Aldwych Theatre London, WC2B 4DF

Aldwych Theatre Tickets

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MIDNIGHT TANGO TICKETS
showing from 20th January 2012
Find Available Dates: View Show Times and Seating Options: Tickets at Best Prices

The Dress Circle bar opens 1 hour before each performance, the Stalls bars & Upper Circle bar open 30 minutes before each performance. Coffee and confectionery available in the Rear Stalls & Dress Circle Bars. A Champagne & Wine Bar is situated to the right of the Front Stalls. Bars with food and drink
Seats are available in the third row of The Aldwych Dress Circle for wheelchair users. Wheelchair users must have an able bodied escort. Access to the theatre is from Drury Lane. The theatre has a separate disabled person's lavatory. The theatre now has a loop system. For further information telephone 020 7379 3367 Disabled Access for Adelphi Theatre
NCP Parker Street/Drury Lane. Parking meters outside the Aldwych Theatre. Aldwych Theatre Parking
Temple/Covent Garden/Holborn are the closest to The Aldwych Theatre. Nearest Underground to The Adlephi Theatre
Charing Cross is the National Rail station close to The Adelphi Theatre. Rail for Adelphi Theatre
Bus Routes: 1, 4, 11, 13, 15, 68, 98 Buses for Adelphi Theatre
49, Aldwych, London, WC2B 4DF
Seating Plan
Aldwych Theatre Map
Theatre
Aldwych Theatre

When the area between Wellington Street, Strand and Fleet Street was rebuilt in the last years of the 19th century, a great deal of London's old theatre land was annihilated. The Modern streets of Aldwych and Kingsway were built, with architectural plans being drawn up for the construction of two theatres with one and the same facades along The Aldwych. There was to be one on the corner of Catherine Street, and the other on the corner of Drury Lane. Between the two theatres there was to be a magnificent hotel, The Waldorf.
The Waldorf Theatre, now The Strand, opened in May 1905 and the Aldwych Theatre was finished shortly afterwards in December 1905. It was constructed by Seymour Hicks in connection with American impresario Charles Frohman, to a design by W.G.R. Sprague with a seating area capacity of 1,092. This has now been expanded to 1200.
Not far off its centenary, the theatre is once more possessed by an American, James Nederlander, and operated by Michael Codron Plays.