The Royal Coburg Theatre in 1811
1818 Theatre starts life as the Royal Coburg, promising the nobility and the gentry 'entirely new entertainment... on a scale of magnitude and great expense'. Opening night includes a melodrama, an Asiatic ballet and a harlequinade.
1831 The great tragedian Edmund Kean plays Richard III, Othello, Macbeth and King Lear during a six-night engagement. He tells a rowdy audience: 'In my life I have never acted to such a set of ignorant, unmitigated brutes as I have before me'.
1833 Theatre re-opens, 'for the encouragement of Native Dramatic Talent', as The Royal Victoria, in honour of Princess (later Queen) Victoria.
1850s Charles Kingsley describes the theatre as 'a licensed pit of darkness, a trap of temptation, profligacy and ruin'. Dickens writes: 'Whatever changes of fashion the drama knows elsewhere, it is always fashionable in the New Cut.'
1871 Theatre re-opens as The New Victoria. During the decade it's twice put up for sale by auction, before closing down.
1880 Emma Cons, a leading Victorian social reformer, re-opens it as The Royal Victoria Coffee and Music Hall, 'a cheap and decent place of amusement on strict temperance lines'. The word 'theatre' is dropped because of its 'impure associations'.
1884 The philanthropist Samuel Morley saves it from closure. Re-christened The Royal Victoria Hall and Coffee Tavern.
1889 Morley Memorial College, offering evening classes for working men and women, opens backstage. Concerts of opera excerpts begin. Bernard Shaw an occasional member of the orchestra: 'If the masses were not improved it was not my fault.'
1898 Emma Cons' niece Lilian Baylis, aged 23, appointed acting manager.

Lilian Baylis, Manager of The Old Vic Theatre, 1912-37
1912 Emma Cons dies. Baylis takes over as manager and lessee, and obtains a theatre licence from the Lord Chamberlain. Opera programme begins.
1914 Shakespeare productions staged for the first time, under director Ben Greet.
1914-18 Sybil Thorndike leads company during war years. Productions continue during Zeppelin and bombing raids. Baylis: 'What's a raid when my curtain's up!'
1918 Royal centenary gala. Baylis to Queen Mary: 'Your dear husband's picture isn't as big as Aunt Emmie's, but then he hasn't done so much for The Old Vic.'
1920-25 Under director Robert Atkins all 36 Shakespeare plays in the First Folio are performed.
1925 Edith Evans becomes first West End star to join the company, after having been turned down six years earlier. Baylis: 'She didn't look the leading type. I was a fool.'
1929-31 John Gielgud's Hamlet and Richard II establish him as exciting new Shakespearean star. 'The Old Vic is pre-eminently the place for artistic experiment, even if some eggshells of prejudice have to be smashed in the process.'
1930 Ralph Richardson joins the company, to play Caliban, Sir Toby Belch, Prince Hal.
1931 Sadler's Wells opens as Baylis' second theatre. The Old Vic Sadler's Wells Ballet Company is formed, led by Ninette de Valois. The two theatres alternate drama, opera and ballet for four years, until opera and ballet move to Sadler's Wells.

Peggy Ashcroft in Caesar and Cleopatra, 19321932Peggy Ashcroft joins the company to play Rosalind, Portia, Juliet and Miranda. 1933Tyrone Guthrie's first season as director. Flora Robson, Charles Laughton and other stars brought in. Baylis to Laughton: 'I'm sure that one day you may be quite a good Macbeth.'
Michael Redgrave and Edith Evans in As You Like It, 1936
1936 Michael Redgrave, Alec Guinness and Laurence Olivier join the company for the first time. Guthrie appointed permanent director.
Alec Guinness in Hamlet, 1938
1937 Lilian Baylis dies as Macbeth is about to open.
1940 John Gielgud leads a season that includes King Lear, directed by Harley Granville-Barker, and The Tempest, directed by George Devine. Because of air-raids, the headquarters are moved to Burnley. Several companies tour Shakespeare to mining and other industrial areas, subsidised by the newly formed Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts, the forerunner of the Arts Council.
1941 Theatre badly damaged by bombs.
1944-49 Ralph Richardson, Laurence Olivier and John Burrell lead a new company at the New Theatre (now the Albery), its temporary home. Successful productions feature Olivier as Richard III and Oedipus, Richardson as Peer Gynt and Falstaff.
1947 Damaged auditorium used by newly established Old Vic School, run by director Michel Saint-Denis.
1950 Theatre re-opens after repairs and renovations with a performance of Twelfth Night.
1953-58 Under director Michael Benthall the complete First Folio is staged for a second time, beginning with Richard Burton as Hamlet.
John Stride and Judi Dench in Romeo and Juliet, 1960
1957 Judi Dench joins for the first of four seasons. Her parts include Ophelia, Hermia, and Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli's production of Romeo and Juliet.
1962 Olivier appointed first director of the National Theatre. Old Vic governors agree to offer the theatre as its temporary home, initially for five years.

