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[[image:criterion.theatre.london.arp.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Criterion Theatre]]
{{Refimprove|date=February 2008}}
[[image:Fromstage.jpg|thumb|right|250px|View from the Stage]]
{{Infobox Theatre
[[image:Dresscircle.jpg|thumb|right|250px|View from the Dress Circle]]
|name = Criterion Theatre
|image = CriterionTheatre.png
|caption = The Criterion Theatre in September 2007
|address = [[Piccadilly Circus]]
|city = [[City of Westminster|Westminster]], [[London]]
|country = [[UK]]
|designation = [[Listed building|Grade II*]]
|latitude = 51.509778
|longitude = -0.134056
|architect = [[Thomas Verity]]
|owner = Criterion Theatre Trust (lease)
|capacity = 588 on 3 levels
|type = [[West End theatre]]
|opened = 21 March 1874
|yearsactive =
|rebuilt =
|closed =
|production = ''Close to You: The Burt Bacharach Musical''
|currentuse =
|website = {{URL|www.criterion-theatre.co.uk}}
}}
The '''Criterion Theatre''' is a [[West End theatre]] situated on [[Piccadilly Circus]] in the [[City of Westminster]], and is a [[Listed building#England and Wales|Grade II* listed building]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1265753 |title=Listing for Criterion Theatre |work=[[English Heritage]] |date=5 February 1970 |accessdate=9 October 2014}}</ref> It has an official capacity of 588.


==Building the theatre==
The '''Criterion Theatre''' is a [[theatre]] situated on [[Piccadilly Circus]] in the [[West End of London|West End]] of [[London]] and is a [[Listed building#England and Wales|Grade II* listed building]]. It has a capacity of 594.
In 1870, the caterers Spiers and Pond began development of the site of the White Bear, a seventeenth-century posting inn. The inn was located on sloping ground stretching between Jermyn Street and Piccadilly Circus, known as Regent Circus. A competition was held for the design of a concert hall complex, with [[Thomas Verity]] winning out of 15 entries. He was commissioned to design a large restaurant, dining rooms, ballroom, and galleried concert hall in the basement. The frontage, which was the façade of the restaurant, showed a French Renaissance influence using Portland stone.


After the building work began, it was decided to change the concert hall into a theatre. The composers' names, which line the tiled staircases, were retained and can still be seen. The redesign placed the large Criterion Restaurant and dining rooms above the theatre, with a ballroom on the top floor.
In 1870, the caterers Spiers and Pond decided to develop the site of a seventeenth century posting inn, the White Bear, an area of sloping ground stretching between Jermyn Street and Piccadilly Circus, known as Regent Circus. A competition was held and, out of 15 entries, [[Thomas Verity]] was commissioned to design a new development consisting of a large restaurant, dining rooms, ballroom, and galleried concert hall in the basement. Having commenced building work it was decided to alter the proposed concert hall, (though retaining the composers names which still line the tiled staircases to this day), to a theatre with the large Criterion Restaurant and dining rooms above it and a ball room on the top floor. Being underground and lit by gas, fresh air had to pumped into the auditorium to prevent the audience from being asphyxiated, making the theatre one of the earliest air-conditioned environments in London.


When Spiers and Pond applied for a licence to operate, the authorities were unhappy because the theatre was underground and lit by gas, creating the risk of toxic fumes. The Metropolitan Board of Works had to vote twice before the necessary licence was issued, and fresh air had to pumped into the auditorium to prevent the audience from being asphyxiated. It was not until October 1881, at the Savoy, that the first theatre was lit electrically.
The first production opened on 21st March 1874 and consisted of 'An American Lady' written and performed by the manager Henry J Byron and a piece by [[WS Gilbert]] entitled 'Topsyturveydom'.


The building was completed in 1873 with the interior decoration carried out by Simpson and Son.
Under the management of [[Charles Wyndham]], The Criterion became one of the leading light comedy houses in London. Between the world wars notable productions included 'Musical Chairs' with [[John Gielgud]] and in 1936, a three year run of 'French Without Tears' which launched the career of [[Terence Rattigan]].


