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Bridge Theatre

Bridge Theatre
Bridge Theatre logo
Main entrance in 2018.
Map
Interactive map of Bridge Theatre
Address3 Potters Fields Park
London, SE1
United Kingdom
Coordinates51°30′15″N 0°04′39″W / 51.5041°N 0.0776°W / 51.5041; -0.0776
OperatorThe London Theatre Company
Capacity900 (seated)
TypeCommercial Producing Theatre
EventTheatre
ProductionThe Oresteia
Public transitLondon Underground National Rail London Bridge
Construction
Opened18 October 2017; 8 years ago (2017-10-18)
Cost
£11.6 million
ArchitectHaworth Tompkins Architects
Project manager
Plann
Structural engineer
Momentum Engineering
Services engineer
Skelly & Couch
Main contractors
Rise Contracts
Website
bridgetheatre.co.uk

The Bridge Theatre is a commercial theatre near Tower Bridge in London that opened in October 2017.[1] It was developed by Nick Starr and Nicholas Hytner as the home of the London Theatre Company, which they founded following their tenancy as executive director and artistic director, respectively, at the National Theatre.

The venue has a food and beverage partnership with the Michelin star St. John and is known for its madeleines, which are baked in house. It was reported that the theatre cost £12 million to build, financed by private investors.[2]

In June 2026 it was announced that Trafalgar Entertainment had acquired the Bridge Theatre and London Theatre Company along with sister venue Lightroom.[3]

Format

[edit]
Performance of Guys and Dolls in 2024

The theatre seats 900 but is a flexible space designed to adapt to accommodate each production with a maximum capacity of 1,100 in its promenade format.

For example, the opening production, Young Marx, featured a traditional proscenium arrangement. The productions of Julius Caesar (2018), A Midsummer Night's Dream (2019, 2025) and Guys and Dolls (2023-25) had the stalls seating removed with the audience standing around moving and raising platforms offering an in-the-round immersive experience in promenade. Nightfall (2018) was performed on a thrust stage.[4]

Production history

[edit]

Upcoming productions

References

[edit]
  1. The Bridge Theatre. Official website.
  2. "Hytner lures big names and old friends to £12m theatre". Retrieved 24 April 2017 via PressReader.
  3. Wiegand, Chris (29 June 2026). "Trafalgar Entertainment acquires Nicholas Hytner's Bridge theatre". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 29 June 2026. Retrieved 30 June 2026.
  4. Bridge Theatre (20 April 2017), Bridge Theatre: the new theatre for London from Nicholas Hytner and Nick Starr, retrieved 24 April 2017
  5. Billington, Michael (19 April 2017). "London's new Bridge theatre should encourage playwrights to think big". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  6. Brown, Mark (19 April 2017). "Karl Marx comedy to kick off first season at new London theatre". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  7. Billington, Michael (8 May 2018). "Nightfall review - poignant study of rural decay and desperation". The Guardian.