Information about Music Halls

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The Old Bedford Music Hall  by Walter Sickert, c.1885
Music hall is a form of British theatrical entertainment which was popular between 1850 and 1960. The term can refer to
  1. A particular form of variety entertainment involving a mixture of popular song, comedy and speciality acts. British music hall was similar to American vaudeville, featuring rousing songs and comic acts, while in the United Kingdom the term vaudeville referred to more lowbrow entertainment that would have been termed burlesque in the United States.
  2. The theatre or other venue in which such entertainment takes place;
  3. The type of popular music normally associated with such performances.

Origins and Development

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Interior of the Canterbury Hall, opened 1852 in Lambeth
Music hall in London had its origins in entertainment provided in the new style saloon bars of public houses in the 1830s. These venues replaced earlier semi-rural amusements provided at traditional fairs and suburban pleasure gardens such as Vauxhall Gardens and the Cremorne Gardens. These latter became squeezed out by urban development and lost their former popularity.

The saloon was a room where for an admission fee or a higher price at the bar, singing, dancing, drama or comedy was performed. The most famous London saloon of the early days was the Grecian Saloon, established in 1825, at The Eagle (a former tea-garden), 2 Shepherdess Walk, off the City Road in north London. According to John Hollingshead, proprietor of the Gaiety Theatre, London (originally the Strand Music Hall), this establishment was "the father and mother, the dry and wet nurse of the Music Hall". Later known as the Grecian Theatre it was here that Marie Lloyd made her debut at the age of 14 in 1884. It is still famous these days because of an English nursery rhyme, with the somewhat mysterious lyrics:

Up and down the City Road
In and out The Eagle
That's the way the money goes
Pop goes the weasel.


Other such "song and supper" rooms included Evan's in Covent Garden, the Coal Hole in The Strand, the Cyder Cellars in Maiden Lane, Covent Garden and the Mogul Saloon in Drury Lane.

The music hall as we know it developed from such establishments in the 1850s and were built up in and on the grounds of public houses. Such establishments were distinguished from theatres, by the fact that in a music hall you would be seated at a table in the auditorium and could drink alcohol and smoke tobacco whilst watching the show. In a theatre, by contrast, the audience was seated in stalls and there was a separate bar-room. A strange exception to this rule was the Britannia Theatre, Hoxton (1841) which somehow managed to evade this regulation and served drinks to its customers. Though a theatre rather than a music hall this famous establishment later hosted music hall variety acts. It was destroyed by enemy action in (1940).