==Early years==
During World War II, The Criterion was requisitioned by the [[BBC]] - as an underground theatre it made an ideal studio safe from the London blitz - and light entertainment programmes were both recorded and broadcast live. After the war The Criterion repertoire included avant-garde works such as [[Samuel Beckett]]'s [[Waiting for Godot]] and pieces by [[Anouilh]], [[Dario Fo]] and others.
{{unreferenced section|date=October 2015}}
The first production opened on 21 March 1874 under the management of [[Henry J. Byron]] & EP Hingston. The programme consisted of ''An American Lady'' written and performed by Byron and a piece by [[W. S. Gilbert]], with music by [[Alfred Cellier]], entitled ''[[Topsyturveydom]]''. The event apparently did not make much of an impression on Gilbert. In a letter to Edgar Pemberton, author of the book on The Criterion in 1903, Gilbert wrote: "I am sorry to say that in my mind is an absolute blank to the opening of The Criterion. I never saw ''Topseyturveydom''. If you happen to have a copy of it and could lend it to me for a few hours it might suggest some reminiscences: as it is I don't even know what the piece was about!" Nevertheless, Gilbert was back at the theatre in 1877 with his farce, ''On Bail'' (a revised version of his 1874 work, ''Committed for Trial''); in 1881, with another farce, ''[[Foggerty's Fairy]]''; and in 1892, with a [[comic opera]], ''[[Haste to the Wedding]]'', with music by [[George Grossmith]] (an operatic version of Gilbert's 1873 play, ''The Wedding March''). ''[[Haste to the Wedding]]'' was a flop, but it introduced the 18-year-old [[George Grossmith, Jr.]], the composer's son, to the London stage. The younger Grossmith would go on to become a major star in [[Edwardian musical comedies]].


[[Charles Wyndham (actor)|Charles Wyndham]] became the manager and lessee in 1875 and under his management The Criterion became one of the leading light comedy houses in London. The first production under the manager was ''The Great Divorce Case'', opening on 15 April 1876. When Wyndham left in 1899 to open his own theatre, The [[Wyndham's Theatre]] (and then the New Theatre, now called the [[Noël Coward Theatre]], in 1903) he remained the lessee bringing in various managements and their companies.
In the 1970's the whole of the Criterion site was proposed for redevelopment, which caused much protest as people feared the theatre would be lost. Eventually, after Equity's Save London's Theatre Committee organised high profile demonstations the theatre's future was secured but it had to close temporarily from April 1989, until it reopened in October 1992. Having undergone major refurbishment both back, and front of house, The Criterion retains an almost perfectly preserved Victorian auditorium, with all the intimacy and atmosphere that make the building a pleasure to both visit and work in.


In March 1883 the theatre closed for alterations demanded by the Metropolitan Board of Works. The pumping of fresh air into the ten-year-old auditorium, some thirty feet below street level, was deemed unsatisfactory. Thomas Verity supervised the alterations (Verity by now had also designed the [[Comedy Theatre]] in 1881 and The [[Empire, Leicester Square|Empire Theatre]] in 1882). The new direct access ventilation shaft meant cutting off a considerable portion of the adjoining Criterion Restaurant. New corridors were built, with several new exits. The auditorium was reconstructed and the stage re-equipped. The old dressing rooms were demolished and new ones built. Most importantly, electricity was installed. ''Dramatic Notes'' (1884) states ''The Criterion Theatre, transformed from a stuffy band-box to a convenient, handsome, and well ventilated house, reopened on April 16"''. Further alterations and redecorations took place in 1902–03, when the theatre was closed for seven months.
From [[1996]] to 2005 it was home to productions of the [[Reduced Shakespeare Company]], ''The Complete Works of Shakespeare'', ''The Complete History of America'', and ''The Bible, The Complete Word of God''.


==20th century==
The Criterion is currently "dark" but will shortly be hosting ''The 39 Steps'' as of the 20th September 2006 which is transferring from the [[Tricycle Theatre]].
Between the world wars productions included ''Musical Chairs'' with [[John Gielgud]] and in 1936, ''French Without Tears'' which ran for 1,039 performances and launched the writing career of [[Terence Rattigan]].


