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Rock of Ages
Shaftesbury Theatre Tickets
London
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Rock of AgesPreviews from 31st August, 2011. The show is a Broadway hit and also has an Australian and US Tour production running and will now rock the West End! |
| There are five bars. Also available is ice-cream, confectionery, biscuits and cakes. |
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| Guide dogs are allowed in box. Staff will dog-sit. Two for the price of one available for disabled theatregoer and one companion. Accessible to a wheelchair user able to walk short distances and up a few steps. Induction Loop or Infra-red sound amplification. |
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| MasterPark at Cambridge Circus, NCP at Museum Street, Drury Lane, Upper St Martin's Lane, Parker Mews. |
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| Tottenham Court Road/Holborn/Covent Garden are the closest tube stations. |
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| London Charing Cross is the closest National Rail station. Victoria and Waterloo are also reachable by tube, bus or taxi. |
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| Bus Routes: 8, 10, 14, 19, 24, 25, 29, 38, 55, 73, 134, 176, 242 |
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210, Shaftesbury Avenue, London, WC2H 8DP Click here for Shaftesbury Theatre Map Theatre Seating Plan |
Theatre Information |
Shaftesbury Theatre brief history: The theatre was designed for the brothers Walter and Frederick Melville by Bertie Crewe and opened on 26 December 1911 with a production of The Three Musketeers, as the New Prince's Theatre, becoming the Prince's Theatre in 1914. It had a capacity of 2,392 and a stage 31' 10" wide by 31' deep. The Prince's was the last theatre to be built in Shaftesbury Avenue, and is located near New Oxford Street. It had considerable success with an 18 week season of Gilbert and Sullivan operas, presented by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, in 1919. These became a regular attraction at the theatre in the 1920s, interspersed with runs of theatre productions transferred from other venues. Basil Rathbone appeared at the Prince's Theatre in May 1933 when he played Julian Beauclerc in a revival of Diplomacy. The Rose of Persia was revived at the theatre in 1935. The D'Oyly Carte returned in 1942. The theatre was sold to EMI in 1962, and became the Shaftesbury Theatre the following year. Broadway productions that transferred to the theatre for long runs in the 1960s included Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1962), How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1963) and Little Me (1964). Part of the ceiling fell in on 20th July 1973, forcing the closure of the long-running musical Hair, after 1,998 performances. The theatre almost fell victim to redevelopment, but a campaign by Equity succeeded in having the theatre placed on the 'Statutory List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest', and the theatre was Grade II listed by English Heritage in March 1974. The theatre reopened with West Side Story a year later. Long runs in the 1980s included They're Playing Our Song (1980) and Follies (1987). The next decade included long runs of Kiss of the Spider Woman (1992), Eddie Izzard: Definite Article (1995) and Rent (1998). During the redevelopment of the Royal Opera House in nearby Covent Garden in the late 1990s, the theatre was booked as an alternative London venue for performances including Benjamin Britten's Paul Bunyan. A series of musicals followed. |










