
Harold Pinter Theatre
The Harold Pinter Theatre opened on 15 Oct. 1881 as a comic opera house. Designed by Thomas Verity, it took six months to build.. Built on four levels, the top three took on a horseshoe shape around the stalls, and the auditorium featured 14 boxes on each side of the stage. Its name on opening was the Royal Comedy Theatre, though its ‘Royal’ epithet was dropped in 1884.
The famous operetta Falka premiered in London at the Comedy Theatre in 1883, and was followed by another successful London premiere, Erminie by Edward Jakobowski, in 1885. The theatre’s fame grew during WWI, thanks to impresarios Charles Blake Cochran and André Charlot presented hugely popular revues at the venue.
The Comedy Theatre helped establish the New Watergate Club in 1956, a society which helped overturn the stage censorship enforced by the Lord Chamberlain’s Office. The formation of the Club meant that the plays banned by the Government could be performed at this venue as it was now being run as a private club rather than a commercial entity. Notable plays in this category include Arthur Miller’s A View from the Bridge and Tennessee Williams’ Cat On A Hot Tin Roof . The censorship was finally overturned in 1968. The 1950s also saw a major reconstruction of the Comedy Theatre but the auditorium retains most of the Renaissance character originally built in 1881 and the original orchestra pit still exists, though is very rarely used.
The works of Harold Pinter had been performed often at this theatre – productions of The Homecoming, The Caretaker, Moonlight, No-man’s Land and The Hothouse had all enjoyed successful runs here, and Pinter directed a production of The Old Masters here in 2004, After his death, it was thought fitting to bestow the honour of naming a theatre after him, and the name was officially changed on 13 Oct. 2011 to the Harold Pinter Theatre.
Over recent years, the Harold Pinter has seen a number of limited run plays on its stage, with recent examples including Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Hamlet starring Andrew Scott, Oslo and Betrayal. The Harold Pinter Theatre is owned by the Ambassador Theatre Group.
Harold Pinter Theatre Seating Information
The auditorium has four levels – Stalls, Dress Circle, Royal Circle and Balcony.
The Stalls is a single block of seats, and offers good sightlines other than the last few rows, which have their few impaired by supportive pillars and the overhang of the Dress Circle. This is reflected in the pricing for these seats.
The Dress Circle doesn’t offer a great raking in the seating, but the view is not affected by the overhang of the Royal Circle. There are supportive pillars, however.
The Royal Circle also doesn’t have much of a rake in the seating, and the legroom can be a problem. The seats curve towards the stage more noticeably than the Dress Circle.
The Balcony feels very high in this theatre, though not enough to induce vertigo in sufferers.
Facilities at Harold Pinter Theatre
Productions at Harold Pinter Theatre
Show | Opened | Closed | Links |
Prima Facie | April 2022 | June 2022 | |
Poirot and More: A Retrospective | January 2022 | January 2022 | |
Four Quartets | November 2021 | December 2021 | |
Blithe Spirit | September 2021 | November 2021 | |
ANNA X | August 2021 | August 2021 | |
J'Ouvert | July 2021 | August 2021 | |
Walden | June 2021 | July 2021 | |
Uncle Vanya | January 2020 | March 2020 | Review |
Ian McKellen on Stage | September 2019 | January 2020 | Review |
Captain Corelli's Mandolin | June 2019 | August 2019 | Review |
Betrayal | March 2019 | June 2019 | Review |
Pinter Seven: A Slight Ache / The Dumb Waiter | January 2018 | February 2019 | Review |
Pinter Six: Party Time/ Celebration | December 2018 | January 2019 | |
Pinter Five: The Room / Victoria Station / Family Voices | December 2018 | January 2019 | |
Pinter Four: Moonlight/ Night School | October 2018 | November 2018 | Review |
Pinter Three: Landscape / A Kind of Alaska / Monologue | October 2018 | November 2018 | Review |
Pinter Two: The Lover/ The Collection | September 2018 | October 2018 | Review |
Pinter One: One For The Road/ New World Order/Mountain Language Ashes to Ashes | September 2018 | October 2018 | Review |
Consent | May 2018 | August 2018 | Review |
The Birthday Party | January 2018 | April 2018 | Review |
Oslo | October 2017 | December 2017 | Review |
Hamlet | June 2017 | September 2017 | Review |
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? | February 2017 | May 2017 | Review |
Nice Fish | November 2016 | February 2017 | Review |
Sunny Afternoon | October 2014 | October 2016 | Review |
The Importance of Being Earnest | July 2014 | September 2014 | Review |
Relative Values | April 2014 | June 2014 | Review |
Mojo | October 2013 | February 2014 | Review |
Chimerica | August 2013 | October 2013 | |
Old Times | January 2013 | April 2013 | Review |
A Chorus of Disapproval | September 2012 | January 2013 | Review |
South Downs / The Browning Version | April 2012 | July 2012 | Review |
Absent Friends | January 2012 | April 2012 | Review |
Death and the Maiden | October 2011 | January 2012 | Review |
Betrayal | May 2011 | August 2011 | Review |
The Children's Hour | January 2011 | April 2011 | Review |
Birdsong | September 2010 | January 2011 | Review |
La Bête | July 2010 | September 2010 | Review |
Prick up your Ears | September 2009 | December 2009 | Review |
Too Close to the Sun | July 2009 | August 2009 | Review |
Sunset Boulevard | December 2008 | May 2009 | Review |
Dickens Unplugged | May 2008 | June 2008 | Review |
The Lover / The Collection | January 2008 | May 2008 | Review |
Boeing-Boeing | February 2007 | January 2008 | Review |
The Rocky Horror Show | December 2006 | January 2007 | |
Donkeys' Years | May 2006 | December 2006 | Review |