Toole's Theatre

Toole's Theatre
1833 Lowther Rooms
1855 Polygraphic Hall
1869 Charing Cross Theatre
1876 Folly Theatre
1881 Toole's Theatre
Street view of front of Victorian theatre of modest proportions, with glass and iron canopy across its width
Façade of Toole's Theatre, 1882
Map
AddressWilliam IV Street[n 1]
Westminster, London
DesignationDemolished
TypePlayhouse
Capacity650–700[2]
Construction
Opened1833
Closed1895
Rebuilt1869 Arthur Evers[3]
1876 Thomas Verity[4]
1882 J. J. Thompson[5]

Toole's Theatre, was a 19th-century West End building in William IV Street, near Charing Cross, in the City of Westminster. A succession of auditoria had occupied the site since 1832, serving a variety of functions, including religious and leisure activities. The theatre at its largest, after reconstruction in 1881–82, had a capacity of between 650 and 700.

As the Charing Cross Theatre (1869–1876) the house became known for bills offering a mixture of drama, burlesque and operetta. Among the authors of its burlesques were W. S. Gilbert and H. B. Farnie. Its stars included Lydia Thompson, Lionel Brough and Willie Edouin. In 1876 Thompson and her husband, Alexander Henderson, became lessees of the theatre and renamed it the Folly Theatre. They continued the theatre's customary mix of operetta and burlesque. Their greatest successes were with English adaptations of French opéras bouffes and opéras comiques, most conspicuously Les cloches de Corneville, which began its record-breaking run (705 performances) at the Folly in 1878.

In 1879 the comic actor J. L. Toole took over the lease. In 1881 he changed the name to Toole's Theatre and had the building substantially reconstructed. He continued the policy of staging burlesques, but introduced more non-musical comedies and farces. Among the authors who wrote for the theatre were John Maddison Morton, F. C. Burnand and Henry Pottinger Stephens; composers included George Grossmith and Edward Solomon. The theatre was important for beginning the professional careers of many actors, writers and actor-managers. Among the playwrights whose early works were presented at Toole's were Arthur Wing Pinero and J. M. Barrie. Future stars who were members of the company as beginners included Kate Cutler, Florence Farr, Seymour Hicks, Irene and Violet Vanbrugh and Lewis Waller.

The lease of the theatre expired in 1895, and the lessor, the Charing Cross Hospital, did not renew it. The theatre was demolished in 1896.

  1. ^ "Public Amusements", The Morning Chronicle, 30 June 1834, p. 2
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference mm228 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference mp1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference mm227 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ Mander and Mitchenson, p. 233


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