London Casino Old Compton Street

  • Old Compton Street is a road that runs east–west through Soho in the West End of London.
  • The London Casino occupies an almost oblong site fronting 81 feet south to Old Compton Street, and 152 feet east to Greek Street. The plan is arranged on a north-south axis, with the entrance and foyers.
  • London Casino Old Compton Street Dazzletag Entertainment Ltd 2010 - Licensed and regulated by the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) under licenses London Casino Old Compton StreetMGA/CL1/711/2010.
  • Old Compton Street is the Mecca of Gay London. Eat at Balans - its living party. Theres also an amazing wine and sprit sore with an enormous collection. The bars are jammed and fun, and hey, your steps away from Covent Garden!!
Old Compton Street
Eastern end of Old Compton Street

Old Compton Street is a road that runs east–west through Soho in the West End of London.

The London Casino. Old Compton Street - 1950. Vintage London Old London Soho London Photos West End British History Coffee Bars Photo Wall England. Soho London Photos and Premium High Res.

History[edit]

The street was named after Henry Compton who raised funds for a local parish church, eventually dedicated as St Anne's Church in 1686.[citation needed] The area in general and this street in particular became the home of Huguenots, FrenchProtestant refugees who were given asylum in England by Charles II in 1681.

By the end of the 18th century, fewer than ten of the houses were without shop fronts.[citation needed] In the middle of the 19th century, while there were some workshops too, as well as restaurants and public houses, the ground floors of most of the houses were still used as shops. The number of people of overseas descent continued to grow and the street became a meeting place for exiles, particularly those from France: after the suppression of the Paris Commune, the poets Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine often frequented drinking haunts here.

Old Compton Street had its resident curiosity in the form of Wombwell's Menagerie.[citation needed]George Wombwell kept a boot and shoe shop on the street between 1804 and 1810 and, by all accounts, was quite an entrepreneur. Of short stature and an alcoholic, he nonetheless built up three hugely successful menageries from a starting point of two snakes bought at a bargain price. The menageries travelled around England and made him a wealthy man before his death in 1850.[citation needed]

Between 1956 and 1970 the 2 I's Coffee Bar was located here. Many well-known 1960s pop musicians played in its cramped surroundings.[citation needed]

Current[edit]

Today, the street is the main focal point for London's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.[citation needed] In Soho, central London, it features several gay bars, restaurants and cafés, as well as a popular theatre. Whilst a pedestrianisation project proved unpopular with local traders and was reversed, the street is closed to vehicular traffic for the Soho Pride festival one weekend each year, in late summer.

London Casino Old Compton Street

The Prince Edward Theatre is located on the east end of the street. Until 2004 the long-running production of Mamma Mia!, a musical based upon the songs of ABBA, was showing at the theatre. When Mamma Mia! moved to larger premises in another part of the West End, a production of Mary Poppins moved in, but closed in 2008. It subsequently became home to Aladdin. London producer and director Adam Spreadbury-Maher lives at the northern end of Old Compton Street.[1]

The Admiral Duncan public house.

In 1999, the Admiral Duncan pub was the site of a nail bomb attack which killed three people and injured over a dozen.[2] A neo-nazi, David Copeland, was subsequently found guilty of the bombing (intended specifically to injure members of the gay community). Previously decorated in neutral colours, the Admiral Duncan was re-opened with a flamboyant pink and purple exterior with a large rainbow flag flying outside as a symbol of gay pride. The flag has remained there ever since, in defiance of Westminster City Council's planning permission laws.

Along the street are numerous other gay bars including Comptons of SOHO and G-A-Y. Also on the street are a variety of cafés, tea rooms (including the original branch of the Patisserie Valerie chain) and restaurants (including Bincho, a yakitori restaurant and Balans, which unusually for much of England is open 24 hours a day), and sex shops.

In the middle of Charing Cross Road, at its junction with Old Compton Street, beneath the grill in the traffic island in the middle of the road, can be seen the old road signs[3] for the now-vanished Little Compton Street, which once joined Old Compton Street with New Compton Street.[citation needed]

Additional adjoining streets[edit]

  • Little Compton Street (now defunct)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Adam Spreadbury-Maher'. Gaydarnation.com. Retrieved 16 July 2012.
  2. ^'Dozens injured in Soho nail bomb'. BBC News. UK: BBC. 30 April 1999.
  3. ^Way, Steve. 'Photo'. Flickr. Archived from the original on 18 December 2013.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Old Compton Street.
  • Panoramic view at the junction with Dean Street

Coordinates: 51°30′48″N0°07′53″W / 51.51326°N 0.13128°W

London
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Old_Compton_Street&oldid=992273651'
(Redirected from London Casino)
Prince Edward Theatre
AddressOld Compton Street
London, W1
England, United Kingdom
Coordinates51°30′48″N0°07′51″W / 51.513472°N 0.130778°WCoordinates: 51°30′48″N0°07′51″W / 51.513472°N 0.130778°W
Public transitLeicester Square; Tottenham Court Road
OwnerDelfont Mackintosh Theatres
TypeWest End theatre
Capacity1,727
ProductionMary Poppins
Construction
Opened1930; 90 years ago
Rebuilt1946 (T. & B. Braddock)
1978 (RHWL Architects)
ArchitectEdward Stone
Website
Prince Edward Theatre website at Delfont Mackintosh Theatres

The Prince Edward Theatre is a West End theatre situated on Old Compton Street, just north of Leicester Square, in the City of Westminster, London.

