Difference between revisions of "Whitehall Theatre [London] (Q9313)"
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(Created claim: Redevelopment date (P104): 2020, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1699364997969) | (Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939) | ||
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| Property / Carthalia ID | |||
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| Property / Carthalia ID: 1142 / rank | |||
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| Property / Modern Opera Houses index | |||
| + | I. p. 40 ; III. pp. 64, 66. | ||
| Property / Modern Opera Houses index: I. p. 40 ; III. pp. 64, 66. / rank | |||
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| Property / theatricalia id | |||
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| Property / theatricalia id: 8e/trafalgar-theatre-london-london / rank | |||
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| Property / Preservation state | |||
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| Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank | |||
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| Property / Preservation state | |||
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| Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank | |||
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| Property / Note | |||
| + | Built 1930 by Edward A. Stone for Walter Hackett. Interior decoration by Marc-Henri Levy and Gaston Laverdet. Opened 29 Sep 1930 as Whitehall Theatre with Walter Hackett's The Way to Treat a Woman. Originally used as a drama theatre. From 1942, used for Phyllis Dixey's revues. 1945-1969 used for farce performances (e. g. R. F. Delderfield's comedy Worm's Eye View that ran for 2245 performances from 1945). From 1971, used for a nude musical. In the late 1970s, unauthorised use as a tourist-trap war museum (Theatre of War). Saved as a theatre by public activity of the Theatres Trust and the Save London's Theatres Campaign. Ca. 1985 bought by the Maybox Group, restored and re-opened as a theatre. 2004 renamed Trafalgar Studios, later Trafalgar Theatre. Operated by the Ambassador Theatre Group. Originally 635 seats, today 648 seats. (English) | ||
| Property / Note: Built 1930 by Edward A. Stone for Walter Hackett. Interior decoration by Marc-Henri Levy and Gaston Laverdet. Opened 29 Sep 1930 as Whitehall Theatre with Walter Hackett's The Way to Treat a Woman. Originally used as a drama theatre. From 1942, used for Phyllis Dixey's revues. 1945-1969 used for farce performances (e. g. R. F. Delderfield's comedy Worm's Eye View that ran for 2245 performances from 1945). From 1971, used for a nude musical. In the late 1970s, unauthorised use as a tourist-trap war museum (Theatre of War). Saved as a theatre by public activity of the Theatres Trust and the Save London's Theatres Campaign. Ca. 1985 bought by the Maybox Group, restored and re-opened as a theatre. 2004 renamed Trafalgar Studios, later Trafalgar Theatre. Operated by the Ambassador Theatre Group. Originally 635 seats, today 648 seats. (English) / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
| Property / Note: Built 1930 by Edward A. Stone for Walter Hackett. Interior decoration by Marc-Henri Levy and Gaston Laverdet. Opened 29 Sep 1930 as Whitehall Theatre with Walter Hackett's The Way to Treat a Woman. Originally used as a drama theatre. From 1942, used for Phyllis Dixey's revues. 1945-1969 used for farce performances (e. g. R. F. Delderfield's comedy Worm's Eye View that ran for 2245 performances from 1945). From 1971, used for a nude musical. In the late 1970s, unauthorised use as a tourist-trap war museum (Theatre of War). Saved as a theatre by public activity of the Theatres Trust and the Save London's Theatres Campaign. Ca. 1985 bought by the Maybox Group, restored and re-opened as a theatre. 2004 renamed Trafalgar Studios, later Trafalgar Theatre. Operated by the Ambassador Theatre Group. Originally 635 seats, today 648 seats. (English) / qualifier | |||
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Latest revision as of 12:23, 11 September 2025
Theatre building in London, United Kingdom
- Whitehall Theatre
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Whitehall Theatre [London] | Theatre building in London, United Kingdom |
|
Statements
51°30'23.760"N, 0°7'39.000"W
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Built 1930 by Edward A. Stone for Walter Hackett. Interior decoration by Marc-Henri Levy and Gaston Laverdet. Opened 29 Sep 1930 as Whitehall Theatre with Walter Hackett's The Way to Treat a Woman. Originally used as a drama theatre. From 1942, used for Phyllis Dixey's revues. 1945-1969 used for farce performances (e. g. R. F. Delderfield's comedy Worm's Eye View that ran for 2245 performances from 1945). From 1971, used for a nude musical. In the late 1970s, unauthorised use as a tourist-trap war museum (Theatre of War). Saved as a theatre by public activity of the Theatres Trust and the Save London's Theatres Campaign. Ca. 1985 bought by the Maybox Group, restored and re-opened as a theatre. 2004 renamed Trafalgar Studios, later Trafalgar Theatre. Operated by the Ambassador Theatre Group. Originally 635 seats, today 648 seats. (English)
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1930
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2020
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I. p. 40 ; III. pp. 64, 66.
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