CHAPTER V. Sadler's Wells

177. Sadler's Wells Theatre, view in 2007. RHWL with Nicholas Hare, architects, 1996–8
Sadler's Wells is the last survivor of the various spas, wells
and places of entertainment scattered about the northern
slopes of Clerkenwell from the late seventeenth century
(see Ill. 2, page 3). Like the London Spaw and the Cold
Bath, it was founded on the tonic properties of chalybeate
water, but from an early stage was associated as much or
more with alcohol and music, and later plays. The present
building, opened in 1998 and finally completed in 2001, is
the sixth theatre to have occupied the site. Despite its resolutely up-to-date appearance, it incorporates a small
auditorium of ten years earlier (the Lilian Baylis Theatre),
as well as parts of the main auditorium walls and steelwork
of the previous main theatre, opened in 1931. In thus
absorbing and adapting elements into their new building,
the architects were following a long-established pattern of
accretion. The 1931 theatre itself made some use of the
existing walls, and successive reconstructions over the
centuries have preserved something of the layout of
the former buildings, and probably some actual fabric
(Ill. 178).
That Sadler's Wells has survived at all is remarkable.
Over more than three centuries it has lost more money
than it has made, and on several occasions has come near
to permanent closure and redevelopment, surviving
periods as a skating-rink and a warehouse, and one of prolonged dereliction. As Anthony Thorncroft observed in
1996, 'Sadler's Wells has had more last-minute rescues
than Clara Bow'. (ref. 1)
This chapter addresses Sadler's Wells' obscure and
often misrepresented origins, and the evolution of the
buildings that have occupied the site up to the present day.
Its theatrical history has been dealt with extensively elsewhere, notably in Dennis Arundell's The Story of Sadler's
Wells 1683–1977, and only sufficient to set the buildings
in their context is given here. Among new discoveries
related are details concerning the original Sadler and his
'musick house', the existence of a wooden playhouse
erected by Thomas Rosoman many years prior to his
rebuilding of 1764, and a late Victorian scheme for redevelopment drawn up by the architect A. H. Mackmurdo.
Throughout 'north' may be taken to mean the north-west
(opposite prompt, stage right) side of the theatre.
The origins of Sadler's Wells, 1664–84
Despite Sadler's Wells' fame and long history, its origins,
and more particularly the identity of the eponymous
founder, have long remained unclear. Lack of information
has resulted in much speculation about both Sadler and
the early history of the theatre buildings. Often Sadler is
referred to as 'Richard'; elsewhere he appears as 'Thomas'
or, more chummily, 'Dick'. He was, however, definitely
Edward, as is proven by the Chancery Court proceedings
brought by him against John Langley, a City merchant, in
September 1684, a case which throws light on the early
ownership of the site. (ref. 2)
Edward Sadler, a vintner, had taken a 35-year lease of
the site of what was to become Sadler's Wells in 1671 from
the Earl and Countess of Clarendon, whose Clerkenwell
property, including Sadler's Wells, was eventually to
become the Lloyd Baker estate. Comprising one acre, it
was partly on Draw Bridge Field and partly on the
Commandery Mantells, on the north side of the New
River as it neared New River Head (see Ill. 97, page 86).
In his complaint Edward Sadler says that after taking the
lease he built a brick boundary wall around the property
and, more significantly, a 'great brick messuage', evidently
the building, close to the New River Company's Water
House, on which he was required to pay tax on nine
hearths in 1674–5. (ref. 3)
Sadler's connection with the area seems to have gone
back earlier. In 1664–5 an Edward Sadler had successfully
applied 'to be admitted to Continew and Dwe[ll]' at the
Water House, which suggests that he was acting as the
New River Company's resident supervisor. (ref. 4) He appears as
a ratepayer at the Water House between 1666 and 1671,
and for some years also at a neighbouring house described
as Fowles's house. In the 1677 Clerkenwell 'census' he is
listed as a victualler—like many of his neighbours in this
long-established area of resort—and he is shown in
various records at a neighbouring property (presumably
the great brick messuage he had built) between 1679 and
1693–4; thereafter the evidence is patchy. (ref. 5) A Hollar print
of 1665 (Ill. 179) depicts the western end of Sadler's site,
its boundaries apparently marked by low posts, which
appears to be empty save for a hut. (ref. 6)
In his Chancery complaint, Sadler describes how, after
he had built the great brick messuage, he and others discovered 'a Spring or Well of Minerall Waters ariseing in
the said premises which is of extraordinary Medicinall
Vertue' and how he had 'made very considerable gaine
thereby, and by offering Drink and other provisions
usually sold in a publique house'. No date is given for the
discovery, but it was certainly made after about 1674, when
hearth tax was first charged on the house, and probably
not long before 1684, the year of the complaint.
Sadler claimed that Langley, one of his customers, had
wanted to buy the business and premises, along with
another property 'near adjoining' on which there was also
a house, which Sadler held on a seven-year lease from
Jonathan Miles, taken out the previous month. Langley,
Sadler asserted, offered him a £600 fine and £300 annual
rent for the residue of his lease, but despite having drawn
up an agreement the previous month, had thus far paid
only five shillings. In addition Langley had allegedly been
telling Sadler's customers that the business was now his
and had caused Sadler to be arrested, for reasons that
remain obscure but which involved a £2,000 security
agreed by both parties.

178. Sadler's Wells Theatre, plans showing evolution of site
and buildings in (from top) 1741, 1807, 1874 and 1938—the
outline of the 1996–8 theatre is shown in black
Langley, in his reply dated 3 November 1684, denied
that he had been stalling. He claimed that he had already
spent £300—presumably on Miles's leasehold, the future
Islington Spa or New Tunbridge Wells—employing
workmen 'to sink wells to separate the Springs, to set upp
Basons, to make gravell walks and to dig draynes … and
to set up an Iron Balcony upon Columes the length of the
end of the house belonging to the said ground'. A year
later, in an advertisement in the London Gazette, Langley
reappeared as the proprietor of the 'Islington Wells'
announcing that they were open for business, and complaining how he had 'been represented by divers of his
malitious adversaries to be a person of no estate or reputation, nor able to discharge his debts'. (ref. 7)
Although the result of the case is not recorded, a possible outcome is that Sadler retained his principal acre of
land and brick house—Sadler's Wells—and sold Langley
the apparently smaller property that he had leased from
Jonathan Miles.
Late in 1684 or early in 1685 the chemist Robert Boyle
tested mineral waters from three different wells at
Islington. (ref. 8) Two—one in a cellar, the other 'in the vault
with steps'—had apparently been discovered very
recently, although whether these were on Sadler's land,
north of the New River, or Langley's, south of it, is not
clear. An anonymous tract with the confusing title Sadlers
New Tunbridge Wells near Islington: How They were Found
Out, attributable on internal evidence to 1684, appears to
have come out before Boyle's visit as these two wells were
so recently discovered that, it relates, 'their Vertues is not
yet known'. The other well tested by Boyle is described by
him as being 'from the musick house'. That term is used
both in the tract cited above and in another better-known
tract definitely of 1684, which has become for most subsequent writers the principal contemporary source of
information about the wells' discovery. (ref. 9) The name
Sadler's Wells, rather than Sadler's Well, might suggest
that there was more than one well on the site north of the
New River, but could derive from the fact that Sadler
once owned both sites—New Tunbridge Wells and
Sadler's Wells.
The second pamphlet, A True and Exact Account of
Sadler's Well, was written by Thomas Guidott, a physician
with literary pretensions and an established interest in the
medicinal benefits of spa waters. It suggests that Sadler's
well was discovered the previous year, 1683. Guidott is the
source of the apparently erroneous belief that Sadler was
a surveyor of the highways. He also suggested that
Sadler's well was one of those recorded by Stow as having
been in use in the Middle Ages, but insofar as any of these
can be located, they appear to have been further south.
Both tracts agree that the well, with a stone cover and
decayed oak supports, was found in the garden of Sadler's
'musick house' when men in his employment were digging
for gravel there (an established activity in this area), and
that Sadler used the water to make beer before the benefits of the unadulterated water were recognized in the
winter of 1683. Thereafter, so Guidott claimed, 500 or 600
people a day were resorting to Sadler's to take the waters.
Sadler's Music House, 1684–99
Sadler's acre of ground was more than three times as long
east to west as it was deep, and stretched from the Outer
Pond at New River Head to the Islington road (now St
John Street) in the east. The west side tapered to align
with a field path running south-west to north-east, the line
of the modern Arlington Way. The music house stood near
the west end of this property, while the well itself is
described by Guidott as in its garden, and in the anonymous tract as in Sadler's 'Back-side'. That might accord
with the location of the well that survives today in the
basement of the modern theatre, which would have been
near the northern boundary of Sadler's land, between the
music house and the brick boundary wall. It was probably
under the small roofed structure visible between the music
house and the boundary wall in the earliest datable view
of Sadler's Wells, of 1730, by Bernard Lens (Ill. 180). The
whole of the long narrow site stretching eastwards from
the music house and well was laid out as gardens with
many trees. The entrance to Sadler's grounds and the
music house was through a gate on the west side, roughly
where the Arlington Way entrance into the foyer of the
theatre is today (see Ill. 97, page 86); there was possibly
another gate in the boundary wall near the well itself.
It is difficult to form a definitive picture of the early
building or buildings on the site. Both 1684 tracts indicate
that the music house was already in existence in 1683,
and therefore not built to take advantage of the newly
discovered wells. Most accounts of the music house have
assumed that it was a purpose-built wooden concert room.
But the earliest images appear to show a building that is
at least partly of brick (Ills 180, 181). The probability is
that the great brick messuage referred to by Sadler and the
music house were one and the same. Sadler described his
messuage as a 'publique house', but 'musick house' in his
day seems to have connoted just that—a pub with musical
entertainment as an extra attraction. (ref. 10) Nevertheless,
neither Sadler nor Langley mentions a room in either of
Sadler's messuages designed specifically for musical performances, perhaps preferring not to draw attention to this
type of entertainment for fear of alerting the licensing
authorities. Ned Ward in the Weekly Comedy of 24 May
1699 and Garbott in the 1720s (see below) describe a
show-room or play-room which may have been a separate
structure, or more likely a brick or wooden extension to
Sadler's original brick messuage, as maps and plans always
show a single building on the site.