Famous Music Halls built in this era include:
  • The Middlesex, Drury Lane (1851) - built up on the site of the Mogul Saloon. Demolished in 1965. The New London Theatre stands on its site.
  • The Canterbury, 143 Westminster Bridge Road, Lambeth (1852). Built by Charles Morton, afterwards dubbed "the Father of the Halls", on the site of a skittle alley next to his pub, the Canterbury Tavern. The 1852 hall looked like most comtemporary pub concert rooms, but its replacement in 1854 wasof then unprecedented size. Itt was further extended in 1859,later rebuilt as a variety theatre and finally destroyed by bombing in 1942.
  • Wilton's Music Hall, Wellclose Square in the East End (1859). Still extant (see below).
  • The London Music Hall aka The Shoreditch Empire, 95-99 Shoreditch High Street, (1856-1935). The theatre was rebuilt in 1894 by Frank Matcham, the architect of the Hackney Empire.
  • Weston's Music Hall, High Holborn (1857) - built up on the site of the Six Cans and Punch Bowl Tavern by the licensed victualler of the premises, Henry Weston. In 1906 it was rebuilt as a variety theatre and renamed as the Holborn Empire. It was closed as a result of enemy action in the Blitz on the night of 11-12 May 1941 and the building was pulled down in 1960.
  • The Alhambra, Leicester Square (1860), in the former premises of the London Panopticon. Demolished in 1936.
  • The Old Bedford, 123-133 High Street, Camden Town] (1861). Built on the site of the tea gardens of a pub called the Bedford Arms. The Bedford was a favourite haunt of the artists known as the Camden Town Group headed by Walter Sickert who featured interior scenes of music halls in his paintings, including one entitled 'Little Dot Hetherington at The Old Bedford'. The Old Bedford was demolished in 1969.
  • The Oxford, 14/16 Oxford Street (1861) - built up on the site of an old coaching inn called the Boar and Castle by Charles Morton, the pioneer music hall developer of The Canterbury, who with this development brought music hall to the West End. Demolished in 1926.
  • The London Pavilion (1861). Facade of 1885 rebuild still extant.
  • Deacons in Clerkenwell (1862).
  • Collins', Islington Green (1862). Opened by Sam Collins, in 1862, as the Lansdowne Music Hall, converting the pre-existing Lansdowne Arms public house, it was renamed as Collins' Music Hall in 1863. It was colloquially known as 'The Chapel on the Green'. Collins was a star of his own theatre, singing mostly Irish songs specially composed for him. It closed in 1956, after a fire, but the street front of the building still survives (see below).
  • The Royal Cambridge Music Hall, 136 Commercial Street (1864-1936). Designed by William Finch Hill (the designerof the Britannia theatre in nearby Hoxton),it was rebuilt after a fire in 1898.
A noted music hall entrepreneur of this time was Carlo Gatti who built a music hall, known as Gatti's, at Hungerford Market in 1857. He sold the music hall to South Eastern Railway in 1862, and the site became Charing Cross railway station. With the proceeds from selling his first music hall, Gatti acquired a restaurant in Westminster Bridge Road, opposite The Canterbury music hall. He converted the restaurant into a second Gatti's music hall, known as "Gatti's-in-the-Road", in 1865. It later became a cinema. The building was badly damaged in the Second World War, and was demolished in 1950. In 1867, he acquired a public house in Villiers Street named "The Arches", under the arches of the elevated railway line leading to Charing Cross station. He opened it as another music hall, known as "Gatti's-in-The-Arches". After his death his family continued to operate the music hall, known for a period as the Hungerford or Gatti's Hungerford Palace of Varieties. It became a cinema in 1910, and the Players' Theatre in 1946.

Variety theatre

A new era of 'variety theatre' was signalled by the rebuilding of the London Pavilion in 1885. According to Charles Stuart and A.J. Park in their classic The Variety Stage (1895):

Hitherto the halls had borne unmistakeable evidence of their origins, but the last vestiges of their old connections were now thrown aside, and they emerged in all the splendour of their new-born glory. The highest efforts of the architect, the designer and the decorator were enlisted in their service, and the gaudy and tawdry music hall of the past gave way to the resplendent 'theatre of varieties' of the present day, with its classic exterior of marble and freestone, its lavishly appointed auditorium and its elegant and luxurious foyers and promenades brilliantly illuminated by myriad electric lights


One of the grandest of these new halls was the Coliseum Theatre built by Oswald Stoll in 1904 at the bottom of St Martin's Lane. This was followed by the London Palladium (1910) in Little Argyll Street. Both were designed by the prolific Frank Matcham. As Music Hall grew in popularity and respectability,and as the licensing authorities exercised ever firmer regulation, the original arrangement of a large hall with tables at which drink was served, changed to that of a drink-free auditorium. The acceptance of Music Hall as a legitimate cultural form was sealed by the first Royal Variety Performance before King George V in 1912 at the Palace Theatre. However, in keeping with this new respectability the greatest music hall star of the day, Marie Lloyd, was not invited, being deemed too 'saucy' for the eyes and ears of monarchy.