History[edit]

The theatre was designed in 1930 by Edward A. Stone,[1] with an interior designed by Marc-Henri Levy and Gaston Laverdet.[2] Named after Prince Edward (at the time Prince of Wales, briefly Edward VIII and later Duke of Windsor), it opened on 3 April 1930 with a performance of the musical Rio Rita.[3] Other notable events in its opening years included the London debut of famed cabaret artiste Josephine Baker, who performed her famous 'Bananas Dance'.

In 1935, Stone converted the theatre to a dance and cabaret hall, being renamed the 'London Casino'.

As the London Casino, it was badly damaged and all its windows lost on 10 May 1941, in London's worst air raid of the Second World War. All neighbouring buildings directly across Greek Street were destroyed.

Stage alterations were undertaken by Thomas Braddock in 1942, and that year the building re-opened as the 'Queensberry All Services Club'—a club for servicemen where the shows were broadcast on the BBC. After the war, the architects T. and E. Braddock restored the building to theatrical use, becoming the 'London Casino'[2] once again — where the 'King of Yiddish Music', Leo Fuld, was a major attraction.[citation needed] The last production before Cinerama took over the building was Wish You Were Here, which included a full-size swimming pool on stage.

Cinerama[edit]

The three-projector, very-wide-screen Cinerama process had made its debut in New York in September 1952 with This Is Cinerama, a spectacular travelogue designed to make the most of the process, and an enormous box office success. The Cinerama Corporation chose the Casino Theatre for the UK debut of the system, and in 1954 architects Frank Baessler and T. and E. Braddock drew up plans for the conversion. This required the installation of three separate projection boxes at stalls level, and a 65 ft-wide-by-26 ft-high deeply curved screen in front of the proscenium. Five speakers behind the screen and others around the auditorium supported the system's seven-track stereophonic sound. Many front stall's seats were removed, and others were lost by the installation of the projection boxes. The sightlines from the upper circle were too poor, and it was taken out of use. Seating capacity was reduced to 1,337.

The premiere of This Is Cinerama took place on 30 September 1954. Like all subsequent presentations, the film was shown on a theatrical basis, with reserved seats and an intermission, which was required to load the spools for the second half onto the single projectors in each box. Unlike future 'roadshow' practice, there were three shows a day and the film ran until 28 January 1956. From 3 February 1956, the second Cinerama film, Cinerama Holiday was presented, running until 22 February 1958. From 25 February 1958, the third Cinerama travelogue, Seven Wonders of the World played, running until 31 October 1959 before being replaced by South Seas Adventure from 3 November 1959 to 4 March 1961. The final Cinerama travelogue presentation was Search for Paradise from 8 March 1961 to 27 October 1962.

The Casino was chosen for the World Premiere of How the West Was Won, the second (and final) narrative film in the three-strip Cinerama process. The premiere took place on 2 November 1962, and the film ran for 123 weeks, closing on 13 March 1965. This was the final three-strip presentation at the Casino, for the Cinerama corporation had in 1963 adopted 70mm 'single lens' Cinerama as the future standard. The two outer projection boxes at the Casino were taken out of use, and the centre box enlarged to take two Philips DP70 projectors capable of 35mm and 70mm projection. The single-strip system had made its debut in the UK at the Coliseum Cinerama at the end of 1963, and the first film in the process at the Casino was The Greatest Story Ever Told, which ran from 8 April to 28 July 1965.

The Casino now entered into a period of large-scale 70mm 'presented in Cinerama' roadshow runs:-

  • The Hallelujah Trail (29 July – 15 December 1965)
  • Battle of the Bulge (17 December 1965 – 8 June 1966)
  • Khartoum (9 June 1966 – 8 March 1967), a Royal World Premiere in the presence of HRH Princess Margaret
  • Grand Prix (9 March 1967 – 8 November 1967)
  • Custer of the West (9 November 1967 – 30 April 1968)
  • 2001 A Space Odyssey (1 May 1968 – 25 March 1969)
  • Ice Station Zebra (27 March – 8 October 1969)
  • Winning (9 October – 1 December 1969), a 35mm blow-up
  • Ben-Hur (26 December 1969 – 6 May 1970)
  • Patton (7 May – 14 October 1970)
  • Two Mules for Sister Sara (15 October – 9 December 1970), a 35mm blow-up
  • Song of Norway (10 December 1970 – 2 February 1972), a Royal Premiere in the presence of HRH Princess Alexandra

For the next two years the Casino found the going increasingly tough, with revivals of old films and premieres of not-very-good new ones. The final presentation 'in Cinerama' was the feeble Run, Run, Joe! and Cinerama vacated the Casino in May 1974.

