliver Rosser)