The rise of syndicates controlling a number of theatres, such as the Stoll circuit, led to increased tensions between employees and employers. Musicians, stage hands, and artistes went on strike in 1907 in London for almost two weeks in the Music Hall War, a strike which became extremely well known, and was enthusiastically supported by the main spokesmen of the trade union and Labour movement - Ben Tillett and Keir Hardie for example. The strike ended in arbitration, which saw most of the main demands satisfied, including a minimum wage and maximum working week for musicians. Several music hall stars such as Marie Lloyd, Arthur Roberts and Gus Elen were strong supporters of the strike, though they themselves earned enough not to be personally concerned in a material sense.

The pressure for greater rewards for music hall songwriters led to the application of copyright law to musical compositions. This in turn boosted the music publication industry, and the sale of music in printed form. The term Tin Pan Alley, for the music publication industry gained currency from the practice of rival publishers of banging together pots and pans in order to disrupt their competitors' musical auditions. The music publishers at the time (Feldman, Francis and Day...) were large, extremely profitable companies. They sold the right to sing songs to particular artists, and no other person had the right to sing the songs in public.

Recruiting

World War I is considered by many to have been the high-water-mark of music hall popularity. Music hall artists and composers threw themselves into rallying public support and enthusiasm for the war effort. Patriotic music hall compositions like "Keep the Home Fires Burning", "Pack up Your Troubles", "It's a Long Way to Tipperary" and "We Don't Want to Lose You (but we think you ought to Go)", were sung by the soldiers in the trenches and by audiences at home. Singers like Marie Lloyd went even further, singing lyrics like "I didn't like you much before you joined the army, John, but I do like yer cockie now you've got your khaki on."

Many songs aimed at recruitment ("All the boys in khaki get the nice girls"); others satirized particular elements of the war experience. "What did you do in the Great war, Daddy" criticized profiteers and slackers; Vesta Tilley's "I've got a bit of a blighty one" showed a soldier delighted to have a wound just serious enough to be sent home. The forced rhymes give a sense of black humour ("When they wipe my face with sponges/ and they feed me on blancmanges/ I'm glad I've got a bit of a blighty one").

Possibly the most notorious of music hall songs from the First World War was "Oh! It's a lovely war" sung by male impersonator Ella Shields.

Music hall continued through the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, but no longer as the single dominant form of popular entertainment in Britain. The arrival of radio, and the cheapening of the gramophone damaged it enormously. It now had to compete with Jazz, Swing and Big Band dance music, as well as with cinema. Even so, it gave rise to such major stars as George Formby, Gracie Fields, Max Miller, and Flanagan and Allen during this period.

Decline

After World War II, competition from television and other musical idioms, including Rock and Roll, led to the slow demise of the British music halls, despite some desperate attempts to retain an audience by putting on striptease acts. In 1957 the playwright John Osbourne delivered this elegy:

"The music hall is dying, and with it, a significant part of England. some of the heart of England has gone; something that once belonged to everyone, for this was truly a folk art."[1].


The final blow came when Moss Empires, the largest British Music Hall chain, closed the majority of its theatres in 1960. Stage and film musicals, however, continued to be influenced by the music hall idiom. Oliver!, Dr Dolittle, My Fair Lady, and many other musicals continued to retain strong roots in music hall. The BBC series The Good Old Days, which ran for thirty years, recreated the music hall for the modern audience, and the Paul Daniels Magic Show allowed several speciality acts a television presence from 1979 to 1994. Aimed at a younger audience, but still owing a lot to the music hall heritage, was the late '70s series The Muppet Show.

History of the songs

The musical forms most associated with music hall evolved in part from traditional folk song and songs written for popular drama, becoming by the 1850s a distinct musical style. Subject matter became more contemporary and humorous, and accompaniment was provided by larger house-orchestras as increasing affluence gave the lower classes more access to commercial entertainment and to a wider range of musical instruments, including the piano. The consequent change in musical taste from traditional to more professional forms of entertainment arose in response to the rapid industrialisation and urbanisation of previously rural populations during the industrial revolution. The newly created urban communities, cut off from their cultural roots, required new and readily accessible forms of entertainment.