179. Looking south-east from the Outer Pond, New River
Head, in 1665. Sadler's Wells site is marked by posts in middle
distance. Engraving by Wenceslaus Hollar
Although the diarist John Evelyn visited in 1686 he did
not record anything of what Sadler's Wells was like. A
more informative early source is François Colsoni's Le
Guide de Londres Pour Les Étrangers, published in 1693.
Colsoni describes visiting Islington where there are 'two
pretty houses' (that is to say, Sadler's Wells and New
Tunbridge Wells) 'where one can go in the mornings to
drink excellent mineral waters'. (ref. 11) Entrance to each cost
threepence, for which the visitor could taste the waters,
walk in the gardens and hear a concert of violins. This
modest entry fee gives a flavour of the low ambitions of
Sadler's Wells, as central London concert rooms at the
time charged 2s 6d, and even suburban music houses at
Richmond, Lambeth and Hampstead charged a shilling;
only Epsom Wells—which did not charge women at all for
entry—seems to have been comparable to Sadler's Wells. (ref. 12)
At Sadler's Wells, Colsoni describes the additional attractions of dancing, English billiards, Royal Oak (a game of
chance), and lotteries (that year Edward Sadler was listed
as the proprietor of a lottery in the 1693–4 Four Shillings
in the Pound Aid). (ref. 13) The fact that Sadler ran a lottery is
consistent with the character of his other entertainments.
In a more satirical and therefore perhaps less accurate
vein, Richard Ames and Ned Ward both wrote verses
describing visits to Sadler's Wells and New Tunbridge
Wells in 1691 and 1699 respectively. Both get comic
mileage out of the socially diverse company and, especially, these venues' reputations as haunts of prostitutes
and the dissolute, but also convey information about the
buildings. In Ames's Islington-Wells it is hard to determine
which of his descriptions apply to Sadler's Wells or New
Tunbridge Wells as, being almost adjoining, they effectively constituted a single pleasure-seeker's destination. (ref. 14)
Ned Ward's Walk to Islington is at once more informative
and more scurrilous and colourful. He is the first to
describe the inside of Sadler's Wells and its music room.
Visiting New Tunbridge Wells and finding themselves in
need of food and drink, he and his (newly made) female
friend 'turn into Sadler's for sake of the Organ'. They are
conducted upstairs to the gallery adjoining the organ
'Where lovers o'er cheesecakes were Scraping and
Humming'. From the gallery, which appears from this and
other early accounts to have been socially a marginally
superior area, they look over into the pit where a huge
throng is being entertained by a succession of low-grade
singers, fiddlers and an 11-year-old sword dancer. The
gallery is painted with allegorical scenes of a lubricious
nature, featuring among others Apollo, Europa and
Neptune. (ref. 15)

180. Edward Sadler's music house (left) and New River Head (centre) from north-west. Drawing by Bernard Lens, 1730

181. Music house from the north, 1731

182. Sadler's Wells, west front c. 1743, showing extension by
Francis Forcer. Engraving by Thomas Kitchin from
sheet-music of A New Song on Sadler's Wells
Noticeably absent from Ward's account is the taking of
the waters. These appear to have dried up between May
1693 when the waters were advertised in the London
Gazette, and an announcement in the Post-boy of June
1697 which stated that 'Sadler's excellent Steel Waters at
Islington, having been obstructed for some years past, are
now opened and currant again'; newspaper advertisements
for the waters continued till 1700 but they had clearly been
eclipsed by this time by the other entertainments on offer.
In July 1697 an 'extraordinary consort of vocal and instrumental musick' lasting two hours was advertised. (ref. 16) Sadler
himself appears to have died in 1699, (ref. 17) and the building
is referred to as 'Miles's musick house' from that year,
although the name Sadler's Wells persisted. (ref. 18)
The Miles in question was James Miles, a glover who
died in 1724 (perhaps a relative of Jonathan Miles,
Sadler's landlord in 1684 at what became New Tunbridge
Wells). During Miles's stewardship of Sadler's Wells it
retained its reputation for low-grade entertainment—a
man eating a live cockerel was one 'turn'—and rowdy, even
violent behaviour. It was described as a 'nursery of
debauchery' in 1711, and the next year a man named
Ingram Thwaits was killed in the gallery (the trial record
calls it a 'box', suggesting the gallery was at this date
divided laterally). (ref. 19) In 1714 Miles was running the
Gun Musick-Booth, one of the many such booths at
Bartholomew Fair, which offered a similar mix of wine,
music, tumblers and ladder dancers to Sadler's Wells. (ref. 20)
During his proprietorship it is said that Miles
'improved and beautified' the music house. (ref. 21) Until the late
1720s or early 1730s Sadler's Wells seems to have consisted
of the great brick messuage built by Sadler—that is, a two
storey brick building, square or possibly cruciform in plan
(including the projecting gallery and boxes), with additional wooden, possibly short-lived structures such as the
'brewhouse' and 'appurtenances' mentioned in Sadler's
deposition of 1684. (ref. 22)
Miles renewed the lease for five years in 1719 (the earliest surviving lease), paying £70 a year to the Lloyd
family (freeholders of the site until 1883). (ref. 23) When he died
in 1724 his will made no mention of Sadler's Wells, so it
seems likely that he had already passed it on to his sonin-law, Francis Forcer. Trained as a barrister, Forcer
appears in the ratebooks for the area by 1724 and renewed
the lease for 21 years with the Lloyds in 1730. (ref. 24) Some
accounts state that his father, a composer of the same
name, owned the Wells immediately after Sadler, but
there is no contemporary evidence for this. (ref. 25) Judging from
incremental rises in his rent between 1730 and 1733, it
seems that it was in this period that Forcer made the first
major additions to Sadler's Wells, especially as it was from
1732 that he began to insure the building, apparently for
the first time. (ref. 26)
It is almost certainly Forcer's enlarged Sadler's Wells
that can be seen in one of the headpieces of The Universal
Harmony, or the Gentlemen and Ladies Social Companion,
a collection of sheet music published in 1743 (Ill. 182).
This shows a two-storey building of two ranges, the larger
one with seven bays facing the Outer Pond at New River
Head, the smaller one running along the northern boundary of the site. Of the seven windows along the main front
only the three on the right or south end are sashes, suggesting that part was an addition, possibly 'for the purpose
of habitation'. (ref. 27) That is supported by the description of
the property as 'Sadler's Wells and the dwelling house' in
Forcer's insurance policy for 1732. (ref. 28) The entry in the register suggests that Sadler's Wells—specifically noted as a
brick building—consisted of one building roughly 50 ft
by 33 ft, probably the main seventeenth-century block,
including Forcer's new domestic addition in its southern
end; another, 33 ft by 12 ft, which was probably the adjoining new or rebuilt north range running along or near the
north boundary; and a third structure, 20 ft by 9 ft, probably the ancillary building to the north east, already on the
site and shown in a print of 1731 (Ill. 181).
A New River survey, dated to 1741, is broadly consistent with this analysis (Ill. 178). It shows a circular pond
to the east with avenues of trees and attached rectangular
areas either side, possibly paving. It seems likely that it was
in this early 1730s remodelling that Forcer added the pedimented gate inscribed 'Sadler's Wells' shown in the 1743
print and in Hogarth's Evening of 1738. Hogarth's print,
not intended as a reliable topographical record, shows only
the gate and part of the south end of Sadler's Wells.
Further enlargement is suggested by another survey of
the New River made in 1743 (see Ills 97, 239, pages 86,
187), which indicates that by then the enlarged Wells
occupied the full north—south depth of the site. Forcer had
by then apparently added a small structure on to the south
side of the dwelling house and other ancillary buildings
stretching along the northern boundary.
Forcer was living at Sadler's Wells when he died in April
1743. His will directed that his interest in the Wells be
sold after his death to pay off his mortgage on another
property, and in December of that year his widow
Catherine assigned the lease to John Warren, merchant, of
Clerkenwell. (ref. 29) It was under Warren's brief period of management that the Grand Jury of Middlesex censured
Sadler's Wells and a number of other theatres and gaming
houses as 'places kept apart for the encouragement of
luxury, extravagance, idleness, and other wicked illegal
purposes', and temporarily closed it down. (ref. 30)
Building and rebuilding by Thomas Rosoman,
1746–9 and 1764
It has long been believed that Sadler's Wells Theatre was
'an old wooden building', dating back to Sadler's day, when
it was rebuilt in brick by Thomas Rosoman in 1764. But
this is incorrect. It is clear from insurance records that what
Rosoman actually rebuilt in 1764 was a wooden theatre he
himself had erected in 1748–9. It appears, too, that
Rosoman's wooden theatre may have been a much-reduced
version of a decidedly ambitious building projected for the
site—how seriously it is impossible to say—for which some
intriguing pictorial evidence survives.
Vintner, actor, and former manager of the New Wells
near by, Rosoman, and his associate Peter Hough, a
tumbler, took a 21-year lease of Sadler's Wells from
Christmas 1745. (ref. 31) Their lease gives some idea of the proliferation of buildings on the site by this date, listing,
along with the main building, a brewhouse, storehouse,
stables, granary, sheds and outhouses. This impression of
a diverse collection of buildings is confirmed by the
description of the property when Rosoman insured it in
April 1748. (ref. 32) At that time the value of the buildings was
put at £700, as compared to £400 in 1739. The domestic
part of the property was evidently a handsome house,
described as being of two storeys with garrets, and containing seven rooms, five wainscotted and two half-wainscotted, with four Portland-stone chimneypieces. What is
not clear is how far the buildings were the result of work
by Forcer or earlier owners, or by Rosoman himself.
Something that does certainly seem to have been new in
1748 was a series of 'Drinking rooms, 2 storey', described
in later policies as 'drinking boxes'.
With these drinking boxes there appears to be a link
with the plan and elevation of an unnamed eighteenth-century theatre, almost certainly Sadler's Wells, copied in
the nineteenth century from earlier drawings now presumed lost (Ill. 183). (ref. 33) The buildings shown consist of a
large galleried theatre adjoining a three-sided, cloister-like
structure lined with two storeys of open-fronted alcoves
or boxes, likely to have been south-facing; the means of
access to the upper level of boxes is not indicated. A secondary stage, fronted by an orchestra pit and open to the
courtyard, is placed asymmetrically on the long side of the
'cloister' and backs against the stage of the main theatre.
If this scheme does indeed relate to Rosoman's tenure of
Sadler's Wells, it suggests that he was seeking to emulate
the great pleasure gardens of Vauxhall and Ranelagh
which acquired private boxes of the type shown during the
1730s or 40s. (ref. 34)

