St James's Theatre
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The St James's Theatre was in King Street,
St James's St James's is a district of Westminster, and a central district in the City of Westminster, London, forming part of the West End of London, West End. The area was once part of the northwestern gardens and parks of St. James's Palace and much of ...
, London. It opened in 1835 and was demolished in 1957. The theatre was conceived by and built for a popular singer, John Braham; it lost money and after three seasons he retired. A succession of managements over the next forty years also failed to make it a commercial success, and St James's acquired a reputation as an unlucky theatre. It was not until 1879–1888, under the management of the actors John Hare and Madge and W. H. Kendal that the theatre began to prosper. The Hare-Kendal management was succeeded, after brief and disastrous attempts by other lessees, by that of the actor-manager George Alexander, who was in charge from 1891 until his death in 1918. Under Alexander the house gained a reputation for programming that was adventurous without going too far for the tastes of London society. Among the plays he presented were
Oscar Wilde Oscar Fingal O'Fflahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 185430 November 1900) was an Irish author, poet, and playwright. After writing in different literary styles throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular and influential playwright ...
's ''
Lady Windermere's Fan ''Lady Windermere's Fan, A Play About a Good Woman'' is a four-act comedy by Oscar Wilde, first performed on Saturday, 20 February 1892, at the St James's Theatre in London. The story concerns Lady Windermere, who suspects that her husband is ...
'' (1892) and ''
The Importance of Being Earnest ''The Importance of Being Earnest, a Trivial Comedy for Serious People'' is a play by Oscar Wilde, the last of his four drawing-room plays, following ''Lady Windermere's Fan'' (1892), ''A Woman of No Importance'' (1893) and ''An Ideal Husban ...
'' (1895), and A.W.Pinero's '' The Second Mrs Tanqueray'' (1893). After Alexander's death the theatre came under the control of a succession of managements. Among the long-running productions were '' The Last of Mrs Cheyney'' (1925), ''Interference'' (1927), '' The Late Christopher Bean'' (1933) and ''Ladies in Retirement'' (1939). In January 1950
Laurence Olivier Laurence Kerr Olivier, Baron Olivier ( ; 22 May 1907 – 11 July 1989) was an English actor and director. He and his contemporaries Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud made up a trio of male actors who dominated the British stage of the m ...
and his wife
Vivien Leigh Vivien Leigh ( ; born Vivian Mary Hartley; 5 November 1913 – 8 July 1967), styled as Lady Olivier after 1947, was a British actress. After completing her drama school education, Leigh appeared in small roles in four films in 1935 and progress ...
took over the management of the theatre. Their successes included '' Venus Observed'' (1950) and for the 1951
Festival of Britain The Festival of Britain was a national exhibition and fair that reached millions of visitors throughout the United Kingdom in the summer of 1951. Labour Party cabinet member Herbert Morrison was the prime mover; in 1947 he started with the ...
season '' Caesar and Cleopatra'' and ''
Antony and Cleopatra ''Antony and Cleopatra'' is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. The play was first performed around 1607, by the King's Men at either the Blackfriars Theatre or the Globe Theatre. Its first appearance in print was in the First Folio published ...
''. In 1954
Terence Rattigan Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan (10 June 191130 November 1977) was a British dramatist and screenwriter. He was one of England's most popular mid-20th-century dramatists. His plays are typically set in an upper-middle-class background.Geoffrey Wan ...
's '' Separate Tables'' began a run of 726 performances, the longest in the history of the St James's. During the run it emerged that a property developer had acquired the freehold of the theatre and obtained the requisite legal authority to knock it down and replace it with an office block. Despite widespread protests the theatre closed in July 1957 and was demolished in December of that year.


History


Background and construction

In 1878 '' Old and New London'' commented that the St James's Theatre owed its existence "to one of those unaccountable infatuations which stake the earnings of a lifetime upon a hazardous speculation"."St James Square: neighbourhood"
''Old and New London'', British History Online. Retrieved 9 February 2019
John Braham, a veteran operatic star, planned a theatre in the fashionable
St James's St James's is a district of Westminster, and a central district in the City of Westminster, London, forming part of the West End of London, West End. The area was once part of the northwestern gardens and parks of St. James's Palace and much of ...
area, on a site in King Street, bounded by Crown Passage to the west, Angel Court to the east and buildings in Pall Mall to the south. A hotel called Nerot's had stood there since the 17th century but was by now abandoned and decaying.Trewin, J. C. "Ghosts in St James's", ''
The Illustrated London News ''The Illustrated London News'', founded by Herbert Ingram and first published on Saturday 14 May 1842, was the world's first illustrated weekly news magazine. The magazine was published weekly for most of its existence, switched to a less freq ...
'', 5 February 1955, p. 228
To generate income, the façade would incorporate one or two shops. Building and opening the theatre were not straightforward. The Theatres Trust comments that Braham quarrelled regularly with his architect, Samuel Beazley, and other professional advisers and contractors."St James's Theatre"
The Theatres Trust. Retrieved 8 February 2019
He also faced difficulties in obtaining the necessary licence to open a theatre; the management of the nearby
Theatre Royal, Haymarket The Theatre Royal Haymarket (also known as Haymarket Theatre or the Little Theatre) is a West End theatre in Haymarket in the City of Westminster which dates back to 1720, making it the third-oldest London playhouse still in use. Samuel Foote ...
opposed it, as did other interested parties. The licence was issued by the
Lord Chamberlain The Lord Chamberlain of the Household is the most senior officer of the Royal Households of the United Kingdom, Royal Household of the United Kingdom, supervising the departments which support and provide advice to the Monarchy of the United Ki ...
on the instructions of
William IV William IV (William Henry; 21 August 1765 – 20 June 1837) was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and King of Hanover from 26 June 1830 until his death in 1837. The third son of George III, William succeeded hi ...
, but Braham continued to encounter opposition from rivals. The theatre, which cost Braham £28,000, was designed with a neo-classical exterior and a
Louis XIV LouisXIV (Louis-Dieudonné; 5 September 16381 September 1715), also known as Louis the Great () or the Sun King (), was King of France from 1643 until his death in 1715. His verified reign of 72 years and 110 days is the List of longest-reign ...
style interior built by the partnership of Grissell and Peto. The frontage was in three bays, three storeys high, with shops in each outer bay. The façade had a four-column Ionic
portico A portico is a porch leading to the entrance of a building, or extended as a colonnade, with a roof structure over a walkway, supported by columns or enclosed by walls. This idea was widely used in ancient Greece and has influenced many cu ...
, a
balustrade A baluster () is an upright support, often a vertical moulded shaft, square, or lathe-turned form found in stairways, parapets, and other architectural features. In furniture construction it is known as a spindle. Common materials used in its ...
d balcony and a two-storey
loggia In architecture, a loggia ( , usually , ) is a covered exterior Long gallery, gallery or corridor, often on an upper level, sometimes on the ground level of a building. The corridor is open to the elements because its outer wall is only parti ...
topped by a tall sheer attic. The interior was decorated by the Frederick Crace Company of Wigmore Street, London. After the opening, ''The Times'' described it in detail: :The prevailing colour is a delicate French white. A border of flowers, richly embossed in gold, runs round the dress circle, and has a tasteful and elegant effect. The panels of the boxes in the front of the first circle are ornamented by designs, in the style of Watteau, placed in gilded frames of fanciful workmanship. … The front of the slips and gallery are distinguished by neat gold ornaments, relieved by handsome medallions. The proscenium, which, like that of Covent-garden, is shell-form, is painted in compartments, where the loves and graces are depicted gaily disporting. Two slender fluted Corinthian columns, supported on pedestals of imitative marble, add greatly to the beauty of the stage-boxes. A series of arches, supporting the roof, and sustained by caryatides, runs entirely round the upper part of the theatre. ... The ''tout ensemble'' of the house is light and brilliant. It looks like a fairy palace. Then, the two great points which are most important to the comfort of an audience – hearing and seeing – have been sedulously consulted; and, with reference to them, we think that the new theatre takes the lead of all its brethren."The St James's Theatre", ''The Times'', 15 December 1835, p. 5