London Casino Old Compton Street Sweeping

Return to theatrical use[edit]

The theatre was acquired by EMI, and refurbished at a cost of £150,000. The Cinerama screen was removed and replaced with a conventional one within the proscenium and the 70mm projectors were removed and replaced with a single 35mm projector and non-rewind system.[3] The Casino Theatre continued in use as a cinema showing films, including the remake of King Kong. It also staged occasional theatre productions such as Dean (a musical about James Dean) in 1976, and the following year a Christmas production of Peter Pan with Ron Moody as Captain Hook. The final film run was a revival of Lady Sings the Blues and Mahogany which ended on 8 April 1978. The building was then converted back into a full-time theatre by RHWL Architects and given its original name, reopening with the world première of the musicalEvita on 21 June 1978. Further renovations were undertaken by RHWL in 1992–93,[2] increasing the size of the stage, reopening 3 March 1993 with a revival of Crazy for You. The ABBA musical Mamma Mia! premièred here on 6 April 1999, transferring to the Prince of Wales Theatre after a five-year run.[3]

Owned by the Delfont Mackintosh Group, and with a capacity of 1,716, it formerly hosted Mary Poppins until 12 January 2008, before the show toured the UK. Jersey Boys opened on 18 March 2008 and moved to the Piccadilly Theatre in March 2014,[4] A revival of Miss Saigon opened at the Prince Edward Theatre in May 2014.[5]

Disney's production of Aladdin opened in June 2016 at the theatre.[6]

Recent and present productions[edit]

  • Evita (21 June 1978 – 8 February 1986) by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, starring Elaine Paige and David Essex
  • Chess (14 May 1986 – 8 April 1989) by Tim Rice, Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, starring Elaine Paige, Tommy Körberg and Murray Head
  • Anything Goes (4 July 1989 – 25 August 1990) by Cole Porter, starring Elaine Paige, John Barrowman and Louise Gold
  • Children of Eden (8 January 1991 – 6 April 1991) by Stephen Schwartz and John Caird
  • The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber (14 May 1991 – 25 May 1991), starring Sarah Brightman
  • The Hunting of the Snark (24 October 1991 – 14 December 1991) by Mike Batt
  • Some Like It Hot (19 March 1992 – 20 June 1992) by Jule Styne and Bob Merrill, starring Tommy Steele
  • Crazy for You (3 March 1993 – 24 February 1996) by George and Ira Gershwin and Ken Ludwig, starring Ruthie Henshall and Kirby Ward
  • Martin Guerre (10 July 1996 – 28 February 1998) by Claude-Michel Schönberg, Alain Boublil and Stephen Clarke
  • Show Boat (28 April 1998 – 19 September 1998) by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II
  • West Side Story (6 October 1998 – 9 January 1999) by Stephen Sondheim, Leonard Bernstein and Arthur Laurents
  • Mamma Mia! (6 April 1999 – 27 May 2004) by Catherine Johnson and Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, starring Siobhán McCarthy, Louise Plowright and Jenny Galloway
  • Mary Poppins (15 December 2004 – 12 January 2008) by Richard M. Sherman, Robert B. Sherman, George Stiles, Anthony Drewe and Julian Fellowes, starring Laura Michelle Kelly, Scarlett Strallen, Gavin Lee and Gavin Creel
  • Jersey Boys (18 March 2008 – 9 March 2014) by Bob Gaudio based on the music of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons
  • Miss Saigon (21 May 2014 – 27 February 2016) by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg
  • Aladdin (9 June 2016 – 24 August 2019) by Alan Menken, Chad Beguelin, Tim Rice and Howard Ashman
  • Mary Poppins (23 October 2019 – ) by Richard M. Sherman, Robert B. Sherman, George Stiles, Anthony Drewe and Julian Fellowes, starring Zizi Strallen and Charlie Stemp

References[edit]

London Casino Old Compton Street London

Street
  1. ^The exterior of the theatre was based on Stone's 'Streatham Astoria Cinema'
  2. ^ abcEarl and Sell (2000) pp. 132
  3. ^ abcPrince Edward Theatre (Arthur Lloyd Theatre History) accessed 11 June 2008
  4. ^'West End's Jersey Boys to Move Home from Prince Edward to Piccadilly Theatre'. Playbill. 14 June 2013. Archived from the original on 18 June 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  5. ^BREAKING NEWS: It's Finally Official! MISS SAIGON to Return to West End in May 2014 at Prince Edward Theatre! broadwayworld.com Retrieved 19 June 2013
  6. ^'A Whole New World! Disney's ALADDIN Confirms Summer 2016 Premiere in the West End, Starring Trevor Dion Nicholas as Genie!'. Broadway World. 15 October 2015. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  • Guide to British Theatres 1750–1950, John Earl and Michael Sell pp. 132 (Theatres Trust, 2000) ISBN0-7136-5688-3

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prince Edward Theatre.
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