183. Drawings for a theatre, thought to be an unexecuted scheme for Thomas Rosoman's Sadler's Wells, c. 1745–50. View of court
with outside stage, drinking- boxes within arches, and theatre behind; and plan
When Rosoman renewed his insurance in 1749 and had
the site resurveyed, the collection of buildings included a
new playhouse of 2,080 sq.ft. The property was insured
for £1,200:£600 for brick buildings and £600 for timber.
Given that the year before only £100 had been allowed for
timber building and the amount for brick was the same, it
is almost certain that this new playhouse was largely or
wholly of timber. (ref. 35) Measuring just 52 ft by 40 ft, it was less
than half the size of the theatre in the putative Sadler's
Wells drawing, though comparable with the surviving
1780s theatre at Richmond in North Yorkshire.
The exact location of this timber playhouse, which survived only fifteen years, is unknown, but it was probably
built on to the back of the original music house, running
east-north-east. If the plan showing the theatre and the
drinking boxes may be taken as a guide, most of the seating
would have been on benches, with stalls fronting the
ground floor of the auditorium, an open pit behind, and a
gallery above round three sides, perhaps with private
boxes at the lower level. Rosoman's advertisements for the
period indicate that entry to the boxes (where according
to the plan seats might be reserved) was 2s 6d, which
included a pint of wine, but to the pit and gallery only one
shilling. (ref. 36) Conditions were cramped, the benches accessible only from narrow walkways, described evocatively on
the plan as 'gin and water passages'. The entertainment
on stage was apparently seen as an adjunct to the main
event of an evening's drinking. Rosoman introduced seats
with ledged shelves behind to accommodate wine bottles
and glasses. (ref. 37)
The theatre appears to have remained in this structural
form until 1764 when the press announced that 'Sadler's
Wells is now rebuilt, and confidently enlarged'. (ref. 38) The
rebuilding was accomplished, it was said at the time, in
seven weeks. A figure of £4,225 was mentioned, but given
that Rosoman insured the new theatre and dwelling house
only for £2,000 this may have been a generous 'talking
up'. (ref. 39) Thomas Lloyd, on behalf of the freeholder, his
brother, the Rev. John Lloyd, was unimpressed with the
quality of the work, and rejected Rosoman's claim that he
had spent 'a large sum' on rebuilding: 'nor do I look on
the place one bit the better for the owner for it … it was
understood you intended to build a Palace equivalent in
some degree to the fortune you have acquired there'.
Lloyd estimated that fortune at £40,000 and claimed that
the terms of Rosoman's recent lease, involving a fine of
only £250 (as opposed to the £500 originally sought), were
'extremely moderate' and that his brother could have had
'£1,000 for such a lease'. (ref. 40)
The new theatre, at 109 ft by 52 ft 6 in, covered more
than twice the area of Rosoman's wooden building, and
seems to have occupied the sites of both this and Sadler's
original music-house. (ref. 41) It was orientated, like every
theatre on the site since, with the side of the auditorium
and stage more or less parallel with the northern boundary of the site. Although no image survives of the original interior, a later description states: 'At this time the
sides of the house were occupied by two tiers of Galleries,
which were of equal price, and communicated with each
other, so that the occupants might ascend or descend at
their pleasure. They were flat with one long seat fixed to
the wall, besides moveable benches'. (ref. 42) A projecting staircase bay at the front of the theatre giving access to the
gallery features in all the surviving images, but may not
have been part of the original building, as the insurance
policy does not list the gallery stairs separately until
later. (ref. 43) Possibly this separate entrance was added to divide
the rougher elements using the gallery from the more
genteel occupants of the boxes.
Rosoman also rebuilt the domestic quarters to the south
as a four-bay house of two storeys and garrets, with a pedimented entrance adjoining the theatre (Ill. 184). To the
side was a canted two-storey bay with a balustrade, and
another pedimented doorway. The proportions suggest
that Rosoman, not a man to spend money unnecessarily,
might have substantially remodelled rather than wholly
rebuilt the existing house of the 1730s, reusing existing
fabric where possible. Most of the new portions of the
rebuilt house, apart from the south-west corner, appear to
have been at the rear, as the new house was deeper than
the old. One report also mentions the use of 'old materials' in building the new theatre. (ref. 44)
Outside, Rosoman put up a brick wall, with iron railings and gates, from the north-west corner of the theatre
to the south-west corner of the site, along what is now
Arlington Way. (ref. 45) He also added iron chains and lamps
along the southern boundary. (ref. 46)
Under new management, 1771–c.1802

184. Sadler's Wells, west front, c. 1791, as rebuilt by
Thomas Rosoman, 1764
The new theatre was clearly a good investment for
Rosoman. In October 1771 he sold his interest in it for
£9,500, and when he died in 1782 left a reputed £40,000. (ref. 47)
The purchaser of the lease, backed by City bankers, was
Thomas King, the Covent Garden actor and sometime
manager, who had assumed some role in the management
of the Wells from 1769. (ref. 48) Despite his connection with the
legitimate theatre, King did little to alter Rosoman's
winning formula of entertainments. However, he did
apparently aspire to alter the tone. In September 1771 he
announced misleadingly that 'This is the last week of the
company Performing for Wine'. (ref. 49) This caused such consternation among regulars, who inferred that wine would
no longer be served, that King had to write to the newspapers before the following season to clarify— wine would
be available. What he had actually meant was that the
buying of drink would no longer be the requirement for
admission. But insofar as the purchase of a 3s ticket now
entitled the holder to a pint of Port, Lisbon, 'mountain'
or punch, there was not a whole lot of difference. (ref. 50) Raising
the tone did little for takings, according to King himself
who complained in 1775 that the rise in social class of the
clientele had damaged the business compared to when
Sadler's Wells had been 'frequented by the meaner sort of
people only'. (ref. 51)

185. Sadler's Wells Theatre, auditorium in 1807, with water scene from The Ocean Fiend or the Infant's Peril
When the theatre reopened in Easter 1772 it had been
'altered and beautified'. The only alterations specifically
recorded were a new coach house, stables and scene house
(probably the tall lean-to visible in later prints), all timberbuilt, adjoining the back of the theatre towards St John
Street. (ref. 52) Following further redecoration a few years later,
the auditorium had a 'very pleasing appearance; the
colours are milk white, pale green and a beautiful pink',
which produce 'a cool, delicate effect'. (ref. 53) In 1776 King got
permission from the New River Company to put up a low
wall and iron railing along the walk opposite his house and
the Wells. This, he claimed, was 'not only an ornament'
but would 'prevent the rabble from assembly there, throwing in their dogs etc'. (ref. 54) Around this time also a row of
poplars was planted along the southern boundary, beside
the New River; later they became 'so lofty as to be easily
recognized by voyagers from Margate as they came up the
Thames' (Ill. 187). (ref. 55) By a further minor alteration, a footbridge over the New River was widened for the carriage
trade in June 1780 and rebuilt in brick. (ref. 56)
Substantial alterations were made to Sadler's Wells in
1778 when the 'whole of the inside of the House was taken
down and materially improved. The ceiling of the auditorium was raised, allowing improved ventilation and sightlines. (ref. 57) Then in 1787, perhaps in connection with a failed
parliamentary bill to license the theatre, further changes
were made to the auditorium. The slips (part of the pit,
the front part of which we would now call the stalls) were
made a continuation of the ground-floor boxes—' 'tis said,
to exclude ladies of a volatile description'. (ref. 58)
This altered interior appears in a small print of 1794,
the basis of the coloured view reproduced as the frontispiece to this volume. Depicting a typical Sadler's Wells
entertainment of a rope-walker on stage, it shows the auditorium in some detail. There is effectively no division
between the stage and the pit, allowing the acrobats and
their equipment to extend beyond the proscenium arch,
perhaps in the manner of the old show-room of Sadler's
time. There are a few benches at the rear of the auditorium— the pit— and at the sides what were presumably the
new boxes replacing the disreputable slips, railed off with
thin balustrading, presumably of iron. This balustrading
is also a feature of the first-floor boxes and the open gallery
above. There is a stage box on the right side of the proscenium at private-box level (with a mildly suggestive classical statue below).
From 1792 the leaseholder of Sadler's Wells was
Richard Hughes, who had managed a number of
provincial theatres. He and his partner William Siddons,
husband of the famous Sarah, oversaw the continuing
improvement in the theatre's social acceptability, welcoming 'a long et cetera of rank and fashion' in their first
season as managers. (ref. 59) It was they who successively
engaged the brothers Tom and Charles Dibdin as writers
in the 1790s, Charles also being manager from 1799.
Charles Dibdin produced a mass of popular entertainments— musical bagatelles, historical ballets, comic songs
and pantomimes over the next twenty years. But the
presentations for which he was best remembered and
which had the biggest impact on the physical form of
Sadler's Wells were the aquatic dramas.
Dibdin had worked previously for Philip Astley at his
Amphitheatre of Arts and Sciences in Lambeth, devising
trick scenery for stage illusions and this skill helped
reshape Sadler's Wells. By 1801 it was in Dibdin's opinion
'the dirtiest and most antique Theatre in London'. (ref. 60)
Siddons had to ask his landlord for a reduction in rent
when the lease was renewed in 1802, on the grounds that
the business had lost money every year between 1795 and
1801. (ref. 61)
Over the winter of 1801–2 the interior of Sadler's Wells
was reconstructed at a cost of about £1,500 by the
specialist theatre architect Rudolphe Cabanel. (ref. 62) He had
rebuilt a number of theatre interiors, including the Royal
Circus in Lambeth, but was presumably known to Dibdin
from Astley's where he had devised stage machinery. (ref. 63) By
January 1802 Richard Wroughton, who had taken over
from King as manager in the late 1770s and still owned a
stake in the theatre, was writing to the landlord that 'the
Place is completely gutted and a very pretty, handsome
Theatre will soon be ready'. (ref. 64) The main alteration was the
creation of a semi-circular circle and galleries on the lines
of the reconstructions of Drury Lane and Covent Garden
in the 1790s, (ref. 65) which gave a more fashionable aspect and
better sightlines, also aided by the slender cast-iron
columns supporting the circle and galleries, an early
example of their use (Ill. 185). The proscenium ends of
the gallery and circle had spacious boxes either side,
although the dress circle was now no longer composed of
boxes, while the gallery was as deep as the circle. Boxes
are often referred to in advertisements, but are out of view
in most illustrations. Probably these were relatively large
boxes (not private boxes intended for one party), located
side by side along the back of the auditorium, and considered superior to the undivided pit in front. (ref. 66) Beyond
the auditorium little had changed, and there were no
proper means of escape, as was demonstrated in 1807,
when eighteen people were trampled to death during a
false fire alarm. (ref. 67)

