Westminster Theatre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Westminster Theatre was a London theatre, on Palace Street in Westminster. It was originally built as the Charlotte Chapel in 1766, which was altered and given a new frontage for use as a cinema from 1924 onwards. It finally became a theatre in 1931 after radical alterations. By the time it fell out of use in the late 20th century, it had been remodelled twice more (in 1966 and 1972) and had three storeys, a 560 seat main house and a 100 seat studio theatre.
It was bought in the late 1940s by Moral Re-Armament, who held it for the following twenty years. In the 1950s and 1960s it was the base for Furndel Productions, run by actor Alan Badel and producer William Anthony Furness. A long campaign to save it from demolition by its then owners ended when a fire destroyed 75% of the building on 27th June 2002, with demolition coming soon afterwards.
[edit] Notable productions
- Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband, 1943, with Martita Hunt as Mrs Cheveley
- Eden and Adelaide Phillpott's comedy Yellow Sands, from 29 March 1945, with Cedric Hardwicke as Richard Varwell
- Henry V, July 1953, Elizabethan Theatre Company, notable as the first London play ever to be directed by John Barton.
- The Duenna ( Music: Julian Slade Lyrics & Book: Dorothy Reynolds) London production, opened July 28 1954 and ran for 134 performances
- British Touring Shakespeare Company, Hamlet, 2002