Vaudeville Theatre London

Chicago Theatre TicketsLes Miserables TicketsBilly Elliot MusicalLion King Theatre TicketsPhantom of The Opera Tickets


HOME

London
West End
Theatres

Adelphi Theatre
Aldwych Theatre
Ambassadors Theatre
Apollo Theatre
Apollo Victoria
Cambridge Theatre
Comedy Theatre
The Coliseum
Criterion Theatre
Dominion Theatre
Duchess Theatre
Duke of York's Theatre
Fortune Theatre
Garrick Theatre
Gielgud Theatre
Her Majesty's Theatre
London Palladium
Lyceum Theatre
Lyric Theatre
New London Theatre
Noel Coward Theatre
Old Vic Theatre
Palace Theatre
Phoenix Theatre
Piccadilly Theatre
Playhouse Theatre
Prince Edward Theatre
Prince of Wales Theatre Queen's Theatre
St Martins Theatre
Savoy Theatre
Shaftesbury Theatre
Theatre Royal Drury Lane
Theatre Royal Haymarket
Trafalgar Studios
Vaudeville Theatre
Victoria Palace Theatre
Wyndham's Theatre

Entertainment
from the UK
and around
the World

 

Vaudeville Theatre London

CLICK HERE FOR ON-LINE STREETMAP

404 Strand
London
WC2R 0NH

 Bars at The Vaudeville Theatre
There are 3 bars at The Vaudeville. Also available is ice-cream and confectionery.
 Disabled access for Vaudeville Theatre
Staff will dog-sit Guide Dogs. Half price tickets are available for disabled theatregoer and one companion from Monday – Thursday. Accessible to a wheelchair user able to walk short distances and up a few steps.
 
 Parking for Vaudeville Theatre
MasterPark Trafalgar Square, NCP Drury Lane are the closest public car parks to The Vaudeville.
 Underground/Tube for Vaudeville Theatre
Charing Cross/Covent Garden/Embankment are the closest London underground stations to The Vaudeville.
 Rail for Vaudeville Theatre Trains
London Charing Cross is the closest British Rail station to The Vaudeville.
 Buses for Vaudeville
 
 
 
 History of The Vaudeville Theatre
HISTORY
 
The Vaudeville Theatre
 
The original theatre on this site was designed by C J Phipps and opened on 16th April, 1870. The theatre was subsequently reconstructed, to designs once again by C J Phipps, and reopened on 13th January, 1891. This theatre added the still existing four-storey high frontage in Portland stone. The theatre then closed on 7th November, 1925 when the interior was completely reconstructed to designs by Robert Atkins - the auditorium was changed from a horseshoe shape to the current rectangle shape - reopening on 23th February, 1926.
 

 Vaudevlille – Seating Plan

Cheap London Theatre Tickets