Music halls were originally bar rooms which provided entertainment, in the form of music and speciality acts, for their patrons. By the middle years of the nineteenth century the first purpose-built music halls were being built in London. The halls created a demand for new and catchy popular songs that could no longer be met from the traditional folk song repertoire. Professional songwriters were enlisted to fill the gap.

The emergence of a distinct music hall style can be credited to a fusion of musical influences. Music hall songs needed to gain and hold the attention of an often jaded and unruly urban audience. In America from the 1840s Stephen Foster had reinvigorated folk song with the admixture of Negro spiritual to produce a new and vibrant form of popular song. Songs like Golden Slippers and The Old Folks at Home spread round the globe, taking with them the idiom and appurtenances of the minstrel song. Other influences on the rapidly-developing music hall idiom were Irish and European music, particularly the jig, polka, and waltz.

Typically a music hall song consists of a series of verses sung by the performer alone, and a repeated chorus which carries the principal melody, and in which the audience is encouraged to join.

In Britain, the first music hall songs often promoted the alcoholic wares of the owners of the halls in which they were performed. Songs like "Glorious Beer", and the first major music hall success, "Champagne Charlie", in 1854, had a major influence in establishing the new art form. "Champagne Charlie" is often credited with inspiring an exasperated William Booth to form the Salvation Army, eliciting his famous quotation: "Why should the devil have all the good tunes?"

By the 1870s the songs had cut themselves free from their folk music roots, and particular songs also started to become associated with particular singers, often with exclusive contracts with the songwriter, just as many pop songs are today.

Towards the end of the style the music became influenced by ragtime and jazz, before being overtaken by them.

Music hall songs were often unashamedly aimed at their working class audiences, reflecting the experiences and humour in their daily lives. Songs like "My Old Man (Said Follow the Van)", "Knocked 'em in the Old Kent Road", and "Waiting at the Church", expressed in melodic form situations that the urban poor were very familiar with. Music Hall songs could be romantic, patriotic, humorous or sentimental, as the need arose. The most popular Music Hall songs became the basis for the Pub songs of the typical Cockney "knees up".

Famous Music hall songs

Music hall songwriters

Music hall comedy

The typical music hall comedian was a man or woman), usually dressed 'in character',to suit the subject of the song, or sometimes in attired in absurd and eccentric style. Until well into the twentieth century the acts were essentially vocal, with songs telling a story, accompanied by a minimum of patter. They included a variety of genres, including:
  • Lions Comiques: essentially, men dressed as a 'toff', who sang songs about drinking champagne, going to the races, going to the ball, womanising and gambling, and living the life of an Aristocrat.
  • Male and female impersonators, perhaps more in the style of a pantomime dame than a modern drag queen. Nevertheless these included some more sophisticated performers such as Vesta Tilley, whose male impersonations communicated real social commentary.
'Stand up', spoken wisecracking acts and double acts with one performer being prompted and interrupted by a 'straight' partner, belong to later developments, derived partly from pantomime and partly from the importation of American comedy styles. The phrases 'I don't wish to know that!' and 'kindly leave the stage!' and some of today's habits, such as finishing on a song, belong to this later period. Inter-war radio programmes such as 'Band Wagon' adapted the music hall and variety traditions to the new medium, while, more recently, 'The Goon Show' took radio comedy into the surreal. Early television variety shows picked up some of the pieces, but this was at a time when music hall was already on its last legs. Nearer to today, the spirit of music hall genre has enjoyed a new kind of life in television'sThe Muppet Show.

