The Lyric Theatre is a West End theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue in the City of Westminster. It was built for the producer Henry Leslie, who financed it from the profits of the light opera hit, Dorothy, which he transferred from its original venue to open the new theatre on 17 December 1888.
In a 2017 survey of London's theatres, Michael Coveney observes that the 1880s marked the beginning of "a building boom … that signals the true making of the West End".[2] The Lyric was one of twelve new or wholly rebuilt theatres of that decade.[n 1] It was the second theatre to be constructed in Shaftesbury Avenue and is the oldest still surviving.[n 2] It was commissioned by the producer Henry Leslie with profits from the Alfred Cellier and B. C. Stephenson hit, Dorothy; Leslie was said to have made £100,000 from the show.[16] The architect was C. J. Phipps, who also designed the Savoy, Lyceum and Her Majesty's theatres.[17]
The theatre is on four levels, and originally had a capacity of 1,306, later reduced to about 900.[18] A contemporary description of the new theatre said, "The façade is of the Renaissance style in red brick and Portland stone, divided in the centre and two wings, each surmounted with a high pitched gable with recessed arcades" and "The frame of the proscenium is of brown and white alabaster: the sides of the stalls and pit are lined with walnut and sycamore panelling, with handsome carved mouldings".[19] The theatre retains many of its original features, including an original 1767 house front, incorporated into the rear of the building, the former house and museum of Sir William Hunter.[n 3]
The theatre opened on 17 December 1888 with the 817th performance of Dorothy, transferred from the Prince of Wales Theatre.[21] The piece starred Marie Tempest in the title role, with Amy Augarde, Florence Perry and Hayden Coffin.[22] In a short speech after the performance Leslie told the audience he hoped "to follow the plan of the Paris Opéra-Comique in producing works by native composers".[22]Dorothy was followed in April 1889 by Doris, by the same author and composer, which failed to emulate its predecessor's record-breaking success and closed after a modest run of 202 performances.[23] Leslie's third offering, The Red Hussar by Henry Pottinger Stephens and Edward Solomon, ran for 175 performances from November 1889, after which Leslie gave up the Lyric. Horace Sedger became the licensee, manager and sole lessee, at the then enormous rent of £6,500 a year.[24]
In 1894 George Edwardes produced His Excellency, a comic opera with a libretto by Gilbert and music by F. Osmond Carr. It closed after 162 performances, victim of an influenza epidemic that kept audiences away from theatres.[33]William Greet then took the theatre, presenting The Sign of the Cross, written by and starring Wilson Barrett. This play, about a Roman patrician converted to Christianity by his love for a Christian girl, brought people to the Lyric who had never before entered a theatre,[18] and it ran for 435 performances from January 1896.[34] Greet and Barrett followed this with the latter's Daughters of Babylon, co-starring Maud Jeffries; among the junior members of the enormous cast was the young Constance Collier.[35] In 1897 and 1898 two French actresses played seasons at the Lyric, first Gabrielle Réjane and then Sarah Bernhardt.[23] For the rest of the 1890s musical pieces returned: Little Miss Nobody by Harry Graham with music by Arthur E. Godfrey and Landon Ronald (1898), L'amour mouille by Louis Varney (1899), and most successful, Florodora (1899), starring Evie Greene, which ran for 455 performances and was also a hit in New York.[23][36]
1900–1914
In 1902 Johnston Forbes-Robertson starred in a season; his repertory included Othello and Hamlet, with Gertrude Elliott as his co-star.[23] His Hamlet was described in the press as "the most refined and beautiful embodiment of Hamlet vouchsafed to our generation",[37] and "a revelation".[38]Max Beerbohm said, "He shows us, for the first time, Hamlet as a quite definite and intelligible being".[39]
In 1910 the Lyric presented The Chocolate Soldier, a musical version of Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man, with music by Oscar Straus; Shaw detested the piece and called it "that degradation of a decent comedy into a dirty farce",[44] but the public liked it, and it ran for 500 performances.[25][42]Philip Michael Faraday, co-producer of this success, became sole director of the Lyric in 1911 and presented Nightbirds (an adaptation of Die Fledermaus, 1912), The Five Frankforters (described as a "Viennese banking comedy", 1912), The Girl in the Taxi (1912), The Girl Who Didn't (1913), and Mamzelle Tralala (1914).[42][45]
1914–1929
William Greet was succeeded as lessee by Edward Engelbach in 1914. For a while, musical productions were not seen at the Lyric, and non-musical drama prevailed, including On Trial, an unusual melodrama that opened with the end of the story and worked backwards to the beginning.[46] It had a satisfactory run of 174 performances.[47]Romance, starring Doris Keane and Owen Nares, transferred from the Duke of York's Theatre to the Lyric, where it finished its run of 1,049 performances.[47][48] Keane then starred in the comedy Roxana (1918); the reviews were excellent. In 1919 she played Juliet opposite the Romeo of her husband, Basil Sydney; this time the reviews were dreadful. The Nurse, played by Ellen Terry, was seen as the saving grace of the production.[49]
