- Leeds City Varieties
The "Leeds City Varieties" is a Grade II* listed
Music Hall inLeeds ,West Yorkshire ,England .It was built in 1865 as an adjunct to the White Swan Inn in Swan Street and the original interior is largely unaltered. Along with
Hoxton Hall andWilton's Music Hall (both in London), it is a rare surviving example of theVictorian era Music Halls of the 1850s/1860s. The interior is a long rectangle, with boxes separated by cast-iron columns along the sides at circle level.The theatre was founded by local pub landlord and benefactor Charles Thornton and was originally called "Thornton's New Music Hall and Fashionable Lounge". The name subsequently changed to the White Swan Varieties and then Stansfield's Varieties before becoming the City Palace of Varieties.
Charlie Chaplin ,Marie Lloyd and Houdini are among the artists who performed there.Between 1953 and 1983, the theatre achieved national fame as the venue for the
BBC television programme "The Good Old Days ", a recreation of old-time Music Hall featuringLeonard Sachs as thealliterative Chairman and many well-known and less-well-known performers. The venue still presents live "Good Old Days" Music Hall events over runs of 3 weekends in the spring and autumn, as well as pantomime and a regular programme of stand-up comedy and music concerts.The City Varieties is currently bidding for Heritage Lottery funds to help with major refurbishment and restoration planned for 2009. [ [http://www.hlf.org.uk/English/MediaCentre/Archive/Good+Old+Days.htm Heritage Lottery Fund brings back the ‘Good Old Days’] ]
References
External links
* [http://www.leeds.gov.uk/cityvarieties/ City Varieties website]
* [http://www.suchsmallportions.com/pagesfinal/features/goodolddays.html The Good Old Days at Leeds City Varieties theatre, from suchsmallportions.com]
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