East End Theatre District

Coordinates: 37°48′45.8″S 144°58′10.3″E / 37.812722°S 144.969528°E / -37.812722; 144.969528

The East End Theatre District is a precinct within the Melbourne city centre, and is bounded by Spring Street, Flinders Street, Swanston Street, and Lonsdale Street. The district is home to six of Melbourne's major theatres, including the Princess Theatre, Her Majesty's Theatre, and the Regent Theatre.[1]

History

The East End of Melbourne was effectively formed by the Hoddle Grid, with Elizabeth Street the dividing line between east and west. The Hoddle Grid was laid out in 1837, following the founding of the Melbourne settlement in 1835.

Melbourne's first theatre, the Pavilion, was constructed adjacent to the Eagle Tavern on Bourke Street in 1842.[2] The second theatre, the Queen's, was also constructed as part of a pub, however it was, and remains, the only major theatre in Melbourne built west of Elizabeth Street.[2]

East End theatres

Six surviving theatres exist within the East End:

Current and upcoming productions

Theatre Owner Address Capacity Production Type Opened Closing
Athenaeum Theatre AT Management 188 Collins Street 880 Comedy venue Comedy - -
Comedy Theatre Marriner Group Cnr Exhibition & Lonsdale Streets 997 The Play That Goes Wrong* Play 22 February 2017 -
Forum Theatre Marriner Group Cnr Flinders & Russell Streets 1500 Concert venue Music - -
Her Majesty's Theatre Hayden Attractions 219 Exhibition Street 1700 Kinky Boots Musical 12 October 2016 -
Aladdin* Musical 26 April 2017 -
Princess Theatre Marriner Group 163 Spring Street 1488 Matilda the Musical Musical 13 March 2016 11 November 2016
The Book of Mormon* Musical 18 January 2017 -
Regent Theatre Marriner Group 191 Collins Street 2143 Circus 1903* Circus 3 January 2017 12 January 2017
Ladies in Black* Musical 25 February 2017 18 March 2017
My Fair Lady* Musical 12 May 2017 -

Historic theatres

The East End has been home to over 25 different theatres since 1841. Some of the major theatres are listed below.

Theatre Address Year Opened Year Closed Year Rebuilt Year Closed
Pavilion Cnr Swanston St and Elizabeth St 1841 1845 - -
Queen's* Cnr Queen St and Little Bourke St 1845 1856 - -
Theatre Royal 232 Bourke St 1855 1872 1872 1933
Olympic (the "Iron Pot") Cnr Exhibition St and Lonsdale St 1855 1860 - -
Haymarket 133 Bourke St 1862 1871 - -
Prince of Wales Opera House 249 Bourke St 1872 1898 - -
Bijou 225 Bourke St 1876 1889 1890 1934
Tivoli 249 Bourke St 1901 1966 - -
King's 131 Russell St 1908 1976 - -
Palace 20 Bourke St 1912 Currently closed - -
Auditorium 171 Collins St 1913 1934 - -

Economic impact

In July 2016, the East End Theatre District was reported to have made an economic contribution of $692 million, and an economic impact of $226 million, to the state of Victoria.[3]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.