Theatre Tickets in London

The theatre has been a favoured form of going out since the early Victorian era. The capital city of London was the entertainment playground of theatre production shows and even still has theatres like the Adelphi and Theatre Royal Dury Lane from the early 1800s.The Adelphi Theatre on the Strand was constructed in late 1806 by John Scott and staged his daughters theatre productions. The theatre has frequently sold many theatre tickets to the residents and tourists of Victorian London and has seen Charles Dickens visit the theatre many times in his earlier years. Actually, the Adelphi Theatre on the Strand was the first theatre to present an adaptation of work by the wonderful Charles Dickens in the mid 1800s. Since then plentiful Charles Dickens work was shown there.In 1663, the oldest theatre selling theatre tickets in Victorian London is the Theatre Royal on Drury Lane. Although various fires have happened within the breathtaking theatre, the home of the theatre has stayed in the same place. As part of West End London the theatre has observed lots of musicals come and go. Get your hands on cheap, affordable London Theatre Tickets.At present, there are lots of theatres in Victorian London all selling theatre tickets. There is even a locality in the Capital City of London called Theatre Land that holds over 40 different theatres. Numerous of them, as described above, were constructed in the Victorian days and even Edwardian. Many of the theatres are privately owned and theatre ticket transactions are exceptionally fundamental to help the theatre owners keep the theatres up and running for the public to try out.One of the theatres in Theatre Land is about to gain history. The Adelphi has recently sent out a press release that it will be staging the sequel to Phantom, aka Phantom of the Opera, by the marvellous Andrew Llyod Webber. Capitalising on the 80 million viewing success of the marvellous first Phantom, next year will see the premiere of the much anticipated follow up. The storyline takes place a decade after the first production and you witness Christine return back to the Phantom without her actually knowing.

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