186. Sadler's Wells racecourse, 1806.
View looking east away from theatre

187. Sadler's Wells looking north-west across New River, 1813
During the 1802 season Hughes and Dibdin introduced
pony races, which were held from time to time over the
next quarter-century (Ill. 186). After a short prelude by
Dibdin, large doors at the back of the theatre were opened
through the scene house to the yard behind, the yard and
stage forming the racecourse. The ponies were supplied
by I'ons' livery stable in Islington. (ref. 68)
The aquatic theatre, 1804–1824
By 1805 an extra two-storey scene room had been added,
along with a covered way (sometimes referred to as 'the
piazza') along the south side of the theatre, between the
yard and the entrance to box and pit by the manager's
house (Ill. 187). Additional sheds and stables had also been
put up. But the most important of Dibdin's improvements
was the installation in 1804 of under-stage equipment
making possible spectacular dramas culminating in a final
scene performed on water.
This was not London's first aquatic theatre. In the years
around 1700 Henry Winstanley, designer of the first
Eddystone lighthouse, and later his widow Elizabeth, had
run a theatre in Piccadilly which combined water effects
and fireworks. (ref. 69) What Dibdin and Hughes put on,
however, was more ambitious than anything attempted
before. Dibdin recalled how they executed the alterations
in absolute secrecy:
We first ripped up the whole of the stage and removed all traps
and cellar work, in all future pantomimes, I was obliged to
model my mechanical effects so as to enable the machinists to
work the pantomime tricks without any assistance from below
which created both for them and me no small perplexity'. (ref. 70)
The vast metal tank, 'made like a brewing vat', (ref. 71) perhaps
of rivetted copper, ran the full depth of the stage and some
way beyond, under the scene house (Ill. 188). It was 90 ft
long and 24 ft across at its widest (presumably at stage
front), tapering to just 10 ft at the far end, and about 3 ft
deep. It rested on dwarf walls in the cellar 2 ft 4 in high
and wide and 2 ft 4 in apart, and contained bearers onto
which the stage could be lowered. There were two
branches, extending to the side walls of the stage, one
about halfway down on the north side, the other nearer the
stage end. The tank was originally filled from the New
River by means of what Dibdin called an 'archimedean
wheel'; later the New River Company was paid £30 per
year to fill it from the main, and on one occasion the water
was cut off because the bill had not been paid. In 1808 an
additional tank was added in the flies to create waterfall
effects about 15 ft wide. (ref. 72) These alterations, the proprietors claimed, cost £1,000. (ref. 73)

188. Aquatic theatre, Sadler's Wells, diagrammatic plan based
on reconstruction by Allan S. Jackson

189. Arlington Street looking south, c. 1875, with Sadler's Wells
scene dock to left
Between 1804 and 1824, 36 aqua-dramas were staged,
almost all up to 1819 written or co-written by Charles
Dibdin. (ref. 74) Until 1823, when alterations were made by a Mr
Copping to the stage-lifting mechanism which allowed it
to rise in a matter of seconds, the audience had to endure
an interlude of up to forty minutes as the stage was
removed to reveal the water-tanks for the final scenes. (ref. 75)
The watery dénouement typically showed a piece of land
bordering a body of water— 'Castle on a Lake with a Water
Fall', 'Gibralter by the Mediterranian'— and featured
ships in full sail (Dibdin employed shipwrights and riggers
from Woolwich dockyard to make correct scale-model
ships), sea creatures, all propelled around by small boys
clad in duffle coats. (ref. 76) Fireworks and other fiery effects—
such as burning castles and volcanoes— were popular as
they reflected well on the water, and lit up the dim recesses
at the back of the stage. (ref. 77) All this heralded a fresh period
of prosperity for Sadler's Wells, stoked by the popularity
of Joseph Grimaldi, who 'transformed the clown from a
rustic booby into the star of metropolitan pantomime'. (ref. 78)
Sadler's Wells in decline, c. 1818–43
Well before the last aquatic shows were held, the theatre
was doing badly. The managers claimed to have lost
£3,000 in the 1818 season alone, and by the mid-1820s,
with Dibdin departed and Grimaldi retired, Sadler's Wells
was firmly set on a decline that lasted until Samuel
Phelps's arrival in 1843. (ref. 79) A succession of managers made
a number of alterations to attract the public, as well as the
usual periodic redecoration. Pony races were revived in
1822 with platforms over the orchestra so that the ponies
could pass into and round the pit, and in 1826 they were
held just in the yard, with boards erected around the
perimeter to prevent free viewing. (ref. 80) This revival may have
been connected with the building at this time of livery
stables just north of the yard, with a building that survives
as No. 381 St John Street, now the Sadler's Wells education centre and known as the 'Georgian House' (see
Survey of London, volume xlvi).
In the years following the renewal of the lease in 1819,
the theatre was given a new roof and the outside walls were
stuccoed, perhaps to update its 'old-fashioned, unpretending appearance'. (ref. 81) Over the winter of 1821–2 alterations
converted the circle into a series of boxes. Six further boxes
were created at the proscenium ends of the gallery, while
two more stage boxes were added each side, and the pit and
gallery were enlarged. (ref. 82) The theatre was also 'embellished
and decorated in a superior style of elegance and splendour
… the prevailing colour is a soft and delicate pink'. (ref. 83) The
panels on the fronts of the boxes were decorated with gilt
lattice work and silvered scallops. The walls of the lobbies
were 'relieved with emblematic devices', while the proscenium and stage doors were painted white with gilt beading.
Above came 'a fanciful grouping in bronze of the lyre, cornucopia, and other symbolic figures'. The slim iron pillars
supporting the boxes were gilded and cut-glass lustres projected from their capitals. The drop curtain was painted
with a scene by Thomas Greenwood; it was predominantly
blue, as was the 'imitative drapery' of the boxes. (ref. 84)
Probably in 1824, the New River Company leased to T.
J. Lloyd Baker the triangular plot of land between the
north flank of the theatre and the newly created Arlington
Street. Here the Sadler's Wells management built a scene
dock and dressing rooms (Ill. 189)— artistes had traditionally been obliged to change beneath the stage, the
women in a makeshift 'canvas compartment' nailed to the
underside. (ref. 85) Next year, the London Wine Co. having taken
a stake in the business, the dwelling house was converted
into box office, wine room, saloon and coffee house—a
development deprecated by the Lloyd Bakers as one
that might interfere with the business of the Sir Hugh
Myddelton's Head, on the other side of the New River, of
which they were also the freeholders. (ref. 86) It was some time
later that a large covered porch of light construction, four
columns wide and two deep, surmounted by a sign board
towards St John Street, with the name 'Sadler's Wells',
was added behind, presumably to shelter those attending
the box office or entering the box and pit door (Ill. 190).
The covered way of c. 1804 seems to have been removed
when this was built.