Early years: 1835–1857

The theatre opened on 14 December 1835 with a triple bill consisting of two farces by Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, Gilbert à Beckett and an opera, ''Agnes Sorel (opera), Agnes Sorel'', with music by his wife, Mary Anne à Beckett. This ran for a month before being replaced by one of the few successes of Braham's tenure, another bill containing an operetta – ''Monsieur Jacques'' – and a farce, ''The Strange Gentleman'', by "Boz" (Charles Dickens). In April 1836 the first of many visiting French companies played at the theatre, a tradition that endured intermittently throughout the 122-year existence of the St James's. The theatre did not attract the public in the numbers Braham had expected; in addition to its unexciting programmes it was felt to be too far west to appeal to theatregoers. Braham struggled financially and after three seasons he gave up. John Hooper, previously Braham's stage director, ran the theatre for four months in 1839. His programmes included the presentation of performing lions, monkeys, dogs and goats. In November 1839 Alfred Bunn, whom the theatre critic and historian J. C. Trewin called a former "autocrat of Drury Lane and Covent Garden", took over the house, and changed its name to "The Prince's Theatre" in honour of the Albert, Prince Consort, Prince Consort. Among Bunn's early offerings was a season of German opera, beginning with ''Der Freischütz''. Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort came to two performances during the season, but otherwise Bunn's tenure was undistinguished and unprofitable. The theatre was dark for most of 1841. In 1842 John Mitchell (1806–1874), a bookseller and founder of the Bond Street Ticket Agency, took over, reverted the name to the original, and ran the St James's for twelve years, with much artistic success but little financial return. He presented French plays with the greatest stars of the Parisian stage, including Rachel Félix, Rachel, Jeanne Sylvanie Arnould-Plessy, Jeanne Plessy, Virginie Déjazet and Frédérick Lemaître. He also engaged a French opera company, which opened in January 1849 with ''Le domino noir'', and followed with ''L'ambassadrice'', ''La dame blanche'', ''Richard Coeur-de-lion (opera), Richard Coeur-de-Lion'', ''Le chalet'' and many other popular French works. In between French offerings, Mitchell occasionally sub-let the theatre. In 1846, an amateur performance of Ben Jonson's ''Every Man in his Humour'' included Dickens playing Captain Bobadil. Mitchell had a fondness for international entertainments, and presented German conjurors, Tyrolean singers, dramatic readings by Fanny Kemble, P. T. Barnum's infant prodigies – Kate Josephine Bateman, Kate and Ellen Bateman, aged eight and six – in scenes from Shakespeare, and, most popular of all, the Ethiopian Serenaders who enthused London about the American-style minstrel shows, a form of entertainment that remained popular for decades. After Mitchell left, the actress Laura Seymour (1820–1879) ran the theatre for a season in association with Charles Reade, from October 1854 to March 1855. Under Seymour's management the interior was remodelled, replacing the first tier of boxes with the now more fashionable dress circle. Among the few notable aspects of her tenure was the London debut of the comic actor J. L. Toole. The house was once again dark for most of 1856, but in 1857 the theatre returned to royal and public favour when Jacques Offenbach brought his opéra bouffe company from Paris, with a repertoire of nine of his works. This was followed by the Christy Minstrels who played to good houses for two weeks in August 1857 before moving to other venues.Duncan, p. 103


Five managements: 1858–1869

Following this the theatre had a succession of managements. F. B. Chatterton became the lessee for two years from 1858. He presented a season, mainly of Shakespeare, by the popular actor Barry Sullivan (stage actor), Barry Sullivan, and staged F. C. Burnand's first major play, a burlesque called ''Dido'', which ran for 80 performances. Alfred Wigan, who had been a member of Braham's original company, briefly took over the house in 1860, and was succeeded, equally briefly, by George Vining. Under Frank Matthews, who took over in December 1862, the theatre had its longest-running production thus far: ''Lady Audley's Secret'', which ran for 104 nights.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 461 Matthews ended his tenancy in July 1863 and was followed by Benjamin Nottingham Webster, Benjamin Webster, who mounted a series of revivals and a few new Victorian burlesque, burlesques and extravaganzas, which were financially unsuccessful. A member of Webster's company, Ruth Herbert, took over in 1864 and ran the theatre until 1868. She attracted much praise for presenting Henry Irving in his first important appearance on a London stage. His performance in Dion Boucicault's ''Hunted Down'' in November 1866 caused a sensation. The following month the theatre presented W. S. Gilbert's first burlesque, ''Dulcamara! or, The Little Duck and the Great Quack'', a parody of Donizetti's ''L'elisir d'amore'', which ran until Easter the following year. The Herbert management ended in April 1868. The theatre historian W. J. MacQueen-Pope writes: :She had done nobly and had earned widespread praise. She had kept the theatre open and had brought at least two young people, both destined for greatness, to the notice of the London public – Henry Irving and Charles Wyndham (actor), Charles Wyndham. But the St James's had lost her a lot of money. The season after her departure was notable for two Offenbach productions in which Hortense Schneider starred, bringing the Edward VII, Prince of Wales and London society to the theatre in June 1868.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 462


