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From April to December 1862 the theatre was run by the actor-manager Samuel Johnson. [1] In 1887 the manager, a Mr Wallace Revill, purchased and plot of land on Corporation Street in St Helens, and a new theatre was constructed. Revill vacated the Milk St building and took the name 'Theatre Royal' with him. The new Theatre Royal still stands.
Theatre Royal, Birmingham (1774–1956; so named from 1807) Theatre Royal, Brighton; Theatre Royal, Bristol; Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmunds; Theatre Royal, Cardiff, later known as Prince of Wales Theatre, Cardiff; Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, London later Royal Opera House Covent Garden; Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London; Theatre Royal, Dumfries
1889 – Theatre Royal, St Helens – Although there is a theatre on the site, it bears little resemblance to its original Matcham design as it was reconstructed in 1964. There were two theatres previous to the current building; the first was also by Matcham and was originally opened by Wallace Revill as the Theatre Royal and Opera House on 4 ...
St Helens Theatre Royal St. Helens 1895, rebuilt 1901 700 Operator - Regal Entertainments Ltd St. Martin's Theatre: London 26 November 1916 550 Stables Theatre:
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New Theatre Royal Lincoln, Lincoln - 475 Buskers , Dundee - 450 The Stables , Milton Keynes - 398 seated and 50 standing (Jim Marshall Auditorium) 80 seated or 100 standing (Stage 2)
St Helens (pronunciation ... The Theatre Royal opened by Revill on Corporation Street in 1889 was relatively short-lived as it was severely damaged by fire in 1901. [103]
Ipswich Regent Theatre (formerly known as the Gaumont Theatre) is a theatre and concert venue located at St Helen's Street in Ipswich, Suffolk, England. The auditorium was refurbished in 2007 and now holds 1,551 people, having reduced the capacity by 150 to accommodate larger and more comfortable seating. It is East Anglia's largest