Katana VentraIP

Lyric Theatre (Hammersmith)

The Lyric Theatre, also known as the Lyric Hammersmith, is a nonprofit theatre on Lyric Square, off King Street, Hammersmith, London.[1]

Location

Hammersmith
London, W6
United Kingdom

Lyric Theatre Hammersmith Ltd

550 (main house)
110 (studio)

1895 (1895)

1979

Frank Matcham (original)

Background[edit]

The Lyric Theatre was originally a music hall established in 1888 on Bradmore Grove, Hammersmith.[1] Success as an entertainment venue led it to be rebuilt and enlarged on the same site twice, firstly in 1890[2] and then in 1895 by the English theatrical architect Frank Matcham. The 1895 reopening, as The New Lyric Opera House, was accompanied by an opening address by the famous actress Lillie Langtry.[1]


In 1966 the theatre was due to be closed and demolished. However, a successful campaign to save it led to the auditorium being dismantled and reinstalled piece by piece within a modern shell on its current site on King Street a short distance from the former Bradmore Grove location. The relocated theatre opened in 1979.[3]


It has two main performance areas: the Main House, a 565-seat 19th-century auditorium maintaining the original design which hosts its main productions; and the 120-seat Studio, which houses smaller productions by up-and-coming companies. The Lyric also presents frequent Lyric Children and Lyric Music performances as well as Sunday Night Comedy.[1]


Its current artistic director is Rachel O'Riordan, and its executive director is Amy Belson.[4]


The Lyric has recently gone through a major redevelopment project, with new facilities for young people and the local community completed in 2015, designed by Rick Mather Architects[5] and was nominated in the 'community benefit' and 'tourism and leisure' categories at the RICS Awards 2016, London.[6]


In 2011, the Lyric won the Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre for Sean Holmes' production of Sarah Kane's Blasted.[7]


In September 2018, it was announced that Sean Holmes would be succeeded as artistic director in February 2019 by Rachel O'Riordan.[8]

Main House

Studio

Music & Comedy

Lyric Children

Lyric Young Company

[1]

The Lyric's programme is divided into five strands:

A Doll's House 2019

Noises Off 2019

Ghost Stories 2019

City of Glass, 2017

The Seagull, 2017

Herons, by , 2016

Simon Stephens

Cinderella, 2015

Tipping The Velvet, 2015

Bugsy Malone, 2015

Secret Theatre, 2015

Secret Theatre, 2014

Secret Theatre, 2013

Steptoe and Son produced by , 2013

Kneehigh Theatre

by Franz Kafka, adapted by Gísli Örn Garðarsson and David Farr, 2013

Metamorphosis

by Steven Sater and Duncan Sheik, 2012

Alice by Heart

by Raymond Briggs, adapted by Pins and Needles Productions, 2012

Father Christmas

Cinderella by and Morgan Lloyd Malcolm, 2012

Joel Horwood

by Eugene O'Neill, 2012

Desire Under the Elms

Morning by , 2012

Simon Stephens

Three Kingdoms by , 2012

Simon Stephens

by William Shakespeare, 2012

A Midsummer Night's Dream

Lovesong by , 2012

Abi Morgan

Aladdin by , Morgan Lloyd Malcolm and Steve Marmion, 2011

Joel Horwood

by Edward Bond, 2011

Saved

The Wild Bride created by , 2011

Kneehigh Theatre

by Vivienne Franzmann, 2011

Mogadishu

's Twisted Tales, 2011

Roald Dahl

, by Joel Horwood, Morgan Lloyd Malcolm and Steve Marmion, 2010

Dick Whittington and his Cat

by Sarah Kane, 2010

Blasted

(21 September – 16 October 2010)

The Big Fella

by Simon Stephens, 2010

Punk Rock

(7 – 17 July 2010)

Lifegame

(17 – 19 June 2010)

Tightrope

(7 May – 5 June 2010)

A Thousand Stars Explode in the Sky

(20 April – 1 May 2010)

Spymonkey's Moby Dick

(24 February – 3 April 2010)

Ghost Stories

(6 January – 20 February 2010)

Three Sisters

(21 November 2009 – 9 January 2010

Jack and the Beanstalk

(7 October – 14 November 2009)

Comedians

(3–26 September 2009)

Punk Rock 2009

/The Importance of Being Ernest (3 October – 1 November 2008)

Spyski

Christmas For the Under 7s (29 November 2007 – 5 January 2008)

(6 – 24 November 2007)

Beauty and the Beast

(16 October – 3 November 2007)

Casanova

(25 September – 13 October 2007)

Water

(5 – 22 September 2007)

Rough Crossings

(2 – 4 August 2007)

The Bacchae

(21 June – 22 July 2007)

Accidental Heroes

: Part 2 (20 June – 22 July 2007)

Angels in America

: Part 1 (7 – 9 June 2007)

Angels in America

(26 April – 26 May 2007)

Elegy

(3 – 14 April 2007)

Absolute Beginners

(13 – 31 March 2007)

St George and the Dragon

(9 February – 10 March 2007)

Don't Look Now

(17 January – 3 February 2007)

Ramayana

(23 November 2006 – 13 January 2007)

Cymbeline

(31 October – 18 November 2006)

Watership Down

(29 September – 28 October 2006)

pool

(16 May – 17 June 2006)

Metamorphosis

Aurélia's (12 – 29 April 2006)

Oratorio

(24 February – 1 April 2006)

The Wolves in the Walls

(20 January – 18 February 2006)

The Odyssey

(2 December 2005 – 14 January 2006)

Nights at the Circus Christmas

(1 – 26 November 2005)

The Magic Carpet

(19 – 29 October 2005)

Brontë

(2 September – 15 October 2005)

Road to Nowhere

(30 June – 23 July 2005)

Julius Caesar

(17 June 2005)

Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others

(10 – 13 June 2005)

Asterisk

(19 April – 7 May 2005)

Stars Are Out Tonight

(30 March – 16 April 2005)

Hymns

Aurelia's (5 – 26 March 2005)

Oratorio

(18 February – 26 March 2005)

Rhinoceros

(27 January – 12 February 2005)

A Raisin in the Sun

for 7+s (26 November 2004 – 22 January 2005)

Strictly Dandia Christmas

(2 – 20 November 2004)

The Firework-Maker's Daughter

(30 September – 30 October 2004)

The Bacchae

(14 – 25 September 2004)

Don Juan

/National Youth Theatre Guest Season/The Master and Margarita (20 August – 11 September 2004)

A Passage to India

by Sandy Wilson, 1979

Aladdin

(Source: the Lyric official website[9])

– Official website of the Lyric Hammersmith Theatre.

Lyric

Lyric Hammersmith at The London Theatre Guide

Artistic Associates Named

The collection of from 1964 to 1966 is held by the Victoria and Albert Museum Theatre and Performance Department.

Lyric Theatre Hammersmith box office returns

History of the Lyric, Hammersmith