Alexandra Palace Theatre
The Alexandra Palace Theatre was originally built in London, England, in 1873 for the performance of opera and ballet, but within a few weeks was burnt to the ground with the rest of Alexandra Palace. The Palace, including the theatre, was rebuilt and reopened in 1875 and is now a Grade II listed building. The new theatre included a cellar below the stage which housed complex machinery for use in scene changes and movement of actors. The theatre fell into disrepair for many years but was reopened in 2018 after refurbishment to consolidate it into a state of arrested decay. The stage machinery is one of the few surviving examples of its type in the country.
1875: Theatre rebuilt
The co-architects of the 1875 Palace were John Johnson and Alfred Meeson. They worked with an expert in stage machinery called Thomas Walford Grieve, son of Thomas Grieve, who designed sets for many London theatres during the 19th century. The stage machinery, housed below the stage, included many different mechanisms to enable scene changes, lower actors through the stage floor and to enable actors to 'fly' over the stage.According to articles in The Era and The Hornsey journals, the theatre could hold around 3,000 people and the stage could hold hundreds. It had a floor area which was about the same as that of the London Drury Lane Theatre, but whereas the area of the Drury Lane stage is about half that of the whole theatre, that of Alexandra Palace Theatre is about a quarter, with a distance of 38 metres between the back row of the stalls to the stage. Statues of Greek muses were installed on either side of the proscenium arch.
Most of the audience were seated in the raked floor area but there were also two balconies, neither of which reached the proscenium arch of the stage as was the case in many other London theatres of the time. It was reported that the stage could be seen from all seats. According to reports at the time the acoustics were good from every seat but others reported that the actors had to 'throw' their voices to be heard well by everyone.
The theatre was originally lit by gaslight using gaseliers suspended from the ceiling but also had natural light from glazed roofing and six large sash windows, which were blocked with dark screens during performances. The theatre was one of the first to install electric lighting in 1898, and the saltwater dimmers used to control the brightness of the lights can still be seen backstage at the theatre.
Early performances at the theatre included the operetta Breaking the Spell by Offenbach, a pantomime based on the fairy tale The Yellow Dwarf, and a ballet called Minerva. Performances of all types took place during the last 25 years of the 19th century but the Palace was closed for long periods due to lack of business with resulting financial difficulties.
1900: Alexandra Palace Trust
From 1875 to 1900 Alexandra Palace was privately owned, but In 1900 the palace and park became owned by the Alexandra Park Trust under the Alexandra Park and Palace Act Act.1901: Cinema
At the beginning of the 20th century cinema was becoming the most popular type of entertainment, so a Cinematograph film projector was installed in the theatre in 1901. The audience was allowed to smoke in the auditorium and, as the projector was unprotected and used to project highly flammable film, there was an inevitable fire risk. Middlesex County Council ordered some work to be done to prevent fire and as a result, the theatre was closed from 1907–1908. One of these precautions was to build a box around the projector, which can still be seen in the theatre today. Another was to fit a long large iron girder weighing 6 tons above the proscenium arch of the stage to be used with a fire-proof safety curtain which divided the auditorium from the stage.1914–1918: World War I
During WW1, the entire Palace was requisitioned as a transit camp for Belgian refugees and then as an internment camp. The theatre was used as a dormitory, chapel, cinema and a space in which internees performed concerts.1922–1936
The Palace was handed back to the trustees in 1922 and W. J. MacQueen-Pope was appointed general manager of the Palace. He decided to use most of the war reparation money to refurbish the theatre. The upper balcony was removed, a new staircase added to the remaining balcony, new moldings added to the ceiling to reduce echo, and a new foyer created. The work was completed in 1923 and the theatre reopened with a performance of the pantomime Cinderella. It was reported in The Era that the theatre was a 'comfortable, warm, modern playhouse capable of staging the biggest shows'. The under stage machinery that produced the effects necessary in Victorian melodrama was no longer used, but most is still preserved beneath the stage.After the reopening, the performances in the theatre included drama, opera musical theatre, and variety. The Alexandra Palace Operatic and Dramatic Society, set up by MacQueen-Pope, with their star Nancy McMillan, performed several Gilbert and Sullivan light operas and Edwardian musical comedies.
In 1926 the theatre was leased by Archie Pitt, husband and manager of the singer Gracie Fields, who practiced and performed in the theatre.
Audiences declined during this period and the last public performance in the theatre, before it reopened in 2018, was a concert by a Royal Artillery band in 1934.