Mrs John Wood; Marie Litton and others: 1869–1878

In 1869 the theatre was taken by Mrs. John Wood, Mrs John Wood, whose first production was ''She Stoops to Conquer'', which ran for 160 performances – a long run for the time. It was beaten by ''La Belle Sauvage'' which opened in November 1869 and ran for 197 nights. There were successful productions of John Poole (playwright), John Poole's ''Paul Pry (play), Paul Pry'', ''Fernande'' (in which Fanny Brough made her London debut), ''Anne Bracegirdle'', and ''Jenny Lind at Last''. The theatre was well patronised and appeared to be finally prospering. But expenses outran receipts, and Wood gave up the management of the theatre in 1871, and went to the US to replenish her funds.MacQueen-Pope, p. 61 In 1875 another actress, Marie Litton, took the theatre. She had made her name in management, founding and running the Royal Court Theatre, Court Theatre, with which Gilbert's works had become closely, and profitably, associated. In one of her productions at the St James's, a work by Gilbert, ''Tom Cobb'', was in a triple-bill with ''The Zoo'', a short comic opera with music by Arthur Sullivan. Another of Litton's productions was a double bill of revivals of Francis Albert Marshall, Frank Marshall's farce ''Brighton'' and William Brough (writer), William Brough's burlesque ''Conrad and Medora'', in which she co-starred with Henrietta Hodson. When Litton left for another theatre in 1876, first Horace Wigan, and then Mrs John Wood made brief returns to management at the St James's, the latter with some success in ''The Danischeffs'', which ran to good houses for more than 300 performances. She was succeeded by Samuel Hayes, who produced three failures in quick succession and then withdrew.


John Hare and the Kendals: 1879–1888

The owner of the freehold of the theatre, Francis Needham, 3rd Earl of Kilmorey, Lord Newry, began to take an active interest in its affairs. He invited the actor John Hare to take over, which he did, in 1879, in partnership with two fellow-actors, Madge Kendal and her husband William Hunter Kendal, William. The theatre was again extensively renovated, with new decor by Walter Crane. ''The Era (newspaper), The Era'' commented that the new management was in possession of "a house which, for taste and elegance, and comfort, is far in advance of anything the Metropolis has yet been able to boast." A historian of the St James's, Barry Duncan, heads his chapter on this phase of the theatre's history, "John Hare and the Kendals: Nine Years of Steady Success". For the first time, the theatre's reputation as "unlucky" was steadily defied. The new lessees aimed both to amuse and to improve public taste,"The Hare and Kendal Management at the St James's", ''The Theatre'', September 1888, pp. 134–145 and in the view of the theatre historian J. P. Wearing, they achieved their aim, with a successful mixture of French adaptations and original English plays.Wearing, J. P
"Hare, Sir John (real name John Joseph Fairs) (1844–1921), actor and theatre manager"
''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press. Retrieved 10 February 2019
Under their management the St James's staged twenty-one plays: seven were new British pieces, eight French adaptations, and the rest were revivals. Their first production on 4 October 1879 was a revival of G. W. Godfrey's ''The Queen's Shilling''. This was followed in December by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Tennyson's ''The Falcon'', based on the ''Decameron'', in which Madge Kendal made a considerable successes as Lady Giovanna.Foulkes, Richard
"Kendal, Dame Madge (real name Margaret Shafto Robertson; married name Margaret Shafto Grimston) (1848–1935), actress"
''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press. Retrieved 10 February 2019
Wearing regards ''The Money Spinner'' (1881) as of particular importance to this period of the theatre's history, being the first of several of Arthur Wing Pinero, A. W. Pinero's plays staged there by Hare and the Kendals. It was regarded as daringly unconventional and a risky venture, but it caught on with the public, partly for Hare's character, the "disreputable but delightful old reprobate and card-shark" Baron Croodle. Other plays by Pinero given by the Hare-Kendal management at the St James's were ''The Squire'' (1881), ''The Ironmaster'' (1884), ''Mayfair'' (1885), and ''The Hobby Horse'' (1886). B. C. Stephenson's comedy ''Impulse'' (1883) was a considerable success and was revived by public demand two months after the end of its first run. The reception of a rare excursion into Shakespeare, ''As You Like It'' (1885), was mixed. Hare's Touchstone was considered by some to be the worst ever seen, whereas Madge Kendal's Rosalind had always been one of her best-loved roles. Among the company in these years the actresses included Fanny Brough, Helen Maud Holt, and the young May Whitty; among their male colleagues were George Alexander, Allan Aynesworth, Albert Chevalier, Henry Kemble (actor, born 1848), Henry Kemble, William Terris, Brandon Thomas (playwright), Brandon Thomas and Lewis Waller. In a speech at the end of the final night of the Hare-Kendal management, Kendal commented that they had enjoyed more successes and fewer failures than managements of most theatres. But the St James's reputation for ill-luck was not yet finished.


