Grand Opera House, York

The Grand Opera House front entrance in 2008.

The Grand Opera House is a theatre in York, England. It is operated as part of the Ambassador Theatre Group. It plays host to touring productions of plays, musicals, opera and ballet, one-off performances by comedians, and other theatrical and musical events. The theatre has been designated a Grade II listed building by English Heritage.[1]

Origins

The Grand Opera House was not built as a theatre. It was a conversion of two buildings, one a warehouse, the other a corn exchange designed by G. A. Dean in 1868. The architect, Mr J. P. Briggs of London, was commissioned to perform the conversion, which took three months and cost £24,000. The theatre opened as the Grand Theatre and Opera House on 20 January 1902 with a performance of a pantomime (Little Red Riding Hood), starring Florrie Forde.

History

References

Notes

  1. "Grand Opera House", National Heritage List for England (English Heritage), retrieved 21 September 2011
  2. York History article

Sources

External links

Coordinates: 53°57′26″N 1°04′55″W / 53.95726°N 1.08186°W / 53.95726; -1.08186

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