Leicester Square Theatre

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Leicester Square Theatre
Notre Dame Hall
Cavern in the Town
The Venue
AddressLeicester Place
London, WC2
United Kingdom
Coordinates51°30′37″N 0°07′49″W / 51.510278°N 0.130278°W / 51.510278; -0.130278Coordinates: 51°30′37″N 0°07′49″W / 51.510278°N 0.130278°W / 51.510278; -0.130278
Public transitLondon Underground Leicester Square
OwnerLondon International Arts Theatre
Capacity400 seats
Opened1953; 69 years ago (1953)
Website
www.leicestersquaretheatre.com

The Leicester Square Theatre is a 400-seat theatre near Leicester Square, in the City of Westminster, London. It was previously known as Notre Dame Hall, Cavern in the Town and The Venue. The theatre hosts stand-up comedy, cabaret, music, plays and comedies.

History[]

The building originated as the Notre Dame Hall in 1953, replacing an earlier building that had been destroyed by World War II bombing, and part of the rebuild of the adjacent Notre Dame de France church, and the hall was used as a French cultural centre for a time. It became a popular music venue in the 1960s under the name Cavern in the Town, regularly hosting beat music group The Small Faces. It was renamed Notre Dame Hall in the 1970s and presented The Rolling Stones and The Who, but specialised in punk music, hosting such acts as The Sex Pistols. In 1979, The Clash previewed material from London Calling here shortly before recording the album. In 2001, it was converted to a theatre and named The Venue. [1]

As The Venue productions included the world premiere of the Boy George musical Taboo, which played a highly successful run in 2002 before transferring to Broadway and Round the Horne (2003)

In 2008 the theatre was under new ownership and underwent refurbishment of the auditorium and bars and reopened in August with the new name of Leicester Square Theatre. The opening season included American comedian Joan Rivers making her acting debut with her play "Joan Rivers: A Work in Progress by a Life in Progress", which played a total of 75 performances to celebrate her birthday. A musical based on the comic strip Alex, by Charles Peattie and Russell Taylor, starring Robert Bathurst, finished the year 2008.

In the subsequent years Leicester Square Theatre has been host to many comedians, theatre and music shows including comedians Al Murray, Andy Parsons, Arabella Weir, Dave Chappelle, Ed Gamble, Janey Godley, Jerry Sadowitz, Jim Gaffigan, Kae Kurd, Mark Thomas, Michelle Wolf, Micky Flanagan, Rachel Parris, Ricky Gervais, Ruby Wax, Sean Lock, Tom Stade and Austentatious established their audience playing regularly. Theatre shows include, Stick Man, Tiddler, Scarecrows Wedding, Private Peaceful, An Evening With Joan Collins and Musik (the Pet Shop Boys Musical). Music from Blake, Mark Kingswood, Macy Gray, Buddy Grecco, Joe Longthorne, Hazel O’Connor & Boy George.

Regular performers who return to the venue regularly include Bill Bailey, Frank Skinner, Frankie Boyle, Henning Wehn, Richard Herring, Stacey Kent and Stewart Lee. Leicester Square Theatre has a long-standing relationship with the children's theatre show Stick Man which has been a regular feature for 10 years over the festive season. Shitfaced Shakespeare and Shitfaced Showtime provide fun summer and festive entertainment with a yearly run.

Leicester Square Theatre launched its New Comedian of the Year competition in 2009. This competition has seen many well-known acts come through to become finalists including Rob Beckett, Rachel Parris, Dane Baptise, Sofie Hagen, Tim Renkow, , Bilal Zafar and Tez Ilyas. It is well regarded as one of the best New Comedian competitions and has led onto the Not So New Comedian Competition and Sketch Off both running at our sister venue The Museum of Comedy.

The theatre is owned and managed by artistic director Martin Witts.

References[]

  1. ^ Witts, Martin. "History: The Talk of the Town – The Leicester Square Theatre", Leicester Square Theatre, accessed 23 September 2012

External links[]

Official website

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