The Charing Cross
Music Hall was established beneath the arches of
Charing Cross railway station in London in 1866 by brothers Giovanni and
Carlo Gatti, to replace the former
Hungerford Hall
Hungerford Hall was a lecture theatre built beside Hungerford Market near Charing Cross in London in 1851. It was used for public entertainments, including demonstrations of magic, mesmerism and optical illusions. It burned down in 1854, badly da ...
. The site had been acquired, together with
Hungerford Market
Hungerford Market was a produce market in London, at Charing Cross on the Strand. It existed in two different buildings on the same site, the first built in 1682, the second in 1832. The market was first built on the site of Hungerford House, ...
, by the
South Eastern Railway in 1862, and incorporated into the railway station, which opened on 11 January 1864, resulting in the demolition of the hall.
[''Advertisement for the Grand Star Company for Xmas at the Charing Cross Music Hall'' (Collect Britain), British Library]
accessed 15 Oct 2007
History
The music hall was built in the substantial two-level space formed by two of the arches of the
undercroft
An undercroft is traditionally a cellar or storage room, often brick-lined and vaulted, and used for storage in buildings since medieval times. In modern usage, an undercroft is generally a ground (street-level) area which is relatively open ...
of the station, and opened in 1867 as ''The Arches'', renamed the ''Hungerford Music Hall'' in 1883, and in 1887 became known variously as the ''Charing Cross Music Hall'', ''Gatti's under the Arches'' and ''Gatti's Charing Cross Music Hall''. By 1895, the hall boasted an attached ''grand cafe and billiard saloon''.
[
As a young man, ]Rudyard Kipling
Joseph Rudyard Kipling ( ; 30 December 1865 – 18 January 1936)''The Times'', (London) 18 January 1936, p. 12. was an English novelist, short-story writer, poet, and journalist. He was born in British Raj, British India, which inspired much o ...
lived in Villiers Street, and visited Gatti's, and wrote ''My One and Only'', for a Lion Comique at the hall. His experiences in the hall formed the basis for his '' Barrack-Room Ballads''. Kipling also wrote a story called ''My Great and Only'' (1890) describing a visit he made to Gatti's. He wrote that the hall held ''four hundred “when it’s all full, sir”''. A weekly periodical for artistes, ''The Music Hall and Theatre'', provides a review on 23 November 1889 of a variety performance:''Twixt Love and Duty'', Leo Dryden has his hands full, to say nothing of his voice, which is equally full . . . Charles Ross, of Gaiety fame, so well known as the ''Dainty Champion'', secures rounds of applause by the rendering of his new characteristic song entitled ''She’s a real good mother'' . . . James Fawn wants to know who cuts the policemen out? Why the soldier whom Fawn impersonated to the very life. He does like to be in the know, you know, equally so with his hearers, who would willingly sit out a whole night with him if he’d keep them ''in the know'' all the time, but James must draw the line somewhere, so he draws it at Gatti’s.
Baroness Orczy, creator of the '' Scarlet Pimpernel'', described a visit to the hall at the turn of the century in her autobiography: The only hall which appealed to we two inveterate Bohemians was a funny little one under the arches of Charing Cross Bridge where aspirants to fame were given a trial with a view to a possible engagement in one or the other of the important halls. Thus they were 'tried on the dog', as the ordeal was called, and many a famous artiste started his or her career under the 'old arches'.
I remember seeing there the début of the Levy sisters, who became such favourites and made such fortunes afterwards. There was no stage at the 'Old Arches', only a platform in the centre of the hall, where sat enthroned the manager at a rostrum when he announced each item of the programme together with the name of the artiste about to perform and tapped the desk before him with a wooden hammer. The audience sat on seats and benches all round the central platform, very much as they do round a prize-ring. A few privileged members in the audience were permitted to sit on the platform with the manager, but this privilege entailed the obligation to pay for that gentleman's drinks.
Notable acts
Not all performers were ''tried on the dog''. Flyers show many established artists performing, for instance, Rose Hamilton, Marie Loftus (1857-1840, mother of noted film actress Cecilia Loftus
Cecilia Loftus (born Marie Cecilia Loftus Brown; 22 October 1876 – 12 July 1943) was a Scottish actress, singer, mimic, vaudevillian, and music hall performer in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Early life
Loftus was born in Glasgow, ...
), and Harry Randall (1857–1932), performed in the ''Whitsuntide'' bill for 1895.
Decline and new era
As the popularity of music hall declined, the theatre became the ''Arena Cinema'' between 1910 and 1923, and from 1928 to 1939 the ''Forum Cinema''. During World War II
World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
it was used as a fire station, and a store for the Army Corps of Cinematography.
Players' Theatre
After the war, it was acquired from the War Office by Leonard Sachs for the Players' Theatre
The Players' Theatre was a London theatre which opened at 43 King Street, Covent Garden, on 18 October 1936. The club originally mounted period-style musical comedies, introducing Victorian-style music hall in December 1937. The threat of World ...
. There were no fittings and none of the paraphernalia for a theatre, but it still opened within three weeks. Regular performers included Hattie Jacques, Bill Owen, Ian Carmichael
Ian Gillett Carmichael, OBE (18 June 1920 – 5 February 2010) was an English actor who worked prolifically on stage, screen and radio in a career spanning 70 years. He found prominence in the films of the Boulting brothers, including ...
, Clive Dunn, Ian Wallace and John Hewer, and featured newcomers including Daphne Anderson, Patsy Rowlands
Patricia Amy Rowlands (19 January 1931 – 22 January 2005) was an English actress who is best remembered for her roles in the ''Carry On'' films series, as Betty Lewis in the ITV Thames sitcom '' Bless This House'', and as Alice Meredit ...
, Maggie Smith, Marian Studholme, Marion Grimaldi, and Margaret Burton. In 1953, Sandy Wilson provided a commissioned work for the theatre, '' The Boy Friend''. In a full-length version this transferred to Wyndham's Theatre, and premièred in New York with Julie Andrews
Dame Julie Andrews (born Julia Elizabeth Wells; 1 October 1935) is an English actress, singer, and author. She has garnered numerous accolades throughout her career spanning over seven decades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy ...
in the starring role.''History Of The Players' Theatre Club'' (Players Theatre, Victorian Music Hall)
accessed 15 Oct 2007
The Players' Theatre closed in 2002. ''New End Theatre'' attempted to revive the venue as the ''New Players' Theatre'', but in 2005 relinquished the lease to The Pure Group, owners of the neighbouring ''
Heaven
Heaven or the heavens, is a common religious cosmological or transcendent supernatural place where beings such as deities, angels, souls, saints, or venerated ancestors are said to originate, be enthroned, or reside. According to the bel ...
''. They continue to operate the 275-seat refurbished theatre for theatrical performance and as a conference centre.
References
External links
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''An informal portrait of a 'gentleman of the road' seated, reading a book next to steps leading down beneath the Players Theatre on Villiers Street at Charing Cross'' (English Heritage ''Viewfinder''){dead link, date=November 2016 , bot=InternetArchiveBot , fix-attempted=yes
Former music hall venues in the United Kingdom
Former buildings and structures in the City of Westminster
Former theatres in London
Music venues completed in 1867
1910 disestablishments in England
1867 establishments in England