190. Sadler's Wells looking west from St John Street Road, c. 1830. New River on left
The 1820s saw intense building activity on the land
around Sadler's Wells, and development of part or all of
the theatre site for housing and other purposes was
mooted many times over the next century and a half. The
first proposal seems to have been in 1823 when William
Lloyd Baker's solicitor, Augustus Warren, suggested that
if the theatre were pulled down, the site, and the triangular plot belonging to the New River Company alongside
Arlington Street, could be used for building houses. (ref. 87) In
1826 Richard Hughes junior, the lessee, wrote to Lloyd
Baker offering to build ten tenements on the north side of
the theatre yard to raise revenue, but the offer was not
taken up as the proposed rent was too small. (ref. 88)
In 1828 John Booth, the Lloyd Baker surveyor, or his
son William Joseph Booth, drew up a more radical plan to
demolish the theatre, and Dibdin's old house at the St
John Street end of the yard. In their place were to be built
two terraces, one of twelve houses fronting Arlington
Street and one of nineteen fronting the New River, the
latter reached by a private carriage road along the riverside from St John Street. (ref. 89) Nevertheless, the Booths
advised that the theatre was still the most profitable use of
the site for the Lloyd Bakers, and nothing was done. In
1830 W. C. Mylne, surveyor to the New River Company,
advised the Lloyd Bakers that the best thing for both
estates would be demolition of the theatre and redevelopment of the whole site with housing, for building houses
alongside the theatre would 'only increase the number of
lodging houses and Brothels which cover your Tunbridge
Wells property'. As an alternative he suggested that the
theatre could be let as a riding school or panorama and
'these itinerant Theatrical corps' compelled 'to quit the
spot forever … as it is, nothing could be worse'. (ref. 90)
Thereafter the Wells lurched from one failure to
another, as prices and standards gradually sank lower and
lower. Superficial changes were made, the saloon being
redecorated as a Chinese pavilion in the early 1830s, and
the auditorium 'ornamented with emblematical and classical devices'. (ref. 91)
Samuel Phelps and after, 1843–75
An upturn came in 1843, when a new partnership took
over, coinciding with the new Theatres Act which allowed
the licensing of minor theatres for regular drama. The
partner-managers were Thomas Longdon Greenwood,
son of the scene-painter and the third generation of
Greenwoods at Sadler's Wells, and the actor Samuel
Phelps. Over the next nineteen years they produced more
than a hundred plays. Their notable success was their
Shakespeare seasons, all the more surprising given the distance of the Wells from the educated West End elite, and
the type of entertainments which had hitherto prevailed.
The management took a stern line with the louche Sadler's
Wells crowd, expelling 'friers of fish, vendors of oysters
and other costermongers' from around the doors,
and beersellers and squalling babies—even the foulmouthed—from inside the theatre. (ref. 92) Under Phelps,
Sadler's Wells became a training ground for the West
End. (ref. 93)
The Phelps era was less significant architecturally than
theatrically. In 1846 a new entrance portico of five roundheaded arches was erected across the front of what had
been the manager's house. A separate entrance for the
boxes was provided and some benches were abolished in
favour of extra boxes. (ref. 94) The front of the first-floor circle
appears to have been opened up into a dress circle. (ref. 95)
In 1849 an extension was built on the site of the longdemolished covered way along the south side of the
theatre, possibly as a corridor and ancillary rooms. It was
designed by Richard Tress, architect and surveyor, and
may have been part of a larger scheme of alterations. (ref. 96)
This structure, with its stuccoed decoration of blind
pilasters, survived up to the rebuilding of 1930.
A 60-year lease was granted in 1851 to Jane Dixon, Jane
Bennett and her husband John Hooper, but the site was
already being eroded by development. The previous year
the house that Dibdin had occupied at the end of the yard,
north of the gates on St John Street, was demolished and
four houses were built in its place, by John Horden. (ref. 97) Then
in 1853–4 two sites were hived off and let to George Payne
for building St John's Terrace, immediately east of the
theatre (see page 133). (ref. 98)

191. Total abstainers' meeting, Sadler's Wells Theatre, drawn
by George Cruikshank, 1854
After 1862 'the hand of decay seemed to be impressed
on the house'. (ref. 99) Although Phelps was still a great draw, his
partner Greenwood had retired and he himself was on the
point of withdrawing from the management of the theatre.
The Lloyd Baker family offered the freehold for sale that
year, and the particulars give an idea of the accommodation at that time. At ground level the pit could take a thousand people. The dress circle held 150, with an upper
circle of boxes at the rear seating another 150. Above that
was a more steeply sloping gallery seating between 800 and
1,000. There were six private boxes, four on the dress
circle level and two level with the stage (Ill. 191). Over the
'ample and lofty' stage were upper and lower flies and a
carpenter's shop. In the two-storey extension of 1849 were
a green room and a cloakroom, with ladies' dressing rooms
and wardrobe above. On the other side of the stage, in the
extension of 1824 was a scene room, while the original
dressing room adjoining was now just for men. There were
also 'two refreshment rooms and a good box office'. (ref. 100)
The building failed to sell and there followed a return
to more mixed programmes with light drama and melodrama as well as Shakespeare, under a series of managers.
The theatre was also used for religious meetings in 1866. (ref. 101)
Final closure took place in 1875, when the fixtures and fittings were auctioned. It was reported that 'we are going to
lose the oldest theatre in London … the theatre is now
going to be turned into baths and washhouses'. (ref. 102) The
building reputedly was used as a pickle factory for a brief
period, but by 1876 it had been acquired to cash in on the
craze for roller-skating. (ref. 103)
Skating Rink and Winter Garden, 1876–8
In February 1876 Ernest George Fellowe, who had
recently taken a 21-year lease on the property, and William
Snell Chenhall, a contractor, registered the Sadlers Wells
Skating Rink and Winter Garden Ltd. By an agreement
of May 1876 Chenhall proposed to lease the building to
the new company for various monthly instalments and
allotments of shares. Plans for a skating rink and refreshment rooms, prepared by another shareholder, the architect John Warrington Morris, had been agreed and in July
Fellowe applied for a music licence. (ref. 104) He proposed to use
the great central hall of the theatre as a concert room
accommodating 3,000 people, and the premises variously
for 'Sunday services and public meetings … lectures …
fancy fairs and bazaars, exhibitions of works of art, athletic sports, wrestling and skating matches, flower shows,
prize dog and cat shows, industrial exhibitions and also
swimming baths during the summer months'. (ref. 105)
If this diverse array of entertainments suggests an
element of bet-hedging on the part of the proprietors
about roller-skating, they nevertheless proceeded with
internal construction works. The stage was removed and
this area together with the pit and the boxes at the back of
the auditorium was excavated to 'a considerable depth
below the former level'. The back of the stage was opened
up and the area behind, presumably including the original
scene room and 40 ft of the yard towards St John Street,
enclosed within the theatre to create a total skating area of
10,000 sq ft. (ref. 106)
By March 1877 the roller-skating boom was over. No
fewer than 49 skating rink companies were registered in
1876; next year there were three and in 1878 none. (ref. 107) So
the lessees decided to rebuild the interior—allegedly
paying £12,000—and reopen Sadler's Wells as a theatre
with Samuel Phelps as its leading tragedian. But Phelps
never returned, dying shortly afterwards, while the building failed to secure a licence. (ref. 108) In 1878 the skating rink
company was wound up and the theatre taken over by
Henry Irving's former partner at the Lyceum, Mrs S. F.
Bateman. (ref. 109)
Reconstruction by C. J. Phipps, 1878–9
Despite all the works of the previous two years, Mrs
Bateman again reconstructed the interior in 1878–9. One
reason may have been the new Metropolis Management
Act which required the Metropolitan Board of Works to
ensure that theatres were safe in the event of fire, and to
compel owners to remedy structural defects. (ref. 110) Her experience at a prestigious West End theatre may also have left
Mrs Bateman dissatisfied with the facilities and patched
appearance of her acquisition. Her architect was C. J.
Phipps, architect of choice to the theatrical establishment,
as renowned as J. W. Morris was obscure. However, he was
probably employed for his thorough understanding of the
practical requirements of theatre, rather than architectural
brio. (ref. 111)
It is debatable whether Phipps's Sadler's Wells counts
as a new theatre. Although it was said that he 'removed
the whole of the interior of the building, including the
inner walls and other structural portions … as well as
parts of the main outer walls', plans of 1883 show that
substantial parts were retained. (ref. 112) These included the 1824
scene dock and dressing rooms on the Arlington Street
front, and parts of many external walls, including those of
the auditorium.
Fire-safety measures were greatly improved (Ill. 192).
There were now two staircases accessible from the huge
gallery—one rebuilt inside the original gallery stair tower
on the main front, the other giving access to Arlington
Street. Both were built of mass concrete by the specialist
firm Charles Drake & Co. There were three exits from the
pit as well as two from the stage, with outward-opening
double doors. Hydrants were provided on the circle level,
stage and up in the flies. (ref. 113)

192. Sadler's Wells Theatre, ground plan as rebuilt by C. J. Phipps, architect, 1878–9
Phipps entirely rebuilt the auditorium, with a stronger
horseshoe profile for the front of the dress circle and
family circle (on one level) and the gallery above. These
were built considerably forward of the previous circle and
gallery fronts and the theatre's capacity consequently
increased. A pair of opulent private boxes terminated
either end of the dress circle, with more modest pit boxes
below each. He raised the roof over the auditorium by 15
ft, thereby improving the ventilation, and over the stage
to a height of 50 ft, allowing an ample iron equipment
grid. One effect of the raised auditorium roof was to
improve sightlines by sharper raking of all levels. Three
new rows of stalls at the stage side of the pit were fitted
with 'Phipps's patent chairs'; this was a socially superior
area to the pit, but the pit benches did at least now have
backs. The fronts of the circle and boxes were bellied in
profile and enriched, while those of the gallery were
flatter. Fluted and gilded Corinthian columns supported
the circle and gallery, with larger ones flanking the private
boxes, decorated with satin hangings (Ill. 193). Over the
boxes, were two large lunettes painted with 'figure subjects
representing the arts' and on the ceiling was an oval 'with
Renaissance ornament on a cream ground'. (ref. 114) In honour
of the theatre's long history the act drop featured a
fanciful representation of 'Sadler's Wells 1779' by John
O'Connor, principal scene-painter at the Haymarket
Theatre from 1863 to 1878. (ref. 115)