The vocal content of the music hall bills, was, from the beginning, accompanied by many other kinds of act, some of them quite weird and wonderful. These were known collectively as speciality acts, which, over time, have included:

  • Aerial acts, of the sort usually seen at the Circus
  • Adagio: essentially a sort of cross between a dance act and a juggling act, consisting usually of a male dancer who threw a slim, pretty young girl around. Some aspects of modern dance choreography evolved from Adagio acts[2].
  • Magic acts and escapologists, such as Harry Houdini.
  • Cycling acts: again, a development of a Circus act, consisting of either a solo or a troupe of trick cyclists. There was even seven-piece a cycling band called Seven Musical Savonas, who played fifty instruments between them, and Kaufmann’s Cycling Beauties, a troupe of girls in Victorian swim wear.
  • Ventriloquists, or Vent acts as they were called in the business.
  • Electric acts, using the newly discovered phenomena of static electricity to produce tricks such as lighting gas jets and setting fire to handkerchiefs through the performers fingertips.
  • Knife throwing and sword swallowing. The most spectacular of its time was the Victorina Troupe, who swallowed a sword fired from a rifle.
  • Juggling and plate spinning acts. Another variation was the Diabolo.
  • Feats of strength by both strongmen and strongwomen.
  • Fire eaters and other eating acts, such as eating glass, razor blades, goldfish etc.
  • Wrestling and jujitsu exhibitions were both popular specialty acts, forming the basis of modern professional wrestling.
  • Mentalism acts. Commonly a male mentalist, blindfolded on stage, and an attractive female assistant passing among the audience. The assistant would collect objects from the audience, and the mentalist would identify each by 'reading' the assistants mind. This was usually accomplished by a clever system of codes and clues from the assistant.
  • Mime artists and impressionists.
  • Balloon modelling acts.
  • Trampoline acts.
  • Animal acts: Talking dogs, Flea circuses, and all manner of animals doing tricks.
  • Stilt walkers.
  • Puppet acts, including human puppets and living doll acts.
  • Comic pianists.
  • Cowboy/Wild West acts.

Music hall performers

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1867 Poster from the National Standard Theatre, Shoreditch. Not strictly a Music hall, but a theatre where many of these artists performed their Music hall acts.
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1910 Hetty King - sheet music cover.

Music hall in literature, drama, and screen

The music hall has been evoked in many films, plays, TV series and books.
  • A music hall with a 'memory man' act provides a pivotal plot device in the classic 1935 Hitchcock thriller The 39 Steps.
  • The Victorian era of music hall was celebrated by the 1944 film Champagne Charlie[3].
  • Charlie Chaplin's 1952 film Limelight, set in 1914 London, evokes the music hall world of Chaplin's youth where he performed as comedian before he achieved world-wide celebrity as a film star in America. The film depicts the last performance of a washed-up music hall clown called Calvero at The Empire theatre, Leicester Square. The film premiered at the Empire Cinema, which built on the same site as the Empire theatre[4].
  • The Good Old Days (1953 to 1983) was a popular BBC television light entertainment programme recorded live at the Leeds City Varieties which recreated an authentic atmosphere of the Victorian–Edwardian music hall with songs and sketches of the era performed by present-day performers in the style of the original artistes. The audience dressed in period costume and joined in the singing, especially the singing of "Down at the Old Bull and Bush" which closed the show. The show was compered by Leonard Sachs who introduced the acts. In the course of its run it featured about 2000 artists. The show was first broadcast on July 20, 1953. The Good Old Days was inspired by the success of the "Ridgeway's Late Joys" at the Players' Theatre Club in London: a private members' club that ran fortnightly programmes of variety acts in London's West End.
  • John Osborne's play The Entertainer (1957) portrays the life and work of a failing third-rate music hall stage performer who tries to keep his career going even as his personal life falls apart. The story is set at the time of the Suez Crisis in 1956, against the backdrop of the dying music hall tradition, and has been seen as symbolic of Britain's general post-war decline, its loss of its Empire, its power, and its cultural confidence and identity. It was made into a film in 1960 starring Laurence Olivier in the title role of Archie Rice[5].
  • J. B. Priestley's 1965 novel Lost Empires also evokes the world of Edwardian music hall just before the start of World War I; the title is a reference to the Empire theatres (as well as foreshadowing the decline of the British Empire itself). It was recently adapted as a television miniseries, shown in both the UK and in the U.S. as a PBS presentation. Priestley's 1929 novel The Good Companions, set in the same period, follows the lives of the members of a "concert party" or touring "Pierrot troupe".
  • The parodic film Oh! What a Lovely War (1969), based on the stage play by Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop, featured the music hall turns and songs that had provided support for the British war effort in World War I[6].
  • Between 1978 and 1984 BBC television broadcast two series of programmes called The Old Boy Network[7]. These featured a star (usually a Music Hall performer, but also some younger turns like Eric Sykes) performing some of their best known routines while giving a slide show of their life story. Artistes featured included Arthur Askey, Tommy Trinder, Sandy Powell, and Chesney Allen.
  • The modern Players' Theatre Club provides a brief impression of contemporary music hall in the film The Fourth Angel, where Jeremy Irons' character creates an alibi by visiting a show[8].
  • Sarah Waters's book Tipping the Velvet revolves around the world of music halls in the late Victorian era, and in particular around two fictional "mashers" (drag kings) named Kitty Butler and Nan King[9].

