Playhouse Theatre
F. H. Fowler
alias Royal Avenue Theatre, Avenue TheatreNorthumberland Avenue, | |
show on the map | http://www.playhousetheatrelondon.com/ |
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The strong contrast in the Playhouse between the neat, well-mannered exterior and the demented vulgarity of the interior - the marvellous brio of the music hall sweeping into the straight theatre -arises from its curious and dramatic history. This is the building, which was originally erected in 1881-2 by Sefton Parry in the hope that the South-Eastern Railway would have to buy him out. They did not; in 1905, however, the original architect F. H. Fowler rebuilt the theatre and part of Charing Cross Station promptly fell upon it even before the first night! One of Parry's successors, Cyril Maude, got the compensation. Most of Fowler's facade remained undamaged , but new architects, Detmar Blow and Fernand Billerey, reconstructed the interior in 1906. Here we have another example of the stage box, this time demi-mondaine rather than royal, barely attached to the balconies. Intrusive walls are starting to appear, masked with illogical but highly amusing decoration.
In: Glasstone, Victor: Victorian and Edwardian Theatres: An Architectural and Social Survey. Harvard 1975 p. 114
Author: Victor Glasstone
Victor Glasstone:
Her Majesty's Theatre, Adelphi Theatre, Criterion Theatre, Grand Theatre and Opera House, Royal Shakespeare and Swan Theatre, Savoy Theatre, Playhouse Theatre, Empire Theatre, Garrick Theatre, Festival Theatre, King's Theatre, Shaftesbury Theatre, Alhambra, Prince's Theatre, Globe Theatre, Tivoli Music Hall, Aldwych Theatre, Hippodrome, Wyndham's, The Royal Pavilion Theatre, Imperial Theatre, Theatre Royal, Empire Music Hall, Metropole, Gielgud Theatre, London Opera HouseAdditional information
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