193. Sadler's Wells Theatre, auditorium in 1879
as reconstructed by C. J. Phipps, with act drop painted
by John O'Connor
From theatre to music-hall, 1881–1914
Mrs Bateman died in 1881 and with her the hopes of a
Phelps-style revival. Despite her improvements, in the
1880s 'the Saturday night gallery contained the most villainous, desperate, hatchet-faced assembly of ruffians to
be found in all London'. (ref. 116)
In 1883 the freehold of Sadler's Wells left the Lloyd
Baker family when it was bought by Edmund Temple
Godman of Longborough, Gloucestershire. (ref. 117) Only minor
alterations were made for the next ten years. (ref. 118) In 1890–3
the lessees Harry Adolphus Freeman and Charles Wilmot,
of the Grand Theatre Islington, applied unsuccessfully
for a music-hall licence. (ref. 119) This was opposed each year by
the Vestry and the London County Council representative
for Clerkenwell, F. A. Ford, along with local clergymen
and ratepayers, on the grounds that the LCC had decided
not to capitalize on the Deacon's music hall site opposite
cleared for the building of Rosebery Avenue, and so should
not permit a music hall just across the road. Wilmot and
Freeman claimed in 1891 that if the licence were granted
they would spend £6,000, if not more, 'in making a second
Alhambra of it'. (ref. 120)
It was during this period that a scheme was drawn up
by the architect A. H. Mackmurdo for redeveloping the
site as a 'Hall, Club-Rooms, Coffee Palace and Artizans
Dwellings (Ills 194, 195). (ref. 121) The address of the building
given on the drawing is Roseberry (sic) Avenue, placing
the date after July 1890, when Rosebery Avenue got its
name. The inclusion of socially improving facilities such
as club rooms and a reading room, as well as model
dwellings, and the abstaining tone of 'coffee palace',
suggest an attempt to win over the Vestry and LCC (the
latter much concerned during its early years with the
moral reform of Londoners' entertainments). One model
for the coffee palace may have been the Royal Victoria
Coffee Music Hall—the Old Vic—established in 1880
by Emma Cons to 'purify' working-class recreation. An
alderman, Cons sat on the LCC Theatres Committee
during its first term. (ref. 122) A room on the ground floor designated 'green room or committee room' suggests that the
proprietors hoped that the 'public hall' might double as a
theatre. Mackmurdo's jaunty design features many pediments and decorative festoons as well as a favourite motif
of his at the date, an open belvedere with a cupola.
The Mackmurdo scheme, which was never presented to
the LCC, was probably commissioned by Wilmot and
Freeman, who in 1893 sublet the theatre to George
Belmont, a flamboyant theatrical personality known as
'Barnum's Beauty'. Lack of a music-hall licence did not
stop Belmont from putting on an array of variety acts over
the next ten years, including Marie Lloyd, interspersed
with 'regular' drama to give a pretence that Sadler's Wells
was not a music hall. (ref. 123)
Physical changes to the theatre between then and 1902
were minor and mostly concerned with safety and sanitary
requirements. Almost all were undertaken by the theatre
architect Bertie Crewe, of Crewe & Sprague. His most
visible alteration was a new portico in 1894, aligned to the
newly completed Rosebery Avenue (Ill. 196). This consisted of four double doors, three leading into the lobby
behind the 1879 carriage porch, one into an office. Built
into the divisions between the three entrance doors were
two small box offices and two attendants' rooms. (ref. 124) At
some time between 1894 and 1900, an enclosed yard was
created along the Rosebery Avenue front by means of a
high brick wall running along the southern boundary of
the site. (ref. 125)
By April 1900 the freehold of Sadler's Wells belonged
to Charles and Charlotte Wilmot, who probably acquired
it on the death of Godman in 1894. (ref. 126) From November
1902, when George Belmont left, to 1911 the theatre was
let to the Music Hall Proprietary Corporation, part of
Frank MacNaghten's Vaudeville Circuit, a variety empire
based in Sheffield. (ref. 127) It is a measure of how lucrative
this type of entertainment was that MacNaghten (who
continued Belmont's practice of two programmes each
evening) was prepared to give up the Lord Chamberlain's
theatrical licence as well as that for selling alcohol in order
to secure one for music and dancing, which he obtained in
1903. After a brief period (1910–14) reverting to a theatrical licence, a new music-hall licence was taken out. (ref. 128)

194, 195. Unexecuted scheme for redeveloping Sadler's Wells Theatre. Elevation and plan by A. H. Mackmurdo, architect, c. 1891
Sadler's Wells as a cinema, 1896–1915
An interesting aspect of Sadler's Wells' history in the
twenty years before its closure in 1915 is its part-use as a
cinema, for which it was licensed under the 1909
Cinematograph Act, possibly as early as 1909 and certainly
by November 1914.
Until about 1910 films were generally just one more act
in a music-hall programme. One of the earliest film shows
in Britain took place here in December 1896, using a
Theatrograph projector, devised by the pioneering film
producer and inventor R. W. Paul, a local man. (ref. 129) Further
'cinematograph exhibitions' were put on in 1900, by the
Edisonograph Co. The word 'exhibition' indicates the
transient nature of early cinemas, which did not require
permanent installation of equipment. At the end of 1900
George Belmont built a temporary shed at Sadler's Wells
'to contain an engine … used in connection with the cinematograph exhibition'. The first permanent alteration
for the showing of films was the creation of a 'biograph
box', a very small projection room with a flue, created
within the gentleman's lavatory on the dress-circle level.
In 1913 a larger and more salubrious two-storey chamber
was made, to the designs of J. B. Whittaker, above the back
of the gallery, partly protruding through the roof, with a
lobby, generator room, winding room and operating box. (ref. 130)
Tip-up seats replaced the wooden pit benches a year
later. (ref. 131)
When the drama critic S. R. Littlewood visited in
February 1914 to check on rumours that Sadler's Wells
was now a cinema he was appalled at its state: 'Poor
wounded old playhouse! Here it stands even now, shabby
and disconsolate, its once familiar frontage half hidden
with glaring posters'. Although it showed films on a
Sunday, during the week Sadler's Wells still operated as a
theatre, packed with 'pale eager-eyed little "flappers",
whistling errand boys and chuckling old greybeards'
who enjoyed the staple fare of 'cowboy melodramas'.
Littlewood's colourful piece ended with prophetic words.
'Does it not seem, then, that here is an unrivalled opportunity for some of these noble philanthropists who are
continually dinning into our ears the need for people's theatres, to step in and begin the actual work at Sadler's
Wells?' (ref. 132)
Closure and dereliction, 1915–23
Briefly in 1914, it looked as though Littlewood's stinging
words would be acted upon, as the leaseholder—Frank
MacNaghten's sometime manager Frederic Baugh, who
had taken over the lease in 1911—offered to accept only
£1,500 for his share of the business if £4,000 was forthcoming to found such a people's theatre, a proposal supported by the Islington Gazette and a roster of theatrical
worthies from Shaw to Pinero and Seymour Hicks. (ref. 133)
This all came to nothing as war took hold. The theatre
closed in 1915 and was even recorded as 'pulled down' in
1917. (ref. 134) In September 1918 R. A. Beaton of Croydon
claimed he was negotiating a long lease and enquired what
work would be needed to secure a theatrical licence. (ref. 135)
Nothing transpired, and in 1919 serious damage was done
by intruders. (ref. 136) Shortly afterwards the theatre was
acquired by Ernest C. Rolls, owner of the Kennington
Theatre, later a theatrical manager in Australia and 'an
entrepreneur with a chequered history of expensive productions, bankruptcy, a prison sentence for voyeurism and
court appearances for tax evasion'. (ref. 137)
Rolls submitted two sets of plans to the LCC: the first
by Bertie Crewe proposed only minor changes. The
second set, by the architect Stanley Harry Burdwood, was
more ambitious. It included a two-storey extension covering the triangular yard between the theatre and the
corner of Arlington Street and Rosebery Avenue. This
was to contain a restaurant, top-lit by an iron and glass
lantern and overlooked by a four-sided balcony. Rolls also
apparently planned to make capital out of the well
(though probably more as an attraction than a source of
health-giving water, which had long since dried up), as
the plans included 'grotto & well'—just a staircase
leading down from the tearoom (the former pit bar) to a
small basement room containing the well. (ref. 138)

196. Sadler's Wells Theatre in 1910, showing portico designed
by Bertie Crewe, architect, 1894
In the event the only alterations carried out were the
removal of the 1846 portico, the division of the Rosebery
Avenue yard, the alteration of the entrance portico and
lobby to a wide central opening flanked by two narrower
ones, the addition of a pediment to the top of the saloon
over the entrance, a balustrade to the top of this and the
1849 extension on the south of the auditorium, and a new
plain two-storey block housing cloakrooms to the right
of the main entrance. The outside of the building was
given a mildly Baroque treatment and rendered, the
upper parts finished to resemble stonework, replacing
the remains of the fake timber-framing which had been
painted on about twenty years earlier (Ill. 196). The
work, carried out by F. G. Minter of Putney, was completed in July 1921. (ref. 139)
Despite this cosmetic makeover, the theatre did not
reopen, but now fell into dereliction. In 1923 the Evening
News reported that the poet and theatrical manager
Ardeen Foster was giving small cash prizes to the best
'house' built by local children—'the little housewives
of Sadler's Wells'—inside the ruins of the theatre
(Ill. 197). (ref. 140) The days of Sadler's Wells appeared to be
numbered.
Lilian Baylis and the rebuilding of Sadler's Wells
In November 1924 Reginald Rowe, a governor of the Old
Vic, was on the look-out, at the suggestion of its manager
Lilian Baylis, for a second home for the theatre. At the
same time 'an enthusiast' (almost certainly Rowe
himself) came across the 'ghost' of Sadler's Wells and
was appalled by what he saw (Ill. 198): 'In the roof were
huge rents. The walls were crumbling. None of the
windows had a pane of glass. A high advertisement
hoarding covered the heaps of rubble … which had
fallen from the decaying members'. The property was for
sale, and the hoarding recommended the site as suitable
for 'offices or a factory'. (ref. 141) An option to purchase was
secured. (ref. 142)
Lilian Baylis—known always as 'The Lady'—had
been running the Old Vic since 1899. Designed as the
Royal Coburg by Rudolphe Cabanel, who had also reconstructed the inside of Sadler's Wells, this had been taken
over in 1880 by Baylis's aunt Emma Cons as a temperance variety theatre. While Cons was alive Baylis continued as before but from 1912 she began, like Phelps at
the Wells, to reinvent the Old Vic as both a people's
theatre and a venue for Shakespeare. Alternating
Shakespearean with more lucrative operatic productions,
and keeping a tight budgetary control, Baylis succeeded
in making her policy pay, even with seats costing between
6d and 6s, and by the mid-1920s was attracting West End
stars such as John Gielgud and Edith Evans. (ref. 143)
By March 1925 an appeal for £60,000, under a committee chaired by the Duke of Devonshire, had been set
up. (ref. 144) Its aim was to buy the freehold of Sadler's Wells,
'reconstruct the interior, and save it, with its historic traditions, for the Nation', as well as establishing a charity
to run it in conjunction with the Old Vic as 'an "Old Vic"
for North London'. Baylis, aware of the value of publicity, was photographed inside the derelict theatre with Sir
Squire Bancroft, a pioneer of the 1860s theatre revival,
and Sir Arthur Pinero, a local 'boy' whose Trelawney of
the Wells had celebrated that same revival and a little-disguised Sadler's Wells itself.
Later that year, with money coming in slowly and the
expiry of the option to purchase looming, the Carnegie
United Kingdom Trust bought Sadler's Wells for
£14,200, to allow the appeal committee time to raise
funds. (ref. 145) Shortly afterwards Frank Matcham & Co. were
appointed as architects. Reconstruction plans by the
senior partner, F. G. M. Chancellor, were approved in
principle by the LCC in July 1926. (ref. 146)
The financial position remained so poor that in June
1927 J. M. Mitchell, chairman of the Carnegie Trust,
asked the LCC if they might be allowed to open the
theatre with only the ground floor completed: 'the building could be made watertight and suitable for concerts,
lectures, etc, with the ground floor and the stage completed, but no galleries', and with no sprinkler system or
heating and ventilation systems installed, as it was felt
fundraising would be easier if a start had been made on
the building. The Theatres Section was surprisingly
sympathetic to this proposal. Although Chancellor had
devised a scheme for doing this that would have cost only
£18,600 it was not carried out. (ref. 147)

