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Gielgud Theatre

The Gielgud Theatre is a West End theatre, located on Shaftesbury Avenue, at the corner of Rupert Street, in the City of Westminster, London. The house currently has 994 seats on three levels.

Address

Shaftesbury Avenue
London, W1
United Kingdom

West End theatre

994 on three levels

27 December 1906 (1906-12-27)

The theatre was designed by W. G. R. Sprague and opened on 27 December 1906 as the Hicks Theatre, named after Seymour Hicks, for whom it was built. The first play at the theatre was a hit musical called The Beauty of Bath co-written by Hicks. Another big success was A Waltz Dream in 1908. In 1909, the American impresario Charles Frohman became manager of the theatre and renamed the house the Globe Theatre, a name that it retained for 85 years. Call It a Day opened in 1935 and ran for 509 performances, a long run for the slow inter-war years. There's a Girl in My Soup, opening in 1966, ran for almost three years, a record for the theatre that was not surpassed until Daisy Pulls It Off opened in April 1983 to run for 1,180 performances.


Refurbished in 1987, the theatre has since presented several Alan Ayckbourn premieres, including Man of the Moment (1990), as well as a notable revival of An Ideal Husband in 1992. During reconstruction of Shakespeare's Globe theatre on the South Bank, in 1994 the theatre was renamed the Gielgud Theatre in honour of John Gielgud. Another refurbishment was completed in 2008.


The Globe's theatre cat, Beerbohm, became famous enough to receive a front-page obituary in the theatrical publication The Stage in 1995.

History[edit]

Early years[edit]

The theatre opened on 27 December 1906 as the Hicks Theatre in honour of actor, manager and playwright Seymour Hicks, for whom it was built. Designed by W.G.R. Sprague in Louis XVI style, the theatre originally had 970 seats, but over the years boxes and other seats have been removed. The theatre is a pair with the Queen's Theatre, which opened in 1907 on the adjacent street corner.


The first play at the theatre was a musical called The Beauty of Bath by Hicks and Cosmo Hamilton. My Darling, another Hicks musical, followed in 1907, followed by the original London production of Brewster's Millions, and the next year, the long-running London premiere production of the Straus operetta, A Waltz Dream . An astonishing event occurred midway through the run of the theatre's next major work, a musical titled The Dashing Little Duke (1909), which was produced by Hicks. Hicks' wife, Ellaline Terriss, played the title role (a woman playing a man). When she missed several performances due to illness, Hicks stepped into the role – possibly the only case in the history of musical theatre where a husband succeeded to his wife's role.[2]


In 1909, the American impresario Charles Frohman became sole manager of the theatre and renamed the house Globe Theatre (the "Globe Theatre" on Newcastle Street had been demolished in 1902, making the name available). The reopening production was His Borrowed Plumes, written by Lady Randolph Churchill, Winston Churchill's mother. During the First World War, the musical Peg O' My Heart was a success at the theatre. Noël Coward debuted his Fallen Angels here in 1925. Call It a Day by Dodie Smith opened in 1935 and ran for 509 performances, an unusually long run for the slow inter-war years. Shakespeare and classic plays, as well as musicals, were seen at the theatre in the decades that followed. In 1939, actor John Gielgud directed and starred in a revival of The Importance of Being Earnest that was "regarded at the time as the definitive production of the 20th century."[3]

After World War II[edit]

Gielgud took his production of The Lady's Not for Burning, by Christopher Fry, to the Globe Theatre in 1949 for a successful West End premiere.[4] Likewise, in 1960, A Man For All Seasons had its stage premiere here. Terence Frisby's There's a Girl in My Soup, opening in 1966, ran for 1,064 performances at the theatre, a record that was not surpassed until Andrew Lloyd Webber's production of the Olivier Award-winning comedy Daisy Pulls It Off by Denise Deegan opened in April 1983 to run until February 1986[5] for 1,180 performances, the theatre's longest run. In 1987 Peter Shaffer's play Lettice and Lovage had a hit London premiere, starring Maggie Smith and Margaret Tyzack, and running for two years. One of several Coward revivals in recent decades, Design for Living, starring Rachel Weisz, transferred to the theatre in 1995. When Lloyd Webber rewrote Tell Me on a Sunday, he relaunched it at the theatre to good notices.[6]


