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The Apollo Victoria Theatre is a West End theatre on Wilton Road in the Westminster district of London, across from London Victoria Station. (The theatre also has an entrance on Vauxhall Bridge Road.) Opened in 1930 as a cinema and variety theatre, the Apollo Victoria became a venue for musical theatre, beginning with The Sound of Music in 1981 ...
Criterion building with restaurant and theatre in 1873 Criterion Restaurant, Piccadilly Circus, 26 October 1902 In 1870 the building agreement for Nos. 219–221 (consec.) Piccadilly and Nos. 8–9 Jermyn Street was purchased by Messrs. Spiers and Pond , a firm of wine merchants and caterers , who held a limited architectural competition for ...
The Apollo Victoria Theatre was built in 1929 in Art Deco style, opening in 1930 the New Victoria Cinema. It closed in 1975 before being reopened as a theatre in 1981. In 1984 it became host to the musical Starlight Express, which remained its main production until 2002.
Haymarket, 2006. Haymarket is a street in the St James's area of the City of Westminster, London.It runs from Piccadilly Circus in the north to Pall Mall at the southern end. . Located on the street are the Theatre Royal, His Majesty's Theatre, New Zealand House, a cinema complex and restaura
The theatre's response was to extend its existing six-month season of international productions, "Barbican International Theatre Event", to the whole year. [13] On 23 January 2013, Greg Doran, RSC artistic director, announced the company's return to the Barbican Centre in a three-year season of Shakespeare's history plays. [14]
Aerial revolving restaurant Apollo, Komatsu, Ishikawa (demolished in the 90s) Kansai. KOCHI TO UMI, Todaya Hotel, Toba, Mie; Top of Kyoto, Rihga Royal Hotel, Kyoto; M! Nara, Nara (not currently rotating) Rakutaian restaurant, OMM Building, Osaka (closed in 2021) Newport Hotel, Kobe (demolished around 1990) Kobe Port Tower, Kobe (not currently ...
The area was known through exaggerated reports and tales of slum housing and (the then-legal) opium dens, rather than the Chinese restaurants and supermarkets of the current Chinatown. However, much of the area was damaged by aerial bombing during the Blitz in the Second World War , although a number of elderly Chinese still choose to live in ...
The Apollo Theatre is a Grade II listed West End theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue in the City of Westminster, in central London. [2] Designed by the architect Lewin Sharp for owner Henry Lowenfeld, [3] [4] it became the fourth legitimate theatre to be constructed on the street when it opened its doors on 21 February 1901, [4] with the American musical comedy The Belle of Bohemia.