During World War II, the Criterion was requisitioned by the [[BBC]] – as an underground theatre it made an ideal studio safe from the London blitz – and light entertainment programmes were both recorded and broadcast live.
== Principal Productions ==


After the war, the Criterion repertoire included avant-garde works such as [[Samuel Beckett]]'s ''[[Waiting for Godot]]''. The early part of 1956 saw the arrival of [[Anouilh]]'s popular comedy, ''[[The Waltz of the Toreadors]]'', with impressive performances by [[Hugh Griffith]] and [[Beatrix Lehmann]].<ref>Lytton's Seating Plans 1962</ref>
* The 39 Steps (From September 20th 2006)
* Star Wars - Shortened (August 17th 2006)
* [[Mack & Mabel]] (April 10 2006 - July 1 2006)
* Otherwise Engaged (October 28 2005 - January 28 2006)
* What The Butler Saw (August 24 2005 - October 22 2005)
* The Gruffalo (July 19 2005 - August 21 2005)
* The Countess (June 7 2005 - July 9 2005)
* Amajuba (April 24 2005 - May 21 2005)
*[[Reduced Shakespeare Company]] (March 7 1996 - April 3 2005)
* Rupert Street Lonely Hearts Club (December 19 1995 - January 22 1996)
* Taking Sides (June 30 1995 - December 9 1995)
* My Night with Reg (November 21 1994 - June 24 1995)
* The Flying Karamazov Brothers: Juggle & Hyde (July 20 1994 - September 3 1994)
* Jack (May 18 1994 - July 16 1994)
* Dishonourable Ladies (April 6 1994 - April 9 1994)
* ''Maxwell: The Musical Revue (Never opened!)''
* Looking Through a Glass Onion - John Lennon in Word & Music (October 18 1993 - January 1 1994)
* Elegies for Angels, Punks & Raging Queens (June 28 1993 - July 24 1993)
* Misery (December 17 1992 - May 15 1993)
* Making it Better (October 21 1992 - November 28 1992)
* Ennio Marchetto (October 10 1992 - October 17 1992)
* Run For Your Wife (December 12 1983 - March 4 1989)
* Woza Albert! (June 15 1983 - December 10 1983)
* Can't Pay? Won't Pay! (July 23 1981 - June 11 1983)
* Hank Williams - The Show He Never Gave (June 2 1981 - July 11 1981)
* Tom Foolery (June 5 1980 - May 30 1981)


In the 1970s the Criterion site was proposed for redevelopment, which caused protest, as people feared the theatre would be lost. In February 1975 the GLC Planning Committee approved the development on the condition that the theatre continued in ''full, continuous and uninterrupted use'' while the redevelopments took place. Throughout the 1970s and early 1980s the argument increased, and the Equity Save London's Theatre Committee organised high profile demonstrations (campaigners included [[John Gielgud]], [[Edward Woodward]], [[Diana Rigg]], [[Robert Morley]] and [[Prunella Scales]]) as they feared that the theatre would still be lost.
[[Category:Westminster]]
[[Category:Grade II* listed buildings in London]]
[[Category:Theatres in London]]


In the 1980s, the theatre building was purchased by Robert Bourne, a property tycoon and patron of the arts, and his wife, theatre impresario [[Sally Greene]]. The couple set up the Criterion Theatre Trust, a registered charity created to protect the Criterion's future. From 1989 to 1992 the theatre was renovated both in the back and front of the house. During that time, the block that exists today was built around it. After the refurbishment, the Criterion retains a well-preserved Victorian auditorium with an intimate atmosphere. Major productions in the last two decades of the century included ''[[Tom Foolery]]'' (1980–1981), ''[[Can't Pay? Won't Pay!]]'' (1981–1983), and the long-running ''[[Run for Your Wife (play)|Run for Your Wife]]'' (1983–1989).
[[fr:Criterion Theatre]]

==Recent years==
{{unreferencedsect|date=June 2015}}
[[File:London Criterion Theatre 2007.jpg|thumb|Criterion Theatre in 2007]]
From 1996 to 2005, the theatre was home to productions of the [[Reduced Shakespeare Company]], ''[[The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)]]'', ''The Complete History of America'', and ''The Bible, The Complete Word of God''. The theatre was used to hold the first round of recalls for successful auditionees in [[ITV (TV network)|ITV]]'s ''[[Pop Idol]]''. The theatre is also used by many leading drama institutions as a venue for their graduating students' annual showcases.

Since 2006, the Criterion has hosted the long-running [[melodrama]] ''[[The 39 Steps (play)|The 39 Steps]]'', adapted for the stage by Patrick Barlow from [[John Buchan]]'s 1915 novel, which was adapted for film by [[Alfred Hitchcock]] in 1935.

[[Peppa Pig]]'s Party transferred to the Criterion Theatre for the 2010 Christmas period to play alongside ''[[The 39 Steps (play)|The 39 Steps]]'' and returned for the following 4 Christmas periods running up to 2014.

