The Theatres Trust

St Martin's

  • Theatre ID
    1098
  • Built / Converted
    1916
  • Dates of use
    • 1916: continuing
  • Current state
    Extant
  • Current use
    Theatre
  • Address
    9 West Street, Westminster, London, WC2H 9NZ, England
  • Website

Details

The St Martin's Theatre was planned at the same time and should have been completed with the Ambassador's (q.v.) but was delayed by the outbreak of the Great War. The two theatres were separate ventures but they were designed as companion buildings and stand on either side of Tower Court. Further research is needed to establish whether the executed design was modified in any way during the three years delay in building. St Martin's has a rather more imposing façe than the Ambassador's; ashlar faced in five bays with giant attached Ionic columns through the upper three storeys, supporting an entablature and parapet. A coat of arms above the parapet was blown down in World War II. Plain modern canopy over the entrance. Good foyer. The prettiness of the Ambassador's auditorium gives no warning of the classical sobriety to come at the St Martin's. Sprague's St Martin's auditorium abandons completely the exuberant displays of fibrous plaster work which typified theatre design (including Sprague's own designs) in previous decades. The style was described as 'Georgian'. Much polished hardwood. Flat side walls with imposing fluted Doric columns and piers, rising from pedestals at first balcony level to carry a correct entablature with triglyphs and mutules, continuing over the rectangular, cavetto-moulded proscenium. Two serpentine balconies, their fronts differently curved, both with turned hardwood balustrades. The lower one runs into single boxes on either side of the proscenium. One box is real, the other a dummy, but fully draped. Boxes also at rear of circle. The auditorium was splendidly redecorated in 1996. Unusually for such a late date, the substage has a remarkably fine (perhaps never used) set of wooden stage machinery, almost complete but marred by the insertion of a control room, eliminating paddle levers and sliders.


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  • Other names
    Irving Theatre
  • Events
    • Owner/Management: Designed and built for Lord Willoughby de Broke
    • 1916 Use: continuing
    • 1916 Design/Construction:
      • Lenn Thomas & Co - Contractor
      • W G R Sprague - Architect
    • 1995 - 1996 Alteration: redecoration
      • Carl Toms - Consultant: Redecoration
    • 1998 Alteration: replica of 1916 canopy
      • Christopher Stedman - Architect
  • Capacities
    • Original: 600
    • Later: 1946: 537 1950: 550
    • Current: 546
  • Listings
    • Grade II
  • Stage type
    • Pros flat
  • Dimensions
    • Stage dimensions: Depth: 24ft (7.30m) Width SL: 23ft 6in (7.16m) SR: 17ft 5in-23ft 6in (5.33-7.16m)
    • Proscenium width: 26ft (7.92m)
    • Height to grid: 50ft (15.24m)

Of the period

Exterior of the Grand Theatre, Cockermouth, 1997
Grand (Cockermouth)
Cockermouth

Have you seen?

Auditorium stage left, box, stalls and balcony, Nelson Palace Theatre, August 2009
Nelson Palace Theatre
Nelson

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