Rutland Barrington; Lillie Langtry: 1888–1890

In 1888 the comic singer and actor Rutland Barrington became lessee of the theatre. He recruited a talented company, giving Olga Nethersole, Julia Neilson, Allan Aynesworth and Lewis Waller their London debuts, but met financial disaster when his first two – and in the event his only – productions, ''The Dean's Daughter'' by Sydney Grundy and ''Brantinghame Hall'' by Gilbert, were both complete failures. Barrington lost £4,500, went bankrupt, and surrendered the lease in January 1889. The theatre stayed dark for the rest of the year. Lillie Langtry took a year's lease from January 1890. She reopened the house on 24 February, playing Rosalind in a production of ''As You Like It'' attended by the Prince and Alexandra of Denmark, Princess of Wales. She followed this with a melodramatic new play, ''Esther Sandraz'', adapted from the French by Grundy, which played with a curtain-raiser, a musical farce by Burnand and Edward Solomon, ''The Tiger''. Langtry fell ill with pleurisy and had to abandon the season in June. Arthur Bourchier, who had been playing in her company, took on the remainder of the lease, presenting ''Your Wife'', an English version of a French farce, but poor box-office takings forced him to close the piece within a month. The lease was taken up by a French company who presented a season of plays in the latter months of the year. Poor attendance again forced the premature closure of the run.