197. 'The little housewives of Sadler's Wells':
children in the derelict foyer, c. 1923

198. Sadler's Wells auditorium in ruins, c. 1923–4

199. Sadler's Wells Theatre, ground plan as rebuilt in 1930–1. F. G. M. Chancellor of Frank Matcham & Co., architect
After prolonged fund-raising, the new theatre was eventually built in 1930. Donors included the City Parochial
Foundation, the Borough of Finsbury and five other north
London boroughs. In keeping with the democratic aspirations for the new theatre, individuals of modest means also
subscribed, it was said, for individual bricks, while the
builder (Frederick Minter) allowed the Trust time to settle
his bill. (ref. 148) The completed building opened with a production of Twelfth Night, appropriately on 6 January 1931,
with Ralph Richardson as Sir Toby Belch and John
Gielgud as Malvolio.
The new Sadler's Wells followed the footprint of its
predecessor to some degree (Ills 192, 199). The ghost of
Rosoman's 1764 building, specifically the relationship
between the manager's house fronting Rosebery Avenue
and the theatre with the stage at the east end, persisted.
On the ground floor was an entrance foyer (on the site
of the old lobby/wine rooms/manager's house), above
which, in the place of the old saloon, was the Sadler's
Wells Room, intended as a display space celebrating the
history of the Wells. The main staircase to the dress
circle led off from the left of the foyer. A coffee room
occupied the space of the former pit bar. As before, a
stalls corridor led from the foyer eastwards, along the
south of the auditorium, but only as far as a secondary
staircase to the dress circle. Beyond that, self-contained
with its own staircase, was a two-storey block on the
south side of the stage and orchestra, housing dressing
rooms and a chorus room. The stage and scene docks
were designed to fit the scenery of the Old Vic so that
productions could be transferable. (ref. 149) Behind the stage,
much shallower than its predecessors, were the property
and carpenters' rooms. A scene dock on the north side
of the auditorium occupied the site of the scene dock
extension of 1824. The rest of the triangular site was
taken up with two staircases, as before, and a pit exit into
Arlington Street. (ref. 150)
The 1,700-seat auditorium featured a dress circle and
gallery cantilevered out on steel girders, but no boxes; the
gallery extended backwards beyond the line of the rear of
the pit and dress circle (Ill. 201). In the pit and stalls the
arrangement of seats in straight rows was considered oldfashioned. (ref. 151) Also provided in the theatre, above the coffee
room, was a cinema projection room. (ref. 152)
The Architect and Building News deplored the fact
that the building retained 'some of the historic ruins', and
blamed sentiment for this 'anti-functional' blunder.
However, economics were a more likely cause. The owners
needed to eke out their funds and one way to do this was
to make use of the existing structure. To what degree they
did so is uncertain. Certainly the auditorium was built
using existing walls at least up to gallery height on the
north and east sides. Since Phipps in 1879 and Cabanel in
1801 both built within the existing structure these were,
in part, Rosoman's walls of 1764.

200. Sadler's Wells Theatre, Rosebery Avenue front in January 1931, shortly before
reopening

201. Sadler's Wells Theatre, auditorium in
1993
Chancellor's first designs of July 1926 had suggested
'architectural decoration on walls' in the auditorium, but
this was not executed. (ref. 153) For economy's sake the décor was
minimal and 'undistracting', with the walls toned a light
buff in flat water paint, 'picked out here and there with
discreetly gilded features, the woodwork being a silvergrey oak'. The escape stairs were left unplastered. (ref. 154) In the
auditorium, it was hoped that the 'necessary warmth and
colour' would be provided by a carpet of mauve and
vermilion'. (ref. 155) Over the proscenium a scene from A
Midsummer Night's Dream was executed in relief plaster
'tinted like old ivory', by Hermon Cawthra and above that
the arms of the borough of Finsbury. The only fashionably art deco note was provided by the glass and steel electrolier in the centre of the coffered ceiling. It was not just
the architectural press that expressed reservations about
the new theatre. John Gielgud later said 'how we all
detested Sadler's Wells when it opened first. The auditorium looked like a denuded wedding-cake and the
acoustics were dreadful'. (ref. 156)
Externally the building was in the polite, light neoGeorgian fashion of the inter-war repertory theatres, in
contrast to the blowzy style with which Matcham's firm
had made its name (Ill. 200). Purple-brick planes were
penetrated by rows of unmoulded window openings, over
a rusticated-stucco ground floor. Decoration was confined
to a relief-carved stone panel by Cawthra depicting
'women drawing water from the well' and stylized masks
of comedy and tragedy over the entrance (all reused inside
the present building). (ref. 157)
Alterations and improvements, 1930s–70s
The new Sadler's Wells began life shakily, with a large
building debt and less than packed houses. Productions
were originally intended to be alternating opera and drama
as at the Old Vic, but the first ballet production came in
May 1931. The dancer and choreographer Ninette de
Valois, who had been working at the Old Vic, harboured
ambitions to extend her teaching and found a ballet school
at the Wells, a development supported by Lilian Baylis.
For the first few years ballet and drama alternated at both
Sadler's Wells and the Old Vic, but from 1935 Sadler's
Wells took over as a ballet stage, and the Old Vic as a sole
drama stage.
A first token of improved fortunes came with the decision in the summer of 1937 to build an extension on the
north side of the theatre, principally for a scene dock and
rehearsal space, on the site of Nos 32–34 Arlington Street.
Stanley Hall & Easton and Robertson, architects of the
water-testing laboratory then under construction at New
River Head, were commissioned to produce the design. (ref. 158)
Following Baylis's death in November 1937, the project
grew. A fund was launched to raise £40,000 for a memorial in the form of proper facilities for ballet; as it was, the
ballet school had to use the largest of the refreshment
rooms for daily training. (ref. 159) This further extension
included a deepening of the stage, the addition of a large
ballet room and property rooms behind (entailing the
demolition of No. 177 Rosebery Avenue), the rearrangement of rooms on the street frontage to the south of the
stage, and a new floor of offices and dressing rooms above
for the use of ballet productions (Ill. 202). The project was
expanded still further in March 1938, during the course
of building, with the addition of an extra floor, containing
a dressing room and office, on the block adjoining the
entrance. (ref. 160) It has been claimed that these alterations and
additions saw the destruction of the last of Rosoman's
theatre but parts of the north wall, at least, survived. (ref. 161)

