The Theatres Trust

Queen's, Poplar

  • Theatre ID
    1144
  • Built / Converted
    1867
  • Dates of use
    • 1867 - 1956
  • Current state
    Demolished
  • Current use
    demolished
  • Address
    275-79 Poplar High Street, London, England

Details

The Queen’s Arms Public House was licensed to Fred Abrahams in 1863. Morris Abrahams was the last licensee named over the bar door of the theatre in 1956. The first music hall licence was granted to Fred Abrahams in 1865. A hall was built at the back of the pub in 1867. It was then known as the Oriental. In 1873 a completely new music hall, the New Albion, was designed by J T Robinson, amalgamating the pub. It was, as usual for this type of hall, squeezed on to back land, with its entrances in the single plot width between the Queen’s Arms and another pub, the Little George. When it closed in 1956 it was still, in part, the Robinson building, as modified by Bertie Crewe, and later by Thomas Braddock. At that time it had a wide three storey stucco façe, rather bland and featureless above the ground floor, apart from the name Queen’s Theatre in large relief letters on a deep, storey-height, plain band. At one end were the original three arched entrances; at the other end, the stalls bar entrance (which also served as artists’ entrance) incorporated an earlier coat of arms. Between the two was the remaining mid-Victorian Queen’s Arms pub front. Internally (like Collins’s) it retained, until the end, the feeling of a drinking music hall entered through a pub via narrow corridors and (in the case of the stalls) a long bar which opened on to the side of the auditorium. Until well into the twentieth century there was also an open bar at the back of the benched pit. At the rear there was a range of dressing rooms, looking rather like a terrace of cottages, and a detached painting room. An important building, and a serious loss. If it had survived twenty years longer it would probably have been listed Grade I or Grade II*.


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  • Other names
    The Oriental, New Albion
  • Events
    • 1867 - 1956 Use:
    • 1867 Design/Construction:
      • J H Good (DS of Poplar) - Architect
    • 1873 Alteration: new music hall incorporating pub
      • J T Robinson - Architect
    • 1897 - 1898 Alteration: Array various safety works and façade reconstructed
      • Bertie Crewe - Architect
    • 1921 - 1922 Alteration: Array alteration to ceiling, circle and front of house; ‘Little George’ pub incorporated into frontage
      • Bertie Crewe - Architect
    • 1937 Alteration: various alterations including rear cine projection room
      • Thomas Braddock - Architect
    • 1873 Design/Construction:
      • Pashley Newton & Co - Consultant: Decorators
    • 1863 Owner/Management: Fred Abrahams, pub licensee
    • Owner/Management: by mid 1890s: syndicate (Maltby, Wickes & Dalby Williams), owners; Fred Harris, manager
    • 1958 Owner/Management: J Baxter Somerville, owner (but never opened by him)
  • Capacities
    • Later: 1873: 3100 (!) 1905: 2000 1946: 1051
  • Listings
    • Grade Not listed

Of the period

Proscenium arch detail, Tyne Theatre & Opera House, 2000
Tyne Theatre & Opera House
Newcastle upon Tyne

Have you seen?

Auditorium at the Lyceum, Crewe, 1994
Lyceum (Crewe)
Crewe

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