Surviving music halls

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The Hackney Empire, August 2005
London was the centre of Music Hall with hundreds of venues, often in the entertainment rooms of public houses. With the decline in popularity of Music Hall, many were abandoned, or converted to other uses, such as cinemas and their interiors lost. Some few purpose built survivors are :-
  • The Hackney Empire, an outstanding example of the late Music Hall period (Frank Matcham 1901). This has been restored to its moorish splendour and now provides an eclectic programme of events from opera to "Black Variety Nights".
  • A mile to the south is Hoxton Hall - an 1863 example of the saloon-style, unrestored but maintained in its original layout, and currently used as a community centre and theatre.
  • Collins Music Hall (about 1860) still stands on the North side of Islington Green. It closed in the 1960s and currently forms part of a bookshop.
  • The Grand, (1900 Grand Palace of Varieties) in Clapham, has been restored, but its interior reflects its modern use as a music venue and nightclub.
  • Greenwich Theatre was originally (1855) the Rose and Crown Music Hall, later Crowder's Music Hall and Temple of Varieties. The building has been extensively modernised and little of the original layout remains.
  • In the nondescript Grace's Alley, off Cable Street, Stepney stands Wilton's Music Hall. This 1858 example of the giant pub hall survived use as a church, fire, flood and war intact, but was virtually derelict, after its use as a rag warehouse, in the 1960s. The Wilton's Music Hall Trust has embarked on a fund-raising campaign to restore the building.
Many of these buildings can be seen as part of the annual London Open House event.

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1904 London Coliseum, Matcham theatre with London's widest proscenium arch


Outside London, surviving music halls include the following examples:
  • Leeds City Varieties (1865) with a preserved interior.
  • Alhambra Theatre, Bradford was built in 1914 for theatre impresario Frank Laidler, and later owned by the Stoll-Moss Empire'. It was restored in 1986, and is a fine example of the late Edwardian style. It is now a receiving theatre for touring productions, and opera.
  • Grand Opera House (Belfast). Frank Matcham 1895, preserved and restored in the 1980s.
  • Gaiety Theatre, Isle of Man. Another Matcham design from 1900.
  • Britannia Music Hall (1857), Glasgow remains standing, with much of the theatre intact but in a poor state having closed in 1938. There is a preservation trust attempting to rescue the theatre.
One of the few fully functional music hall entertainments, is at the Brick Lane Music Hall in a former church in North Woolwich. For information. The Players' Theatre Club is another group performing a Victorian style Music Hall show at a variety of venues.

See also

The term "Music hall" is also used to describe some large musical venues, such as the Paris Olympia, Radio City Music Hall, and Music Hall in Cincinnati, Ohio (see Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra).

