(Redirected from Albery Theatre)
The 'Noël Coward Theatre' is a
West End theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the
City of Westminster. It opened on
March 12,
1903 as the 'New Theatre', and was built by
Sir Charles Wyndham behind
Wyndham's Theatre which was completed in 1899. The building was designed by architect
W.G.R. Sprague with an exterior in the
Classical style and an interior in the
Rococo style.
In
1973 it was renamed the 'Albery Theatre' in tribute to the late Sir Bronson Albery who had presided as its manager for many years. Since September 2005, the theatre has been owned by Delfont-Mackintosh Ltd. It underwent major refurbishment in 2006, and was renamed the
Noël Coward Theatre when it re-opened for the London premiere of ''
Avenue Q'' on
1 June 2006. Coward, one of Britain's greatest playwrights and actors, made his West End debut in his own play, ''I'll Leave It To You'', at the then New Theatre in 1920.
The theatre seats 872 patrons on 4 levels. The building is now a Grade II
Listed structure.
Notable productions
After opening in 1903 with a production of ''Rosemary'' starring Charles Wyndham and his wife,
Mary Moore, the Noël Coward Theatre has hosted a number of notable productions. ''I'll Leave it to You'', in 1920, was Coward's first play.
George Bernard Shaw's ''
St. Joan'' with an acclaimed performance by actress
Sybil Thorndike ran in 1924.

John Gielgud directed and played the title role in a legendary production of ''
Hamlet'' at the New Theatre in 1934.
The 1930s saw the greatest commercial success of
John Gielgud's career, ''
Richard of Bordeaux'' (1933).
Gielgud followed up this triumph with a legendary production of ''
Hamlet'' in which he both played the title role and directed a company that included
Jessica Tandy,
Jack Hawkins, and a young
Alec Guinness in one of his first professional roles as Osric.
Gielgud also appeared with
Laurence Olivier,
Peggy Ashcroft and
Edith Evans in ''
Romeo and Juliet''. With
the Blitz, came the destruction of the theatres that were home to the
Old Vic and
Sadler's Wells Theatre Companies. Both companies made the New Theatre home until their respective theatres were rebuilt in the 1950s. One of the most successful shows to play the New Theatre opened
30 June 1960, it was
Lionel Bart's musical retelling of
Charles Dickens' ''
Oliver Twist'', ''
Oliver!.'' It ran for 2,618 performances.
In 1981, ''
Children of a Lesser God'' won
Olivier Awards for Best New Play and for actors
Trevor Eve and Elizabeth Quinn. Among some of the notable productions recently is the 1994 revival of
Turgenev's ''
A Month in the Country'' starring
Helen Mirren and
John Hurt.
Recently, the theatre has played host to some notable Shakespeare productions including a production of ''
Twelfth Night'' set in India with an entirely Asian cast. The production played to packed houses and only closed as the
Royal Shakespeare Company themselves had exclusive rights to perform their annual London season of Tragedies there. Between December 2004 and April 2005, they presented ''
Hamlet'', ''
Romeo & Juliet'', ''
Macbeth'', ''
King Lear'' and a brand new production of Euripedes' ''
Hecuba'' starring
Vanessa Redgrave.
On
8 June 2005,
Dion Boucicault's Victorian melodrama ''
The Shaughraun'' opened; however, its success at the Dublin
Gate Theatre was not repeated in London and it closed on
30 July. A dark period of around three months followed before the theatre was transferred to the ownership of Delfont Mackintosh Limited and reopened in October 2005 with The Right's Size's new production ''
Ducktastic!''. Once again this failed to live up to expectations and closed just three weeks after opening on
19 November 2005. A short Christmas season of
Patrick Stewart's one-man version of Charles Dickens' ''
A Christmas Carol'' played from
6 December to
31 December 2005, before the theatre hosted the
Edinburgh Festival hit drama ''
Blackbird'' starring
Roger Allam. It is currently hosting the European premiere of the
Broadway hit, ''
Avenue Q'', which started previewing on 2nd June 2006 and had its opening night on 28th June 2006.
Recent and present productions
★ ''Endgame'' (10 March 2004 - 1 May 2004) by
Samuel Beckett, starring
Lee Evans and
Michael Gambon
★ ''Suddenly Last Summer'' (14 May 2004 - 31 July 2004) by
Tennessee Williams, starring
Diana Rigg
★ ''Twelfth Night'' (26 August 2004 - 30 October 2004) by
William Shakespeare, starring
Raza Jaffrey and
Kulvinder Ghir
★ The RSC's ''Hamlet'' (23 November 2004 - 11 December 2004) by
William Shakespeare, starring
Toby Stephens
★ ''Peter Pan - 100 Years of Peter Pan (19 December 2004) by
JM Barrie
★ The RSC's ''Romeo and Juliet'' (21 December 2004 - 8 January 2005) by
William Shakespeare
★ The RSC's ''King Lear'' (18 January 2005 - 5 February 2005) by
William Shakespeare, starring
Corin Redgrave
★ The RSC's ''Macbeth'' (16 February 2005 - 5 March 2005) by
William Shakespeare
★ The RSC's ''Hecuba'' (7 April 2005 - 7 May 2005) by
Tony Harrison, adapted from Euripides, starring
Vanessa Redgrave
★ ''
The Shaughraun'' (8 June 2005 - 30 July 2005) by Dion Boucicault
★ ''
Ducktastic!'' (19 October 2005 - 19 November 2005) by
Sean Foley and
Hamish McColl
★ ''Celebration - Harold Pinter'' (1 December 2005 - 3 December 2005) by
Harold Pinter
★ ''A Christmas Carol'' (7 December 2005 - 31 December 2005) by
Patrick Stewart. adapted from
Charles Dickens, starring
Patrick Stewart
★ ''Blackbird'' (13 February 2006 - 13 May 2006) by David Harrower, starring
Roger Allam and
Jodhi May
★ ''
Avenue Q'' (28 June 2006 - )
External links
★
DelfontMackintosh.co.uk — official webpage for the Noël Coward Theatre on the Delfont Mackintosh website
★
Theatre History