George Alexander: 1890–1918

In 1891 the actor George Alexander, who had begun a managerial career a year earlier, took a lease of the St James's. He remained in charge there until his death in 1918. He redecorated it and had electric lighting installed. He opened with a double bill of comedies, ''Sunlight and Shadow'' and ''The Gay Lothario''."George Alexander and the St James's Theatre", ''The Era'', 24 June 1899, p. 13 He followed this with ''The Idler'', by Charles Haddon Chambers, Haddon Chambers, a serious drama. It had already been a success in America and ran at the St James's through most of the remainder of the season, which concluded with a costume drama, ''Moliere'', by Walter Frith. When Alexander took over the St James's he had only eleven years' professional experience in the theatre, but the historians J. P. Wearing and A. E. W. Mason both note that he had already reached a firm and enduring managerial policy. He sought to engage the best actors for his company: unlike some star actor-managers he did not wish to be supported by actors whose inferior talent would make the star look better. Among the actresses he engaged for his companies were Lilian Braithwaite, Constance Collier, Kate Cutler, Julia Neilson, Juliette Nesville, Marion Terry and Irene Vanbrugh, Irene and Violet Vanbrugh.Parker, pp. 97, 103, 187, 225, 887 and 898 Their male colleagues included Arthur Bourchier, Henry V. Esmond, H. V. Esmond, Cyril Maude, Godfrey Tearle and Fred Terry. Two key features of Alexander's management were his continual support of British playwrights; and his care to avoid alienating his key clientele, the fashionable society audience. The writer Hesketh Pearson commented that Alexander catered to the tastes and foibles of London Society in its theatre-going just as the Savoy Hotel catered to them in restaurant-going.Pearson, p. 74 Within a year of taking over the St James's, Alexander began a mutually beneficial professional association with
Oscar Wilde Oscar Fingal O'Fflahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 185430 November 1900) was an Irish author, poet, and playwright. After writing in different literary styles throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular and influential playwright ...
, whose ''
Lady Windermere's Fan ''Lady Windermere's Fan, A Play About a Good Woman'' is a four-act comedy by Oscar Wilde, first performed on Saturday, 20 February 1892, at the St James's Theatre in London. The story concerns Lady Windermere, who suspects that her husband is ...
'' he presented in February 1892. The following year he produced Pinero's, '' The Second Mrs Tanqueray'', presented in May 1893. Like ''Lady Windermere's Fan'' it featured "a woman with a past", but unlike Wilde's play it ended in tragedy. It was thought daring at the time, but Alexander knew his audiences and kept to what Pearson called his "safe path of correct riskiness". It ran for 227 performances in its first production and was later much revived. The title role was first played by Mrs Patrick Campbell, who made her name in the part. Between Pinero's play and the work with which Alexander's name has become most closely associated – ''The Importance of Being Earnest'' – came Alexander's most conspicuous failure. The celebrated novelist Henry James had written a play, ''Guy Domville'', about a hero who renounces the priesthood to save his family by marrying to produce an heir, but finally reverts to his religious calling. The play had been turned down by one London management, but Alexander took it on and opened it at the St James's on 5 January 1895. It was received politely by those in the more expensive parts of the house and impolitely by those in the cheaper seats. The reviews were unenthusiastic; Alexander kept the play on the bill for a month before turning to Wilde as a more theatrically adept writer.Horne, Philip
"James, Henry (1843–1916), writer"
''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press. Retrieved 5 February 2019
In February 1895 Alexander presented Wilde's ''
The Importance of Being Earnest ''The Importance of Being Earnest, a Trivial Comedy for Serious People'' is a play by Oscar Wilde, the last of his four drawing-room plays, following ''Lady Windermere's Fan'' (1892), ''A Woman of No Importance'' (1893) and ''An Ideal Husban ...
''. The success of the play with audiences and critics was immediate and considerable, but it was short-lived. Within weeks of the premiere Wilde was arrested on a charge of committing homosexual acts and was tried, convicted and imprisoned. The public turned against him, and although Alexander tried to keep the production of the play going by removing the author's name from the playbills, he had to withdraw it after 83 performances. Under Alexander, the St James's did not solely concentrate on drawing-room comedy and society drama. There were costume dramas, including the Ruritanian swashbuckler, ''The Prisoner of Zenda#Adaptations, The Prisoner of Zenda'', which ran for 255 performances; and occasional ventures into Shakespeare, notably ''As You Like It'', with Alexander as Orlando, Julia Neilson as Rosalind and a supporting cast that included C. Aubrey Smith, Bertram Wallis, Harry Brodribb Irving, H. B. Irving, Robert Loraine and H. V. Esmond. At the end of 1899 Alexander closed the theatre to have it largely reconstructed, producing what ''The Era'' called "one of the handsomest temples of the drama in London", while retaining its charm and cosiness. The rebuilding provided increased seating capacity, which enhanced the financial viability of the theatre. The decor was by Percy Macquoid, carried out by the leading London decorators Messrs. Morant and Co. It reopened on 2 February 1900 with a performance of ''Rupert of Hentzau'' by Anthony Hope attended by Edward VII, the Prince of Wales. The ''Manchester Guardian'' agreed that the redeveloped theatre was "now one of the handsomest in London". Alexander's management continued into the new century, continuing to vary the repertory with, in 1902, a verse drama, ''Paolo and Francesca'', based on an episode in Dante Alighieri, Dante's ''The Divine Comedy'', as well as the theatre's more usual fare such as Pinero's drama ''His House in Order'', an artistic and box-office success, running for 427 performances. In 1909 Alexander successfully revived ''The Importance of Being Earnest'', which ran for 316 performances. In 1913 he sub-let the theatre to Harley Granville Barker for four months. Among the novelties of that season was George Bernard Shaw, Bernard Shaw's ''Androcles and the Lion (play), Androcles and the Lion'' in 1913.