Criterion Presents, launched in October 2011, is an ancillary programme of shows, events and platforms that run alongside the main production, taking place at lunchtimes, early evenings and late nights.

==Recent notable productions ==
* ''[[The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)]]'' (March 7, 1996 – April 3, 2005)
* ''[[What the Butler Saw (play)|What the Butler Saw]]'' (August 24, 2005 – October 22, 2005)
* ''[[Otherwise Engaged]]'' (October 28, 2005 – January 28, 2006)
* ''[[Mack & Mabel]]'' (April 10, 2006 – July 1, 2006)
* ''[[The 39 Steps (play)|The 39 Steps]]'' (September 20, 2006 – September 5, 2015)
<!-- PLEASE DO NOT ADD FUTURE SCHEDULED PRODUCTIONS. -->

==References==
{{Reflist}}
* ''Guide to British Theatres 1750–1950'', John Earl and Michael Sell pp.&nbsp;105–06 (Theatres Trust, 2000) ISBN 0-7136-5688-3

==External links==
{{Commons category}}
*[http://www.criterion-theatre.co.uk/ Official website]
*[http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/CriterionTheatre.htm Theatre History] With 1800s programmes and other archive material.

{{Theatres in London}}

[[Category:West End theatres]]
[[Category:Theatres in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Grade II* listed buildings in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Grade II* listed theatres]]
[[Category:Subterranean London]]
[[Category:Theatres completed in 1874]]
[[Category:Theatres where Gilbert or Sullivan works premiered]]
[[Category:Piccadilly Circus]]
[[Category:Piccadilly]]

Revision as of 22:49, 24 October 2015

Criterion Theatre
The Criterion Theatre in September 2007
Map
AddressPiccadilly Circus
Westminster, London
UK
OwnerCriterion Theatre Trust (lease)
DesignationGrade II*
TypeWest End theatre
Capacity588 on 3 levels
ProductionClose to You: The Burt Bacharach Musical
Construction
Opened21 March 1874
ArchitectThomas Verity
Website
www.criterion-theatre.co.uk

The Criterion Theatre is a West End theatre situated on Piccadilly Circus in the City of Westminster, and is a Grade II* listed building.[1] It has an official capacity of 588.

Building the theatre

In 1870, the caterers Spiers and Pond began development of the site of the White Bear, a seventeenth-century posting inn. The inn was located on sloping ground stretching between Jermyn Street and Piccadilly Circus, known as Regent Circus. A competition was held for the design of a concert hall complex, with Thomas Verity winning out of 15 entries. He was commissioned to design a large restaurant, dining rooms, ballroom, and galleried concert hall in the basement. The frontage, which was the façade of the restaurant, showed a French Renaissance influence using Portland stone.

After the building work began, it was decided to change the concert hall into a theatre. The composers' names, which line the tiled staircases, were retained and can still be seen. The redesign placed the large Criterion Restaurant and dining rooms above the theatre, with a ballroom on the top floor.

When Spiers and Pond applied for a licence to operate, the authorities were unhappy because the theatre was underground and lit by gas, creating the risk of toxic fumes. The Metropolitan Board of Works had to vote twice before the necessary licence was issued, and fresh air had to pumped into the auditorium to prevent the audience from being asphyxiated. It was not until October 1881, at the Savoy, that the first theatre was lit electrically.

The building was completed in 1873 with the interior decoration carried out by Simpson and Son.

Early years

The first production opened on 21 March 1874 under the management of Henry J. Byron & EP Hingston. The programme consisted of An American Lady written and performed by Byron and a piece by W. S. Gilbert, with music by Alfred Cellier, entitled Topsyturveydom. The event apparently did not make much of an impression on Gilbert. In a letter to Edgar Pemberton, author of the book on The Criterion in 1903, Gilbert wrote: "I am sorry to say that in my mind is an absolute blank to the opening of The Criterion. I never saw Topseyturveydom. If you happen to have a copy of it and could lend it to me for a few hours it might suggest some reminiscences: as it is I don't even know what the piece was about!" Nevertheless, Gilbert was back at the theatre in 1877 with his farce, On Bail (a revised version of his 1874 work, Committed for Trial); in 1881, with another farce, Foggerty's Fairy; and in 1892, with a comic opera, Haste to the Wedding, with music by George Grossmith (an operatic version of Gilbert's 1873 play, The Wedding March). Haste to the Wedding was a flop, but it introduced the 18-year-old George Grossmith, Jr., the composer's son, to the London stage. The younger Grossmith would go on to become a major star in Edwardian musical comedies.

