Drury Lane Theatre Drury Lane Theatre
Catherine Street, London WC2B 5JF
|
Tube Station: |
Covent Garden (250m) |
|
Parking: |
Single yellow lines on Russell Street. NCP in Drury
Lane. Taxi rank at Covent Garden Piazza end of Russell
Street. |
| Total Seats: |
2196 |
| No of Bars: |
3 |
| No of Food Point: |
3 |
| No of Parking Spaces: |
3 |
|
Guide Dogs: |
Guide dogs not allowed into the auditorium but
theatre staff can look after them in an office. |
|
Infra-Red: |
Infra-red system with 10 headsets. Best reception in
centre Stalls and centre Circle. Headsets available from
duty manager in main foyer. Induction loop at Box
Office. |
|
Disabled Access: |
Entrance to theatre through signposted door on
Russell Street which leads into the left of the Stalls.
The door has a bell on the outside. 4 spaces for
wheelchairs users, L1 and 35 and K1 and 35, companions
can sit in the same row. Transfer seating to aisle
seats, wheelchairs can be stored in the Stalls store
room (maximum of 2 scooter transferees). |
|
Toilets: |
Adapted toilet to the left inside Russell Street
entrance, beside the Stalls. |
|
Steps: |
6 steps up to front entrance through swing doors
into main foyer and Box Office. Box Office counter to
right. 20 steps down then 17 up to Stalls with handrails
on both sides, 39 to Dress Circle with a handrail on the
right, 61 to Upper Circle with a handrail on both sides.
Top stair of each group is highlighted. Theatre open 1
hour before performance. |
|
Air Conditioning: |
Yes |
|
Owner: |
Really Useful Theatres |
The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane is a West End theatre in
Covent Garden, in the City of Westminster, a borough of
London. The building faces Catherine Street (earlier named
Bridges or Brydges Street) and backs onto Drury Lane. The
building standing today is the most recent in a line of four
theatres at the same location dating back to 1663, making it
the oldest London theatre. For its first two centuries,
Drury Lane could "reasonably have claimed to be London's
leading theatre" and thus one of the most important theatres
in the English-speaking world. Through most of that time, it
was one of a small handful of patent theatres that were
granted monopoly rights to the production of "legitimate"
(meaning spoken plays, rather than opera, dance, concerts,
or plays with music) drama in London.
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