Phoenix Theatre (London)

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Phoenix Theatre
Phoenix Theatre, July 2007
Address
City
Designation Grade II
Architect Giles Gilbert Scott, Bertie Crewe and Cecil Masey
Owned by Ambassador Theatre Group
Capacity 1,012 on 3 levels
Type West End theatre
Opened 24 September 1930
Production Blood Brothers
www.theambassadors.com/phoenix/
Coordinates: 51°30′52″N 0°07′46″W / 51.514444, -0.129556

The Phoenix Theatre is a West End theatre in the London Borough of Camden, located on Charing Cross Road (at the corner with Flitcroft Street). The entrance is in Phoenix Street.

The theatre was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, Bertie Crewe and Cecil Masey and is Grade II listed. It has a restrained neoclassical exterior, but an interior designed in an Italianate style by director and designer Theodore Komisarjevsky. It opened on 24 September 1930 with the première of Private Lives by Noel Coward, who also appeared in the play, with Adrienne Allen, Gertrude Lawrence and a then young Laurence Olivier. Coward returned to the theatre with Tonight at 8.30 in 1936 and Quadrille in 1952. On 16 December 1969, the long association with Coward was celebrated with a midnight matinee in honour of his 70th birthday, and the foyer bar was renamed the Noel Coward Bar.

The Phoenix has had a number of successful plays including John Gielgud's Love for Love during the Second World War. Harlequinade and The Browning Version, two plays by Terence Rattigan, opened on 8 September 1948 at the theatre.

In the mid 1950s, Paul Scofield and Peter Brook appeared at the theatre. In 1968, a musical version of Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales opened and ran for around two thousand performances. Night and Day, a 1978 play by Tom Stoppard, ran for two years.

The theatre has hosted many musicals in the 1980s and 90s, including The Baker's Wife by Stephen Schwarz, directed by Trevor Nunn, and Into the Woods by Stephen Sondheim, starring Julia McKenzie. There were also a number of plays by Shakespeare.

The current production is Blood Brothers, a 1982 Willy Russell musical. This transferred from the Albery Theatre in 1991, and is now the longest running production at the theatre.

The theatre is owned by the Ambassador Theatre Group.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Guide to British Theatres 1750-1950, John Earl and Michael Sell pp. 131 (Theatres Trust, 2000) ISBN 0-7136-5688-3

[edit] External links