Charles Wyndham became the manager and lessee in 1875 and under his management The Criterion became one of the leading light comedy houses in London. The first production under the manager was The Great Divorce Case, opening on 15 April 1876. When Wyndham left in 1899 to open his own theatre, The Wyndham's Theatre (and then the New Theatre, now called the Noël Coward Theatre, in 1903) he remained the lessee bringing in various managements and their companies.

In March 1883 the theatre closed for alterations demanded by the Metropolitan Board of Works. The pumping of fresh air into the ten-year-old auditorium, some thirty feet below street level, was deemed unsatisfactory. Thomas Verity supervised the alterations (Verity by now had also designed the Comedy Theatre in 1881 and The Empire Theatre in 1882). The new direct access ventilation shaft meant cutting off a considerable portion of the adjoining Criterion Restaurant. New corridors were built, with several new exits. The auditorium was reconstructed and the stage re-equipped. The old dressing rooms were demolished and new ones built. Most importantly, electricity was installed. Dramatic Notes (1884) states The Criterion Theatre, transformed from a stuffy band-box to a convenient, handsome, and well ventilated house, reopened on April 16". Further alterations and redecorations took place in 1902–03, when the theatre was closed for seven months.

20th century

Between the world wars productions included Musical Chairs with John Gielgud and in 1936, French Without Tears which ran for 1,039 performances and launched the writing career of Terence Rattigan.

During World War II, the Criterion was requisitioned by the BBC – as an underground theatre it made an ideal studio safe from the London blitz – and light entertainment programmes were both recorded and broadcast live.

After the war, the Criterion repertoire included avant-garde works such as Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. The early part of 1956 saw the arrival of Anouilh's popular comedy, The Waltz of the Toreadors, with impressive performances by Hugh Griffith and Beatrix Lehmann.[2]

In the 1970s the Criterion site was proposed for redevelopment, which caused protest, as people feared the theatre would be lost. In February 1975 the GLC Planning Committee approved the development on the condition that the theatre continued in full, continuous and uninterrupted use while the redevelopments took place. Throughout the 1970s and early 1980s the argument increased, and the Equity Save London's Theatre Committee organised high profile demonstrations (campaigners included John Gielgud, Edward Woodward, Diana Rigg, Robert Morley and Prunella Scales) as they feared that the theatre would still be lost.

In the 1980s, the theatre building was purchased by Robert Bourne, a property tycoon and patron of the arts, and his wife, theatre impresario Sally Greene. The couple set up the Criterion Theatre Trust, a registered charity created to protect the Criterion's future. From 1989 to 1992 the theatre was renovated both in the back and front of the house. During that time, the block that exists today was built around it. After the refurbishment, the Criterion retains a well-preserved Victorian auditorium with an intimate atmosphere. Major productions in the last two decades of the century included Tom Foolery (1980–1981), Can't Pay? Won't Pay! (1981–1983), and the long-running Run for Your Wife (1983–1989).

Recent years

Criterion Theatre in 2007

From 1996 to 2005, the theatre was home to productions of the Reduced Shakespeare Company, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged), The Complete History of America, and The Bible, The Complete Word of God. The theatre was used to hold the first round of recalls for successful auditionees in ITV's Pop Idol. The theatre is also used by many leading drama institutions as a venue for their graduating students' annual showcases.

Since 2006, the Criterion has hosted the long-running melodrama The 39 Steps, adapted for the stage by Patrick Barlow from John Buchan's 1915 novel, which was adapted for film by Alfred Hitchcock in 1935.

Peppa Pig's Party transferred to the Criterion Theatre for the 2010 Christmas period to play alongside The 39 Steps and returned for the following 4 Christmas periods running up to 2014.

Criterion Presents, launched in October 2011, is an ancillary programme of shows, events and platforms that run alongside the main production, taking place at lunchtimes, early evenings and late nights.

Recent notable productions

References

  1. ^ "Listing for Criterion Theatre". English Heritage. 5 February 1970. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  2. ^ Lytton's Seating Plans 1962
  • Guide to British Theatres 1750–1950, John Earl and Michael Sell pp. 105–06 (Theatres Trust, 2000) ISBN 0-7136-5688-3