The Theater Royal, Drury Lane, Catherine Street, WC2B 5JF, is a theater of the air conditioning in Covent Garden, Westminster, London's West End. The current building of the theater is the latest of four theaters that were located in the same location since 1663, what makes the Royal Theater of the oldest theater in London. The present building was included in Class I in February 1958 by English Heritage. The first incarnation of the theater are revealed after the Puritan Interregnum, a 11-year ban on "frivolous" hobbies, including theater. It is open 7 May 1663 and was known as the "King's Playhouse" by many. The original building was a wooden three-story, 112 meter long and 59 feet wide. At most, it could hold 700 spectators. Performance during this period was generally around 3 p. m. to make use of daylight. There was no roof over the pit public, which often left the participants to play thank you from the elements. When the first theater was destroyed by fire in 1672, the second stage, called "Theater Royal Drury Lane, opened in 1794. The theater lasted nearly 120 years but was demolished in 1791 to make way for a larger theater, which opened in 1794. This theater has lasted 15 years, as it burned in 1809. The theater still existing today at the opening on October 10 1812. It seats about 2237 people who, despite still being considered as a great theater, it is about 550 seats smaller than the old building. Since its opening, it was visited by Shakespearean actors, comedians, composers and performers of music and the same comedy troupe Monty Python, who recorded an album there together. World War II forced the theater to close temporarily during the war, the theater was used as headquarters of the Entertainments National Service Association. Although the theater has suffered minor bomb damage, it was reopened in 1946 with Noel Coward's "Pacific 1860". Since the war, he produced mostly musical theater, including several Rodgers and Hammerstein, including the musicals "Oklahoma!" In 1946, "South Pacific" in 1951 and "The King and I" in 1953 . Other productions have included "My Fair Lady", which has a term of five years beginning in 1958, "42nd Street" from 1984 to 1989, Miss Saigon from 1989 to 1999 and, more recently, "The Producers ", which closed in January 2007, a musical adaptation of" The Lord of the Rings ", which closed 19 July 2008, and" Oliver! "which began immediately after the close of" The Lord of the Rings. "The Drury Lane Theater is currently owned by Andrew Lloyd Webber. It is often named as one of the most haunted theaters. One of the most famous spirits alleged to haunt the theater is "the man in gray," a man whose skeleton was found in a room with walls up in 1848. Other supposed ghost in the theater the minds of Joe Grimaldi comedian and actor Charles Macklin.











Leave a Reply