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The Understudy Tickets

Palace Theatre, London
Running time: 2hr (inc. interval)
Age Restrictions: Suitable for ages 16+.
Tickets from £24.00

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The Understudy Tickets

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A semi-staged rehearsed reading of The Understudy comes to the Palace Theatre this December.

A SEMI-STAGED REHEARSED READING.

Actor Stephen McQueen has just landed a dream West End role. Well, that’s not quite true – what he’s going to be is understudying film star (and 12th Sexiest Man in the World) Josh Harper in the brand new show Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know, but still…

Whilst he’s waiting for his time to shine, he reflects on his career – one that has spanned everything from (non-speaking) Rent Boy 3 in The Bill to his recent starring role as Sammy in the (low-budget) regional tour of Sammy The Squirrel’s Seriously Silly Safari.

With this new job Stephen’s stage career may be destined for the dizzying heights, but not everything is going quite as well. Stephen’s wife left him two years ago, wondering if he’d ever grow up; his daughter wonders when he’ll get an actual job; worst of all, he’s starting to fall for the leading man’s wife.

The Understudy is the story of an underdog – a failed husband, a failing father, a failing actor, and the impossible choice he’s going to have to make between stealing the show and stealing another man’s wife.

Author: Henry Filloux-Bennett (based on the novel by David Nicholls)
Cast: Mina Anwar, Natalie Casey, Sasha Frost, Stephen Fry, Marie Lawrence, James McNicholas, Lizzie Muncey, James Norton
Director: Giles Croft
Lighting Design: Chris Brearley
Sound Design: Alexandra Faye Braithwaite
Video Design: Mark Kendrick and Christopher McGill for Dusthouse
Press Company: Midas PR
Marketing Company: Make a Noise
Advertising Company: Make A Noise

Venue information

Palace Theatre
Palace Theatre
Shaftesbury Avenue
London
W1D 5AY

The Palace Theatre, London, is an imposing red-brick building that dominates the west side of Cambridge Circus.

Commissioned by Richard D'Oyly Carte in the late 1880's, it was designed by Thomas Collcutt. D'Oyly Carte intended it to be the home of English grand opera, much as his Savoy Theatre had become the home of light opera with the Gilbert and Sullivan series. The foundation stone, laid by his wife Helen in 1888, can still be seen on the facade of the theatre, almost at ground level to the right of the entrance.

The Royal English Opera opened in January 1891 with Arthur Sullivan's Ivanhoe. No expense was spared to make the production a success, including a double cast and "every imaginable effect of scenic splendour" (Hesketh Pearson, ''Gilbert and Sullivan''). It ran for 160 performances.

However, this was not enough to sustain the venture and D'Oyly Carte sold the theatre within a year, and it was renamed the Palace Theatre of Varieties. The name was changed to The Palace Theatre in 1911.

On March 11, 1925 the musical comedy No, No, Nanette opened at the Palace Theatre starring Binnie Hale. The run of 665 performances made it the third longest running West End musical of the 1920s.

The Palace Theatre was also the venue for Fred Astaire's final stage musical Gay Divorce which opened there on November 2, 1933.

The last years of the twentieth century saw two exceptional runs for The Palace tickets: Jesus Christ Superstar and Les Misérables. The latter ran for eighteen years, having transferred from the Barbican Centre on December 4, 1985. The show is still running at the Queen's Theatre just 100m further up Shaftesbury Avenue, having transferred in April 2004.

Following the transfer of Les Miserables, the theatre was greatly refurbished, marble walls uncovered, restored, repainted, fired with new chandeliers, cleaned etc. This was followed by a short 6-week season of illusionist Derren Brown following his successful UK tour.

Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Woman in White received its world premiere at The Palace Theatre, London, on 15 September 2004 and ran for 19 months to 25 February 2006. The show starred Maria Friedman and Michael Crawford originally with subsequent casts including Ruthie Henshall, Michael Ball, Anthony Andrews, Simon Callow and David Burt.

Also premiered at the theatre were, the London premiere of Monty Python's Spamalot on 2 October 2006 which was followed by Priscilla, Queen of The Desert The Muscial

Travel by train: Charing Cross. Nearest tube: Leicester Square/Tottenham Court Road

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