Non-musical plays dominated the Lyric's programmes in the rest of the 1920s. The theatre historians Mander and Mitchenson write that in 1926 and 1927 two names became closely associated with the theatre: "Three plays by Avery Hopwood had outstanding runs: The Best People, written in collaboration with David Grey (1926), 309 performances; The Gold Diggers (1926), 180 performances; and The Garden of Eden (1927), 232 performances".[47] The last two featured the actress Tallulah Bankhead, then a considerable box-office draw among the "bright young things" of the 1920s. She appeared again at the Lyric in Her Cardboard Lover (1928) and Let Us Be Gay (1929).[47]
Priestley's Bees on the Boatdeck (1936), directed by and starring Ralph Richardson and Olivier, was not a success;[56] Maurice Colbourne's Charles the King (1936) fared better; Gwen Ffrangcon-Davies and Barry Jones starred.[55] In 1936 Edward VIII lifted the long-standing ban on stage personations of his great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, and Laurence Housman's Victoria Regina, seen only in private performance up to this point, was given its first public production, with Pamela Stanley in the title role, and ran for 337 performances.[55]
In April 1954 another long run (433 performances) began with Hippo Dancing, another Roussin plot, adapted by and starring Morley.[55][58] There were good runs in 1955 with My Three Angels, an adaptation of Albert Husson's comedy La Cuisine des anges, and in 1956 with Coward's romantic comedy South Sea Bubble, starring Vivien Leigh and subsequently Elizabeth Sellars (276 performances).[59]
The Lyric began the decade with The Battle of Shrivings by Peter Shaffer (1970), described by a reviewer as "the biggest flop of his career";[66] it starred John Gielgud as a celibate vegetarian philosopher.[67]Alan Ayckbourn's comedy How the Other Half Loves opened on 5 August 1970 and ran for 869 performances.[68] In 1972–73 Deborah Kerr appeared in The Day After the Fair, an adaptation of a story by Thomas Hardy, which ran for seven months and then closed to allow the star to open the play in the US.[69]
A revival of Joe Orton's Loot in 1984 made headlines when the star, Leonard Rossiter, died in his dressing-room during a performance.[90] The run continued with Dinsdale Landen in the role.[91] There was a short-lived return to musical theatre in 1985, with a stage adaptation of Lerner and Loewe's film Gigi.[92] Ayckbourn and Russell were again on the bill, with the former's A Chorus of Disapproval (1986) and the latter's non-musical comedy One for the Road (1987).[93] In 1988–89 Brian Rix presented and starred in a revival of the Whitehall farceDry Rot, thirty years after its original London run.[94]
The theatre reopened on 5 December 2020, with a socially distanced production of the musical Six, but closed due to further pandemic restrictions on 15 December.[101] The musical reopened at the theatre on in May 2021 and ran until August.[102]Get Up, Stand Up! The Bob Marley Musical opened at the theatre in October 2021[103] and ran for 15 months before closing in January 2023. A revival of Aspects of Love, starring Michael Ball, opened in May 2023 for a limited 6 month run but closed early in August 2023 after receiving negative reviews.[104][105]Peter Pan Goes Wrong ran at the Lyric from November 2023 to January 2024,[106] followed by the West End premiere of Hadestown, which opened at the theatre in February 2024.[107]
^Sheppard, F. H. W. (ed). "Shaftesbury Avenue"Archived 17 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Survey of London: Volumes 31 and 32, St James Westminster, Part 2, (1963), pp. 68–84. British History Online. Retrieved 12 July 2020
^"Romeo and Juliet at the Lyric", The Athenaeum, 25 April 1919, pp. 234–234; "Doris Keane's Juliet", The New York Times, 18 May 1919, p. 2; "Romeo and Juliet Revived", The Graphic, 19 April 1919, p. 28; and "Romeo and Juliet", The Pall Mall Gazette, 14 April 1919, p. 9
^Wardle, Irving. "John, Paul, George, Ringo … and Bert", The Times, 16 August 1974; and "Theatres", The Times, 16 August 1975, p. 6
^Wardle, Irving. "The Birthday Party", The Times, 9 January 1975, p. 12
^Lewsen Charles. "Chekhov's perplexing challenge", The Times, 29 October 1975, p. 13; and Wardle, Irving. "The Bed Before Yesterday", The Times, 10 December 1975 p. 8
^Wardle, Irving. "Taking Steps", The Times, 3 September 1980, p. 3; "Theatres", The Times, 26 September 1980, p. 22; and "Theatres", The Times, 26 May 1981, p. 21
^Wardle, Irving. "Tonight at 8.30", The Times, 12 August 1981, p. 11
^Larkin, Colin (ed). "Blood Brothers (stage musical)", Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Oxford University Press, 2006. Retrieved 13 July 2020 (subscription required)[dead link]
Gaye, Freda, ed. (1967). Who's Who in the Theatre (fourteenth ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons. OCLC5997224.
Herbert, Ian, ed. (1977). Who's Who in the Theatre, Volume 2 (seventeenth ed.). London and Detroit: Pitman Publishing and Gale Research. ISBN978-0-8103-0234-1.