202. Fund-raising flyer for extensions to Sadler's Wells,
c. 1937. Axonometric view taken from the north
In contrast, the death in 1945 of Sir Reginald Rowe,
who with Lilian Baylis had been instrumental in saving
Sadler's Wells, was occasioned by nothing more substantial than a memorial plaque. Carved by Esmond Burton,
this took the form of a portrait in relief, and was unveiled
in January 1952 on the main staircase. (It was reinstalled
within the present theatre.) (ref. 162)
Throughout the twentieth century Sadler's Wells was
hampered by the fact that having incubated successful
enterprises, these moved elsewhere—usually to find better
accommodation. The Sadler's Wells ballet developed in
the 1930s only to move in 1946 to Covent Garden to
become the Royal Ballet; de Valois then founded the
Sadler's Wells Ballet touring company, also based at the
Royal Opera House but performing at Sadler's Wells
during its London seasons.
The reward for this success was nearly half a century of
threatened extinction. For several years in the early 1960s
a proposal was considered for a new opera house on the
South Bank that would have rendered Sadler's Wells
redundant as an opera venue. With this in prospect, in
1963 one Finsbury Borough councillor suggested that the
best memorial to Sadler's Wells 'would be a block of flats
for London's homeless'. (ref. 163) In 1964 the New River Co. Ltd,
then proposing comprehensive redevelopment of its own
estate, offered to oblige with a plan for a 22-storey block
of private flats on the site. (ref. 164) Finsbury's borough engineer
opined that the tower would have no adverse effect on the
Spa Green housing estate opposite Sadler's Wells, and
the council offered no objection, but the tower scheme and
the wider redevelopment both came to nothing. Funding
for the opera house also failed to materialize, but in 1968
Sadler's Wells Opera moved to the more spacious London
Coliseum in St Martin's Lane (eventually to become
English National Opera). (ref. 165) After this Sadler's Wells
struggled to find a role, and in 1971 was threatened with
replacement by shops. (ref. 166)
Given these uncertainties, post-war alterations to
Sadler's Wells tended to be minor and piecemeal. In 1959
the acoustics were improved by the architectural acoustician Hope Bagenal and the architects Fred Rowntree &
Son with features modelled on the theatre at Bayreuth. (ref. 167)
These included three tall, convex, fibrous plaster 'fins'
either side of the stage between stage and auditorium, and
an adjustable canopy of the same material over the proscenium (it was presumably at this time that the Cawthra
panel was removed). (ref. 168) In 1961 the stage was extended on
the south side, the orchestra was enlarged under the stage,
a library was created on the first floor at the south-east
corner, and a further row of offices was added to the
Rosebery Avenue front (above those added in 1938), all
to Rowntree's designs. (ref. 169) In 1966 the leaking roof was
repaired and the orchestra pit was enlarged further by
removing one row of stalls. (ref. 170)
In 1977 a dance rehearsal room named in memory of
the choreographer John Cranko was built above the existing rehearsal room overlooking Arlington Way. It took
18 months to build and cost £80,000, from private
donations. (ref. 171)
The present building
'When we go down to hell, we shall find it is the Sadler's
Wells foyer', complained the ballet critic Clement Crisp of
the old theatre. (ref. 172) The opening of a new advance-sales
box-office in 1980 at No. 371 St John Street on the corner
of Rosebery Avenue freed up some room in this famously
cramped space, (ref. 173) but the under-sized foyer was just one
of several fundamental shortcomings in the building glaringly apparent in the last decades of the twentieth century.
Back-stage accommodation was poor, the fly-tower inadequate for large-scale productions, and performers were
hampered by the lack of space either side of the stage: the
1961 expansion on the south side of the stage had left
behind a supporting column of masonry into which
dancers were apt to collide as they came off. The audience,
too, had to put up with sub-standard conditions. 'The
décor is glum, the leg-room non-existent and the sightlines terrible', was the critic David Benedict's summation
in the 1990s. (ref. 174)
In 1983 the management under Stephen Remington
devised a three-phase improvement programme, to create
a studio theatre for smaller-scale works and community
use, to re-site the dressing rooms and enlarge the stage,
wings and fly-tower, and, most ambitiously, to rebuild the
foyer and box-office with a glass-enclosed stairway to each
floor (Ill. 203). (ref. 175) An appeal for £5.5m was launched that
year to fund this and the acquisition of neighbouring
properties on Arlington Way, St John Street (enabling an
entrance on that street) and Rosebery Avenue on which to
expand or rebuild. (ref. 176)
The latest rebirth of Sadler's Wells took fifteen years to
come to fruition. The first phase was achieved in 1988, at
a cost of about £1.5 million (nearly twice the original estimate), with the opening of the Lilian Baylis Theatre, an
uncluttered box-like space with bar and foyer created by
Frank Woods of Chamberlin Powell, Bon & Woods on the
site of three houses in Arlington Way. (ref. 177) In the spirit of
Phelps and Baylis, the intention was that it would be used
half the time by amateur and educational groups, the rest
by small-scale productions, thereby increasing community
involvement. Financial constraints prevented this balance
from being achieved in its early years.
By 1990 the redevelopment had been effectively stalled
because of funding problems, and the Sadler's Wells
Royal Ballet had departed to Birmingham. Three variant
schemes were now put forward for the redevelopment of
both the theatre site and New River Head. Designed by
Cecil Denny Highton, these were a joint venture by
Sadler's Wells and Thames Water. The most radical
scheme elided the sites, with dense housing and offices to
fund a new theatre further west. (ref. 178) This scheme was
dropped, partly because it was unpopular locally, and the
principal buildings at New River Head were converted to
flats.
About this time there were suggestions that a refurbishment of the 1930 theatre might be more realistic. (ref. 179)
However, in 1994, with large-scale funding for cultural
projects available via the National Lottery, a more ambitious rebuilding was pursued following the appointment
of an experienced theatrical manager, Ian Albery, as chief
executive. He concluded that the existing theatre's
shortcomings doomed it to be host to 'second- or thirdrate companies'. The fact that the upper circle was
reached by a back door was also deemed 'clearly unacceptable in a modern democratic society'. (ref. 180) This tone of
anti-elitism pervaded the scheme that matured with
RHWL Architects. Albery's aspiration that the new
Sadler's Wells should be 'in no way an echo of the
National Theatre, Barbican, or Royal Opera House or any
other prestige civic or national theatre', (ref. 181) chimed well
with the aims of the National Lottery Fund. It was
pointed out that Sadler's Wells had survived so long,
despite its woeful equipment, because it was the only yearround receiving theatre in London. With updated facilities it could flourish as both a community theatre and a
national dance theatre.

203. Sadler's Wells Theatre, sketch of proposed glass staircase
in south-west position by Peter Rice, c. 1983
The new Sadler's Wells was always going to be driven
by theatrical necessity rather than architectural conceit.
The architects' brief was to rebuild the foyer, stage and
backstage areas with the latest technical stage equipment,
and provide four rehearsal rooms, and community and
education facilities. In the first instance, because Sadler's
Wells was a listed building and its management believed
that consent for a virtual rebuild was more likely to be
forthcoming if part of the existing theatre were retained,
RHWL produced a design that included the entrance
block of Chancellor's 1930–1 building—for 'history and
sentiment' and to act 'as a "familiar" feature on Rosebery
Avenue, linking the new building to the character and scale
of residential Islington' (Ill. 204). At the south-west
corner was to have risen a sail-shaped glass tower or 'theatrical beacon'. The impression of a building largely of
glass, fronted by the retained entrance and a 'strong
brick wall' with glass doors and canopies, was judged
unsatisfactory and jumbled, so the design failed to receive
consent. English Heritage felt that retention of the
entrance was acting as a constraint; since the listing had
been made for 'the wells and historic associations', a
substantially new building would be better. (ref. 182)
RHWL produced a number of alternatives to satisfy
the management's desire to retain an obvious element of
the old building. But their preferred option was for a
sharp glass entrance from the corner with Arlington Way.
The idea was developed into the final design by Nicholas
Hare Architects, appointed as consultants for the exterior.
This design also mixed brick and glass but vertically
rather than horizontally. The walls were red-brick planes
punctuated by ranks of simple square windows and other
openings, with several sharply wedge-shaped projecting
windows. This understated hint of modish 'deconstruction' has proved problematic on the Arlington Way
frontage where the projecting window has been hit several
times by passing lorries. A sheer wall of glass marking the
entrance on Rosebery Avenue was overshot at the
Arlington Way corner by a fin of brick pierced with
square openings (Ill. 177). The design retained the prominent fly-tower, clad in metal panels with pronounced
joints. It was essentially this revised design that was built
in 1996–8, project-managed by Roger Spence for Sadler's
Wells with Bovis as construction managers. In the best
theatrical tradition, the performance licence was only
issued two minutes before curtain-up on 12 October
1998. (ref. 183)

204. Sadler's Wells Theatre, proposal for reconstruction and enlargement retaining existing entrance. RHWL, architects, 1995
The main public feature of the building is the open
limestone-floored foyer (Ills 205, 206). This can be naturally ventilated by automated high-level windows on the
Arlington Way façade. A large screen behind the fullheight glazing can broadcast scenes from the stage or, as
has more usually been the case, show advertising. From the
foyer a cantilevered staircase with open maple treads gives
access to all levels of the auditorium, areas for a bar, food
and ticket sales, and a shop. Elements of the old theatre
were retained within the new building, including the floor
levels of the dress circle and upper circle landings, the
structural steelwork of dress and upper circles, and parts
of the auditorium walls. Esmond Burton's memorial to
Reginald Rowe and Cawthra's masks from the old entrance
front were also preserved, along with the latter's relief of
'women drawing water from the well', which is now displayed in an internal garden space inside the stage door.
The walls, balcony fronts and ceiling of the auditorium are
essentially large technical galleries, lined in mesh panels
(Ill. 207). Those on the walls can be lit from in front or
behind and can also be removed entirely. In the auditorium the rows of seats are steeply raked but with very little
curve—the similar alignment of the 1931 seating was disparaged in contemporary criticism, but this is now recognized as offering better sightlines. Some rows of seats at
the side provide a connection between audience and stage
missing in the old theatre. The upper circle can be closed
off for smaller audiences, and the seating can be reduced
from 1,578 to 900, or increased to 1,833 with stalls
removed for promenade audiences. Like the auditorium,
the sprung stage is designed to be versatile. At 15 m
square, with a proscenium opening 15 m by 9m, it is larger
than the Royal Opera House stage and equal to that at the
London Coliseum. The orchestra pit can accommodate 80
players, and like the auditorium can be increased or
reduced in size. This, along with a 27m-high fly-tower,
allows the largest of productions. The power-flying, which
accounted for 10 per cent of the budget, was the first such
system installed in a major British theatre. (ref. 184)
The new Sadler's Wells extends in between the backs
of the houses in Arlington Way and Rosebery Avenue to
accommodate small dance studios, the Arlington Room (a
community space entered from Arlington Way), a workshop and the Kahn lecture theatre. Like the refitted Lilian
Baylis Theatre, this last has ranks of seating that can be
slid back electronically to leave an entirely open space. A
new glass-fronted stage door from Rosebery Avenue gives
access to Garden Court, a café space and 'green room'
shared by staff, community, audiences and performers.
This was created between the Lilian Baylis Theatre, the
houses of Rosebery Avenue, and the back of the
'Georgian House' erected in 1822 as livery stables and
now used as offices by the theatre. The glass entrance
required the demolition of No. 179 Rosebery Avenue, the
former theatre offices, which moved next door to No.
181. (ref. 185)

205. Sadler's Wells Theatre, ground plan as reconstructed in 1996–8

206. Sadler's Wells Theatre, main staircase from foyer in 2007

207. Sadler's Wells Theatre, auditorium from gallery in 2007
Garden Court, which has a sloping roof lit by vertical
windows on the south side, features a back-lit red wall,
perforated with tiny holes, and is flanked by two narrow
glazed garden areas 'planted' with tall thin steel poles
designed to move in the wind and cast shadows. The wall
and gardens together comprise 'Natural Forces', a collaboration between the architectural partnership Ushida
Findlay and the artist Vong Phaophanit. (ref. 186)
When the new Sadler's Wells opened, the critic
Jonathan Glancey declared that it was 'not a masterpiece
and certainly not a building to welcome in the millennium
with a trumpet blast'. (ref. 187) What this lukewarm endorsement
misses is that the modern Sadler's Wells is a theatrical
rather than an architectural statement, and as such entirely
in keeping with its five predecessors.