The Globe was the home of a resident theatre cat named Beerbohm, after actor Herbert Beerbohm Tree. The tabby's portrait still hangs in the corridor near the stalls. Beerbohm appeared on stage at least once in every production, forcing the actors to improvise. He always chose to occupy certain actors' dressing rooms while they were at the theatre, including Peter Bowles, Michael Gambon and Penelope Keith. Beerbohm was mentioned several times on Desert Island Discs, and he was the only cat to have received a front-page obituary in the theatrical publication, The Stage.[7] He died in March 1995 at the age of 20.[8]

Refurbished in 1987, with extensive work on the gold leaf in the auditorium, the theatre is particularly notable for its beautiful circular Regency staircase, oval gallery and tower. The theatre has presented several Alan Ayckbourn premieres, including Man of the Moment (1990). Oscar Wilde's classic comedy, An Ideal Husband (1992) and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (2004) saw notable revivals, and the Royal Shakespeare Company and others have brought several Shakespeare and classic play revivals to the theatre in recent decades. The 2007 production of Equus attracted considerable press for the nude appearance of 17-year-old Daniel Radcliffe, who was still filming the Harry Potter films. The production was successful enough to transfer to Broadway and ran to 2009 there.[9] Musicals returned in 2009 with a transfer of Avenue Q, and then a transfer from Broadway of Hair the next year, followed by the West End premiere of the stage version of Yes, Prime Minister before it went on tour.[10]


In 1994, in anticipation of the 1997 opening of the reconstruction of Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on the South Bank, to avoid public confusion, the theatre was renamed the Gielgud Theatre in honour of John Gielgud. The Globe's theatre cat, named Beerbohm, became famous enough to receive a front-page obituary in the theatrical publication The Stage in 1995. In 2003, Cameron Mackintosh announced plans to refurbish the Gielgud, including a joint entrance foyer with the adjacent Queen's Theatre, facing on to Shaftesbury Avenue. Mackintosh's Delfont Mackintosh Theatres took over operational control of the Gielgud from Andrew Lloyd Webber's Really Useful Theatres in 2006.


Work on the facade of the theatre started in March 2007 and the interior restoration, including reinstating the boxes at the back of the dress circle, was completed in January 2008. The theatre is one of the 40 theatres featured in the 2012 DVD documentary series Great West End Theatres, presented by Donald Sinden.[11]

1906: , by Seymour Hicks and Cosmo Hamilton

The Beauty of Bath

1907: by Winchell Smith & Byron Ongley

Brewster's Millions

1908: an operetta by Oscar Straus

A Waltz Dream

1914: Kismet, a revival of 's play, with Henry Daniell in his London debut.

Edward Knoblock

1916: by John Hartley Manners

Peg O' My Heart

1920: , a revival of the 1882 play by Victorien Sardou, with Basil Rathbone as Loris Ipanoff

Fédora

1925: by Noël Coward, starring Tallulah Bankhead

Fallen Angels

1929: by Frederick Lonsdale, starring Yvonne Arnaud

Canaries Sometimes Sing

1931: by James B. Fagan, starring Yvonne Arnaud and Frank Cellier.

The Improper Duchess

1935: by Dodie Smith

Call it a Day

1939: by Oscar Wilde, with John Gielgud starring as well as directing

The Importance of Being Earnest

1942: by Robert E. Sherwood

The Petrified Forest

1949: by Christopher Fry, with Richard Burton in a supporting role

The Lady's Not for Burning

1960: by Robert Bolt, starring Paul Scofield

A Man For All Seasons

1966: by Terence Frisby

There's a Girl in My Soup

1966: by Bill Owen

The Matchgirls

1976: A season of as Dame Edna Everage

Barry Humphries

1978: by Simon Gray, starring Jeremy Irons, Barry Foster, Simon Ward and Clive Francis