Laurence Olivier and Maggie Smith in Othello, 1964
1963 The Old Vic company disbands. The National opens with Hamlet, starring Peter O'Toole. Over the next 13 years company regulars include Albert Finney, Anthony Hopkins, Geraldine McEwan, Joan Plowright and Maggie Smith.
1970 Money from recent surpluses is used to finance the Young Vic, which serves the National as a studio theatre for three years, after which it becomes a separate company.

Diana Rigg in Jumpers, 1972
1973 Olivier's last stage performance, in Trevor Griffiths' The Party. He resigns as director of the National, and is succeeded by Peter Hall. His productions include John Gabriel Borkman with Richardson, Ashcroft and Wendy Hiller, No Man's Land with Richardson and Gielgud, and Hamlet with Albert Finney.
John Gielgud and Ralph Richardson in No Man's Land, 1975
1976 The National's last performance before moving to the South Bank is Tribute to the Lady. Peggy Ashcroft plays Baylis, Gielgud and Richardson are among those taking part, Redgrave and Thorndike are in the audience. In her curtain speech Ashcroft repeats Baylis' threat to come back and haunt The Old Vic should her and her aunt Emma Cons' work ever be put at risk.
1977 Theatre leased to visiting companies. The first production is The White Devil, with Glenda Jackson.
1978It becomes the home of Prospect at The Old Vic under the artistic directorship of Toby Robertson. Productions include Hamlet with Derek Jacobi, Antony and Cleopatra with Alec McCowen and Dorothy Tutin, and Saint Joan with Eileen Atkins. Return to top
1982 The theatre is put up for sale. Canadian businessman Ed Mirvish restores it to its former glory. The facade of the building is based on an 1830 engraving, and the auditorium on the designs of 1871. A giant sign is hung on the scaffolding: 'Lilian Baylis, you're going to love this. Honest Ed.'

David Suchet and Michael Sheen in Amadeus, 1996
1987-90 Jonathan Miller directs 17 productions and collects five Olivier Awards.
1997 Peter Hall's classic repertory season includes Beckett's Waiting for Godot, with Ben Kingsley and Alan Howard.
1998 The Mirvish family puts the theatre on the market. Suggestions for changing it into a themed pub, a bingo hall or a lap-dancing club provoke widespread outrage and protests. In response to public and political pressure, it's acquired by The Old Vic Theatre Trust 2000, a registered charity set up by Sally Greene.
1998 Transfer of the Almeida's production of The Iceman Cometh is a huge success. Kevin Spacey wins the Evening Standard Drama and Olivier Awards as Best Actor.
1999 First production under the ownership of the Trust is Peter Hall's production of Amadeus, which is nominated for five Olivier Awards.
2003 Announcement that The Old Vic will once again become a producing house. Kevin Spacey is appointed first artistic director of The Old Vic Theatre Company.
Imogen Stubbs and Ben Wishaw in Hamlet, 2004
2004 The new Company's first season opens in September with the British premiere of Cloaca by Maria Goos, directed by Spacey. It continues with a new version of Aladdin, with Ian McKellen as Widow Twankey.
2005 The season continues with the British premiere of National Anthems by Dennis McIntyre, starring Spacey, Mary Stuart Masterson and Steven Weber. It's followed by Philip Barry's The Philadelphia Story with Jennifer Ehle as Tracy Lord. In September, Spacey makes his UK Shakespearean debut in the title role of Richard II, with Ben Miles as Bolingbroke. At Christmas, Ian McKellen repeats his Widow Twankey in the revival of Aladdin.
2006 The world premiere of a new version of Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale with a cast of Iraqi and European actors and musicians. Robert Altman directs the British premiere of Arthur Miller's Resurrection Blues with Neve Campbell, James Fox, Matthew Modine and Maximilian Schell. Eugene O Neil's A Moon for the Misbegotten, starring Eve Best, Colm Meaney and Kevin Spacey, directed by Howard Davies.
2007 The Taming of The Shrew and Twelfth Night directed by Edward Hall and his all-male company Propeller. John Osborne's The Entertainer, starring Robert Lindsay and Pam Ferris, directed by Sean Holmes. Patrick Hamilton's Gaslight, starring Kenneth Cranham, Rosamund Pike and Andrew Woodall, directed by Peter Gill. A new play by Samuel Adamson, based on Pedro Almodóvar's film All About My Mother, starring Lesley Manville, Diana Rigg and Mark Gatiss directed by Tom Cairns. Cinderella, book and lyrics by Stephen Fry, with music by Anne Dudley, directed by Fiona Laird, starring Pauline Collins and Sandi Toksvig.
2008 David Mamet's Speed-the-Plow, starring Jeff Goldblum, Kevin Spacey and Laura Michelle Kelly, directed by Matthew Warchus. Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion starring Tim Piggot-Smith and Michelle Dockery, directed by Peter Hall. Alan Ayckbourn's The Norman Conquests, directed by Matthew Warchus.
2009 Joe Sutton's Complicit, starring Richard Dreyfuss, Elizabeth McGovern and David Suchet, directed by Kevin Spacey.
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