1918–1939

After Alexander died in 1918, the lease was taken over by Gilbert Miller, an American impresario, who presented his own productions from time to time, but more often sub-let the theatre to other managers. The first was Gertrude Elliott who presented and starred in an American Parallel universes in fiction, fantasy play, ''The Eyes of Youth'', which ran for 383 performances. After this, Miller went into partnership with the actor Henry Ainley, and in 1920 they presented ''Julius Caesar (play), Julius Caesar'', with Ainley as Mark Antony and a cast including Basil Gill, Claude Rains, Milton Rosmer and Lilian Braithwaite, which ran for 83 performances. There followed a succession of society dramas and light comedies including ''Polly With a Past (play), Polly With a Past'' (1921) in which many future stars appeared, including Helen Haye, Edith Evans and Noël Coward. In 1923 ''The Green Goddess'', a melodrama by William Archer (critic), William Archer, started a run of 417 performances. During the 1920s, the St James's staged Christmas seasons of ''Peter and Wendy, Peter Pan'' with Peter played by Edna Best (1920 and 1922) and Jean Forbes-Robertson (1929), and Captain Hook by Ainley (1920), Ernest Thesiger (1921), Lyn Harding (1922), and Gerald du Maurier (1929). In September 1925 du Maurier and Gladys Cooper took a sub-lease of the theatre to present '' The Last of Mrs Cheyney'' by Frederick Lonsdale (1925), which ran for 514 performances, until the end of 1926.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 479 ''Interference'' (1927), a thriller by Roland Pertwee and Harold Dearden, was another big success and ran for 412 performances. It was followed by a flop, ''S.O.S'' (1928), notable only for starring Gracie Fields in her first straight part. In 1929, Alfred Lunt made his London debut, starring with his wife Lynn Fontanne in ''Caprice'', presented by Charles B. Cochran, C. B. Cochran, a comedy about a man, his two mistresses, and his son by one of them who falls in love with the other. In the early 1930s there was a succession of failures or minimal successes until 1933, when Emlyn Williams's '' The Late Christopher Bean'' ran from May until September of the following year, with Edith Evans, Louise Hampton and Cedric Hardwicke.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 480 In 1936 the centenary of the theatre was marked by a lavishly staged adaptation of ''Pride and Prejudice'', designed by Rex Whistler, which ran for nearly a year. It was presented by Miller in association with Max Gordon (producer), Max Gordon and starred Celia Johnson and Hugh Williams. Of the later productions during the 1930s only ''Golden Boy'' (1938) and ''Ladies in Retirement'' (1939) ran for more than 100 performances.


