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Book Tap Dogs Tickets If this is the only show you see this summer then ... "Kill to get a ticket." Tap Dogs, the global dance phenomenon, has been seen worldwide by over 11 million people. |
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| There are four licensed bars at The Novello Theatre. Drinks can be brought into the auditorium. Icre-creams available before the show and during the interval. |
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Guide dogs are allowed into the auditorium or cloakroom staff can dog-sit. There is wheelchair access from Catherine Street, with four steps downinside the door. There are two spaces for wheelchair users in Box A. The venue is not suitable for motorised scooters. The theatre does provide transfer seats for two wheelchair/lightweight scooters in each performance. Transfer seats are available at A32, A33, A10 and A11 in the Dress Circle (view better on right hand side). Each wheelchair user must bring a non-disabled companion. |
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| There is parking at the NCP in Drury Lane close to The Novello Theatre |
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| Covent Garden, Holborn and Charing Cross are the nearest tube stations to The Novello. |
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| Charing Cross, London Victoria and Waterloo |
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| Buses 6, 11, 13 and 15 |
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Novello Theatre The Aldwych London WC2B 4LD Click Here for Novello Theatre Map |
Theatre |
The Novello Theatre The Novello Theatre is a theatre on Aldwych in the West End of London. The theatre was built as one of a pair with the Aldwych Theatre on either side of the Waldorf Hotel, both being designed by W.G.R. Sprague. The theatre opened as the Waldorf Theatre on May 22, 1905, and was renamed the Strand Theatre in 1909. It was again renamed as the Whitney Theatre in 1911 before again becoming the Strand Theatre in 1913. In 2005, the theatre was renamed by its owners (Delfont- Mackintosh) the Novello Theatre in honour of Ivor Novello. The black comedy Arsenic and Old Lace had a run of 1337 performances here in the 1940s, and Sailor Beware ran for 1231 performances from 1955. Stephen Sondheim''s musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum opened here on the day of Kennedy''s assassination, running for nearly two years. In 1971 the comedy No Sex Please - We''re British opened here, remaining for over 10 years of its 16-year run until it transferred to the Garrick Theatre in 1982. The theatre was extensively refurbished in 1930 and again in the early 1970s. For its 100th anniversary in 2005, the theatre is undergoing yet another extensive refurbishment. The current capacity is around 1,050. It reopened on 8th December 2005 with the Royal Shakespeare Company''s annual London season, playing to 4-week runs of Twelfth Night, The Comedy Of Errors, A Midsummer Night''s Dream and As You Like It, concluding in March 2006. Starting off 2009 will be A Midsummer Night's Dream followed by The Taming of The Shrew. |
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