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Haymarket Theatre Royal

  • Theatre
  • Leicester Square
New_Theatre Royal002.jpg
© Susie Rea
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Time Out says

This storied (and potentially haunted) venue is one of London's oldest theatres

Dating back to the eighteenth century, Theatre Royal Haymarket is London's third oldest theatre that's still in use. On the outside, its gleaming white Neoclassical facade, designed by John Nash, features six stately Corinthian columns. On the inside, things have often been rather less dignified. The theatre's riotous history includes the 'Dreadful Accident' of 1794, where 20 people were killed in a crush of audience members trying to glimpse the king. It was also the home of legendarily scurrilous 18th century actor, theatre manager and satirist Samuel Foote, whose digs at other performers regularly threatened the theatre's existence. 

Perhaps unsurprisingly, given its long and eventful history, it's also one of London's most haunted theatres. Actor Patrick Stewart is the latest person to have claimed to see the ghost of the theatre's Victorian actor-manager, John Baldwin Buckstone, who apparently hangs out in the wings, wearing tweeds, when a comedy is playing. 

Unlike its West End neighbours, Theatre Royal Haymarket offers a clutch of fresh openings each year. One of the finest proscenium arches in theatreland frames a line-up that focuses on 'proper theatre': you'll regularly get celeb-led takes on classic 20th century plays, as well as the odd production of Shakespeare or a new musical. 

Details

Address:
18 Suffolk St
London
SW1Y 4HT
Transport:
Piccadilly Circus tube
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What’s on

Waiting for Godot

  • Experimental

Despite the late Irish titan’s estate being famously resistant to any sort of major innovation when it comes to revivals of his work, Samuel Beckett’s existential masterpiece ‘Waiting for Godot’ still gets wheeled out semi-frequently: it’s too good and too singular to bother fretting over whether or not you can radically reinvent it or not (NB, you can’t). This is the first time it’s had a full-on West End production since Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart did it in 2009, though, as heavyweights Lucian Msamati and Ben Whishaw take on the role of tramps Estragon and Vladimir, lolling about in a no-man’s land while kidding themselves that the mysterious Godot is going to visit them sometime soon. The great director James Macdonald – renowned for his work with the likes of Caryl Churchill, Sarah Kane and Annie Baker – will helm things while trying not to annoy the Beckett estate.

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