References

1. ^ John Osbourne (1957) The Entertainer: 7. Faber and Faber, London
2. ^ DanceSport UK accessed 10 May 2007
3. ^
4. ^
5. ^
6. ^
7. ^ The Old Boy Network accessed 10 May 2007
8. ^
9. ^ BBC Drama - description accessed 10 May 2007

External links

Music Hall is Cincinnati's premier classical music performance hall, but was designed from the start with a dual purpose - to house musical activities in its central auditorium and industrial exhibitions in its side wings.
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Entertainment is an event, performance, or activity designed to give pleasure or relaxation to an audience (although, for example, in the case of a computer game the "audience" may be only one person).
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A variety show on television is an entertainment made up of a variety of acts, especially musical performances and comedy skits, and normally introduced by a compère or host.

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The format is basically television's version of the music hall.
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For other uses, see Vaudeville (disambiguation).


Vaudeville was a genre of variety entertainment prevalent in the United States and Canada from the early 1880s until the early 1930s.
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Burlesque refers to theatrical entertainment of broad and parodic humor, which usually consists of comic skits (and sometimes a striptease). While some authors assert that burlesque is a direct descendant of the Commedia dell'arte, the term 'burlesque' for a parody or comedy of
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Vauxhall Gardens /vɒks'hɔ:l/ was a pleasure garden, one of the leading venues for public entertainment in London, England from the mid 17th century to the mid 19th century.
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Cremorne Gardens was the name of two pleasure gardens established in England and Australia in the mid 19th century by James Ellis .
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Often referred to by Londoners as "The City Road", the western extremity of the road is at the Angel, Islington where it forms a continuation of Pentonville Road.
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Gaiety Theatre

The Gaiety Theatre, c. 1905
Address
Aldwych

City
Westminster, London



Architect Bassett and Keeling

Opened 1864
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Marie Lloyd

Photograph in possession of family
Background information
Birth name(s): Matilda Alice Victoria Wood
Date of birth: 12 January 1870(1870--)
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"Pop Goes the Weasel" is a jig, often sung as a nursery rhyme, that dates back to 17th century England, and was spread across the Empire by colonists. The tune or melody is as follows, or a variation:

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Covent Garden is a district in London, England, located on the easternmost parts of the City of Westminster and the southwest corner of the London Borough of Camden. The area is dominated by shopping, street performers and entertainment facilities and contains an entrance to the
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This article is about the street in London; Drury Lane is also the name of a well-known theatre on that street and of a fictional detective created by Ellery Queen writing as Barnaby Ross.

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The Britannia Theatre (1841–1900) was located at 115/117 High Street, Hoxton, London.[1] The theatre was badly damaged by a fire in 1900. The site was reused as a Gaumont cinema from 1913 to 1940, when this too was destroyed.
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Hoxton


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This article is about the street in London; Drury Lane is also the name of a well-known theatre on that street and of a fictional detective created by Ellery Queen writing as Barnaby Ross.

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New London Theatre

Blue Man Group at the New London Theatre in 2006
Address
Drury Lane

City
Camden, London



Architect Paul Tvrtkovic
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Charles Morton (28 January 1907, Illinois, USA - 26 October 1966, North Hollywood, California, was an American actor.

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Wilton's Music Hall

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Address
Grace's Alley, Cable Street

City
Tower Hamlets, London


Designation Grade II* listed
Architect Jacob Maggs
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Shoreditch


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Weston's Music Hall

Westons, circa 1880
Address
High Holborn

City
Camden, London



Architect Finch Hill
Owned by Henry Weston
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High Holborn is a road in Holborn in central London, England. It starts in the west near St Giles' Circus, then goes east, past Bloomsbury Street, the Kingsway and Southampton Row, and continues east. The road becomes Holborn at the junction with Gray's Inn Road.
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Weston's Music Hall

Westons, circa 1880
Address
High Holborn

City
Camden, London



Architect Finch Hill
Owned by Henry Weston
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