Home Theatre Heartbeat Of Home Tickets

Heartbeat Of Home Tickets

Piccadilly Theatre, London
Running time: 1hr 50min (inc. interval)
Age Restrictions: Children under 5 will not be admitted.
Tickets from £15.00

Select Tickets

Heartbeat Of Home Tickets

OFFER: Was £69.50 Now £33 Saving £36

SAVE UP TO £65

£96 / £108 now £43
£72 / £84 now £33
£48 / £60 now £25
£30 / £36 now £15
Valid all performances until 13 October 2019. 
 

 

Unfortunately, we don't have any events on sale for Heartbeat Of Home at the moment.

If you'd like to be the first to know when new events are announced, you can follow Heartbeat Of Home below.

Heartbeat of Home returns to the West End after sell out perfomances at the London Palladium

Heartbeat of Home is a spine-tingling, tantalizing, high octane, sexy, dance and music extravaganza. It is a heart–stopping tour de force that features the dynamic, vibrant components of traditional Irish, Latin, Hip-Hop, Afro-Cuban and Contemporary music and dance, uniting performers and audiences on journeys to find a home, wherever that may be.

Following sold out performances at the London Palladium earlier this year and having thrilled audiences in Dublin, North America, China and Germany, the show is heading to the Piccadilly Theatre for an extended West End run due to popular demand.

 

Venue information

Piccadilly Theatre
Piccadilly Theatre
16 Denman Street
London
W1D 7DY

The Piccadilly Theatre is situated on Denman Street in London's West End, hidden behind Piccadilly Circus. 

Owned and operated by the Ambassador Theatre Group, The Piccadilly Theatre plays host to the London West End adaptation of the Oscar winning film Dirty Dancing by original writer Eleanor Bergstein, and directed by Sarah Tipple. The show features many of the songs from the famous original movie soundtrack such as "Hungry Eyes" and "I've Had The Time of My Life" to name just two, along with a collection of fantastic new songs.

The Piccadilly Theatre: History

At its grand opening in April 1928, the Piccadilly Theatre was one of the largest theatres to be built in London with a 1,400 seat capacity, since reduced to 1,232. Its souvenir brochure claimed, ''If all the bricks used in the building were laid in a straight line, they would stretch from London to Paris''. The opening production starred one of the most acclaimed actresses of the period, Miss Evelyn Laye. 

In its early days, the Piccadilly operated as a cinema and made entertainment history when it premiered the very first talking picture to be shown in Britain, The Singing Fool with Al Jolson. He also opened The Jazz Singer in 1928 and appeared afterwards on-stage to sing Mammie. 

The Piccadilly Theatre, London has presented most forms of stage entertainment from Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (with its original Broadway cast) to A Night with Dame Edna. There have been a variety of Royal Shakespeare Company productions including Edward II starring Ian McKellen, and Henry Fonda also made his West End debut in the solo play, Clarence Darrow and Y. 

The 1990's witnessed an expansion in musicals, ballet and dance, notably the most successful commercial ballet season ever to play in the West End, with Adventures in Motion Pictures' Swan Lake. 

 

The Piccadilly has been home to a season of plays directed by Sir Peter Hall, starring famous names such as Judi Dench, Michael Pennington, Julia MacKenzie and Eric Sykes. It has also hosted the smash-hit musical Spend Spend Spend starring the Olivier award-winning actress, Barbara Dickson, the sell-out run of Shockheaded Peter, Noises Off starring Lynn Redgrave, Ragtime, the transfer of the National Theatre's acclaimed production of Jumpers and more recently Jailhouse Rock.

Travel by train: Charing Cross. Nearest tube: Piccadilly Circus

Back to top: