Britain | Theatre architecture

London is likely to get a swanky new theatre

Out with the hard benches; in with the bars, VIP suites and boxes

BUILT INTO the bricks of British theatres are the aims and ideals of the ages that made them. “Social class,” says Rohan McWilliam, a historian at Anglia Ruskin University and author of a book on the West End, “was etched into the architecture of theatre.” From the gilded social stratification of Victorian theatres to the dourly democratic National Theatre (“a mixture of Gatwick airport and Brent Cross shopping centre”, as the director Jonathan Miller had it) British theatres are mirrors to their makers.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Box clever”

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