The Theatres Trust

Lyceum (London)

  • Theatre ID
    2023
  • Built / Converted
    1834
  • Current state
    Extant
  • Current use
    Theatre
  • Address
    Wellington Street, Strand, Westminster, London, WC2E 7RQ, England

Details

The Lyceum is a building of outstanding national importance, architecturally and theatrically. Its history is complex. A public building of this name stood on an adjoining site (now covered by Wellington Street) in 1772, then a theatre from 1794 until Wellington Street was formed, when a new theatre was built on the present site. This opened in 1834. It was for long managed by Sir Henry Irving and was famous for its association with him and Ellen Terry (their last performance in 1902). The Crewe interior is post-Irving and was intended to be a variety house to compete with the Palace and the London Coliseum but it was not a success in this mode and soon reverted to drama. It was purchased by the LCC in 1939 for demolition in connection with a road improvement, later abandoned. Leased to Mecca, it became a ballroom. The abolition of the GLC in 1986 led to a period of darkness and uncertainty, during which the London Residuary Body sold a 125-year lease to Brent Walker before transferring the freehold to The Theatres Trust, who eventually negotiated terms for a transfer of Brent Walker’s unexpired term to Apollo Leisure, who set about works of restoration and improvement. They reopened the theatre in 1996 as a home for large-scale musicals. Despite the fact that the symmetrical neo-classical composition was altered at upper level by 1904 and the domed attic lost, Samuel Beazley’s 1834 façe and portico remain today as rare and valuable pre-Victorian survivals. The portico stands over the public footway (cf Haymarket) and is a striking incident in the view up Wellington Street from the Strand. The Crewe theatre occupied a wider plot than the earlier building and the portico and entrance staircase are, as a consequence, offset from the axis of the auditorium. The splendid foyer and staircase lead now to Crewe’s richly ornamented variety house interior. The rococo-ornamented panel over the proscenium is, perhaps, rather too deep for complete comfort, but the auditorium must, nevertheless, be rated as one of the most flamboyant in Britain. The most striking alteration in the 1996 works was the total rebuilding of the stage house to give flying height for the most demanding modern productions. The old stage house was the result of a patchwork of alterations and additions to the Beazley/Phipps stage with further enlargement by Crewe. The new fly tower is, as it must be for a major musical house, a landmark. The orchestra pit has been enlarged to a size suitable for Grand Opera. Apollo’s initial auditorium decorations were criticised by some and the renewed ceiling paintings are, undoubtedly, a touch raw and startling, but this remains one of the most impressive reawakenings of recent years and one which would have seemed highly unlikely as recently as the mid 1980s. It is time that this building was fully researched and an authoritative architectural account published.


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  • Other names
    Theatre Royal, Lyceum, Theatre Royal, English Opera House, English Opera House, Royal Lyceum Theatre
  • Events
    • 1834 Design/Construction:
      • Samuel Beazley - Architect
    • 1882 Alteration: partially reconstructed and improved
      • C J Phipps - Architect
    • 1884 Alteration: circle fronts redecorated and altered
      • C J Phipps - Architect
    • 1904 Alteration: rebuilt behind Beazley’s façade and portico
      • Bertie Crewe - Architect
    • 1919 Alteration: minor alterations
      • Edward Jones - Architect
    • 1951 Alteration: converted to Mecca Ballroom
      • Matthews & Sons - Architect
    • 1996 Alteration: reconverted to theatre; total rebuilding of stage house; auditorium restored and redecorated; adjoining building incorporated
      • Holohan Architects - Architect
    • 1996 Design/Construction:
      • Arup Acoustics - Consultant: Acoustical Consultants
      • Thorborn Colquhoun - Consultant: Structural Engineers
      • Amanda Fletcher - Consultant: Interior Design
    • Owner/Management: For licensees to 1930, see Diana Howard, op. cit.
    • Owner/Management: Subsequently owned by LCC and then GLC and leased to Mecca
    • 1989 Owner/Management: From owned by The Theatres Trust but leased (before their acquisition) to Brent Walker
    • Owner/Management: leased by The Theatres Trust to Apollo Leisure
  • Capacities
    • Current: 2000
  • Listings
    • Grade II*
  • Stage type
    • Proscenium Flat
  • Dimensions
    • Stage dimensions: Depth: 16m
    • Proscenium width: 13m
    • Height to grid: 22m
    • Orchestra pit: Enlarged for 75-100
  • Unreliable anecdotes
    Apart from the portico, which survives from the earlier building, the present Lyceum was not the scene of Irving’s triumphs

Of the period

Auditorium of the Almeida Theatre
Almeida
London

Have you seen?

Façade of the Winter Gardens, Bournemouth, 1994
Winter Gardens (Bournemouth)
Bournemouth

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