The Rear Column

1982: by Noël Coward, starring Vanessa Redgrave

Design for Living

1983: by Denise Deegan

Daisy Pulls It Off

1987: by Peter Shaffer, starring Maggie Smith and Margaret Tyzack

Lettice and Lovage

1990: by Alan Ayckbourn premiere

Man of the Moment

1992: by Oscar Wilde

An Ideal Husband

1995: , starring Rachel Weisz

Design for Living

2003: by Andrew Lloyd Webber, starring Denise Van Outen

Tell Me on a Sunday

2004: The RSC's , starring Judi Dench

All's Well That Ends Well

2004: , starring Christian Slater, Frances Barber and Mackenzie Crook

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

2005: by Friedrich Schiller, starring Derek Jacobi

Don Carlos

2005: by Neil LaBute, starring David Schwimmer and Catherine Tate

Some Girls

2005: by Agatha Christie, starring Tara Fitzgerald

And Then There Were None

2006: The RSC's and The Canterbury Tales

The Crucible

2006: by Peter Morgan, starring Michael Sheen and Frank Langella

Frost/Nixon

2007: by Peter Shaffer, starring Daniel Radcliffe and Richard Griffiths

Equus

2007: by William Shakespeare, starring Patrick Stewart

Macbeth

2007:

Nicholas Nickleby

2008: presented a Gilbert and Sullivan season

Carl Rosa Opera

2008: by Yasmina Reza, starring Ralph Fiennes and Tamsin Greig

God of Carnage

2008: by Luigi Pirandello, starring Ian McDiarmid

Six Characters in Search of an Author

2008: 's Tinselworm

Bill Bailey

2009: by Alan Bennett, starring Alison Steadman

Enjoy

2009: by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx

Avenue Q

2010:

Hair

2010: by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn, starring David Haig and Henry Goodman

Yes, Prime Minister

2011:

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

2011:

Lend Me a Tenor

2011:

The Ladykillers

2012:

Chariots of Fire

2013: by Peter Morgan, starring Helen Mirren

The Audience

2013: by Noël Coward, starring Toby Stephens and Anna Chancellor

Private Lives

2013: by Craig Warner, starring Jack Huston, Laurence Fox and Imogen Stubbs

Strangers on a Train

2014: by Noël Coward, starring Angela Lansbury

Blithe Spirit

2014: (re-opening after Apollo Theatre ceiling collapse)

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

2017: by Jez Butterworth

The Ferryman

2018: , based on the Cicero novels by Robert Harris and adapted by Mike Poulton starring Richard McCabe and Joseph Kloska

Imperium

2019: , starring Michael Ball, Alfie Boe, Carrie Hope Fletcher and Matt Lucas

Les Misérables – The Staged Concert

2019:

Girl from the North Country

2020: , starring David Mitchell

The Upstart Crow

2021:

The Mirror and the Light

2022: by Aaron Sorkin, adapted from the novel by Harper Lee

To Kill a Mockingbird

2023: by Arthur Miller, starring Fisayo Akinade, Milly Alcock, and Brian Gleeson (transfer from the National Theatre)

The Crucible

2023: , starring Bernadette Peters and Lea Salonga

Stephen Sondheim's Old Friends

2024: 's 30 Years Of Dirt

Frank Skinner

2024: , starring Sheridan Smith

Opening Night

2024: by Sean O'Casey, starring Mark Rylance and J. Smith-Cameron

Juno and the Paycock

2024: , starring Simon Lipkin, Aaron Sidwell, and Philip Franks (transfer from the Chichester Festival Theatre)

Oliver!

History of the theatre

History and photos of the theatre and other images

Profile of theatre with list of productions

Another profile of the theatre

Guide to British Theatres 1750–1950, John Earl and Michael Sell pp. 112 (Theatres Trust, 2000)  0-7136-5688-3

ISBN

Who's Who in the Theatre, edited by John Parker, tenth edition, revised, London, 1947, pp. 477–478 and 1183.

Bergan, Ronald, The Great Theatres of London. An Illustrated Companion (Prion, 1990) ( 1-85375-057-3).

ISBN

Berry, Patricia Dee, Theatrical London (Britain in Old Photographs series) (Alan Sutton, 1995) ( 0-7509-0942-0).

ISBN

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

discography at Discogs

Gielgud Theatre

from the London Theatre Guide, a website of the Society of London Theatre

Gielgud Theatre

original namesake of this theatre

Profile of Seymour Hicks

Gielgud Theatre's record for longest running production

Information about Daisy Pulls It Off