Apollo Theatre
The Apollo Theatre was opened one month after the death of Queen Victoria therefore making it the foremost West End theatre of the Edwardian era. The auditorium was refurbished in 1932. The balcony (3rd tier) is said to be the steepest in London you have been warned! The Apollo Theatre boasted mostly musical comedies in the early years. The theatre became the home of Harry Gabriel Pelissier’s The Follies from 1908 to 1912. From the thirties it’s specialised mostly in light comedies, thrillers and farces. Marc Camoletti’s Boeing Boeing opened here in 1962 before transferring to the Duchess Theatre in 1965 where it completed a total of 2,035 performances. History then repeated itself when Camoletti’s Don’t Dress For Dinner opened here on 26th March, 1991 before changing to the Duchess Theatre on 26th October, 1992 where it then closed on 1st March, 1997.