1940–1957

At the outbreak of the Second World War theatres were temporarily closed by government decree. When they were permitted to reopen, a few weeks later, ''Ladies in Retirement'' resumed its run until the theatre was hit by a bomb in 1940. It did not reopen until March 1941. A brief season of ballet was followed by a Shakespeare and Ben Jonson season by Donald Wolfit and his company. In mid-1942 Coward's ''Blithe Spirit (play), Blithe Spirit'' transferred from the Piccadilly Theatre; Coward took over the role of Charles Condomine from Cecil Parker prior to taking the play on tour. Wolfit and his company returned at the end of 1942 and played into the following year. Williams's adaptation of ''A Month in the Country (play)#European productions, A Month in the Country'' starring Michael Redgrave ran for 313 performances for most of 1943.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 481 It was followed by Agatha Christie's ''And Then There Were None (play), Ten Little Niggers'', which ran for 260 performances, interrupted when a bomb severely damaged the theatre in February 1944: the production moved temporarily to the Cambridge Theatre, returning in May to complete its run. Of productions of the later 1940s, few made much impression, with the exception of ''Adventure Story (play), Adventure Story'' by
Terence Rattigan Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan (10 June 191130 November 1977) was a British dramatist and screenwriter. He was one of England's most popular mid-20th-century dramatists. His plays are typically set in an upper-middle-class background.Geoffrey Wan ...
(1949), starring Paul Scofield as Alexander the Great. The reviews were respectful, but the play ran for less than three months.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 482 The critic Ivor Brown thought that Scofield's performance as Alexander, though excellent, owed something to the example of
Laurence Olivier Laurence Kerr Olivier, Baron Olivier ( ; 22 May 1907 – 11 July 1989) was an English actor and director. He and his contemporaries Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud made up a trio of male actors who dominated the British stage of the m ...
. In January 1950 Olivier and his wife
Vivien Leigh Vivien Leigh ( ; born Vivian Mary Hartley; 5 November 1913 – 8 July 1967), styled as Lady Olivier after 1947, was a British actress. After completing her drama school education, Leigh appeared in small roles in four films in 1935 and progress ...
took over the management of the theatre. They opened with Christopher Fry's new play, '' Venus Observed'', in which Leigh did not appear. In 1951, for the
Festival of Britain The Festival of Britain was a national exhibition and fair that reached millions of visitors throughout the United Kingdom in the summer of 1951. Labour Party cabinet member Herbert Morrison was the prime mover; in 1947 he started with the ...
season, they starred in Shaw's '' Caesar and Cleopatra'' and Shakespeare's ''
Antony and Cleopatra ''Antony and Cleopatra'' is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. The play was first performed around 1607, by the King's Men at either the Blackfriars Theatre or the Globe Theatre. Its first appearance in print was in the First Folio published ...
''. Duncan observes, "The company was as brilliant as it was enormous." In addition to the Oliviers it included Robert Helpmann, Richard Goolden, Wilfrid Hyde White and Peter Cushing among the men, and their female colleagues included Elspeth March, Maxine Audley and Jill Bennett (British actress), Jill Bennett.Duncan, pp. 336–338 Later that year, at Olivier's invitation, the French actors Jean-Louis Barrault and Madeleine Renaud presented a three-week season at the theatre with their own company. This was followed by Orson Welles in the title role of ''Othello'', with Peter Finch as Iago and Gudrun Ure as Desdemona. In 1953 Olivier presented an Italian company headed by Ruggero Ruggeri in plays by Luigi Pirandello, Pirandello, and a short French season by the Comédie-Française. In 1954 Rattigan's play, '' Separate Tables'', began a run of 726 performances, the longest in the history of the St James's. The play starred Margaret Leighton and Eric Portman.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 483 During the run of ''Separate Tables'' it became known that a property developer had acquired the freehold of the theatre and had obtained the requisite permission from the London County Council (LCC) to demolish the building and replace it with an office block. Leigh and Olivier led a nationwide campaign to try to save the theatre. There were street marches and a protest in the House of Lords. A motion was carried against the Government in that house, but to no avail. The LCC ordered that no further theatres would be demolished in central London without a planned replacement, but neither the national nor the local government would intervene to prevent the destruction of the St James's. After the run of ''Separate Tables'' there were five short-lived productions at the theatre, and the final performance there was given on 27 July 1957. In October the interior was stripped; in November the contents of the theatre were auctioned; and in December the demolition team moved in.Mander and Mitchenson, p. 484 An office building, St James's House, was built on the site. It incorporated sculptured balcony fronts on each floor above the entrance. Four bas-relief panels by Edward Bainbridge Copnall depicted the heads of Gilbert Miller, George Alexander, Oscar Wilde and the Oliviers. The office building was demolished and a new one built on the site in the 1980s. The panels were moved from the King Street façade to the Angel Court side of the building."St James's Theatre"
Arthur Lloyd. Retrieved 9 February 2019


Notes, references and sources


Notes


References


Sources

* * * * * * * * * * *


External links



With many archive images and original programmes.


Theatre timeline and images
{{DEFAULTSORT:Saint James's Theatre Former theatres in London Former buildings and structures in the City of Westminster Theatres completed in 1835 1957 disestablishments in England Buildings and structures demolished in 1957 Demolished buildings and structures in London St James's 1835 establishments in England