The Kings Theatre, with numbers 24-28 (even) Albert Road, Southsea is a Grade II* listed building in the Portsmouth local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 March 1976. A Edwardian Theatre. 14 related planning applications.

The Kings Theatre, with numbers 24-28 (even) Albert Road, Southsea

WRENN ID
broken-sandstone-wagtail
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Portsmouth
Country
England
Date first listed
4 March 1976
Type
Theatre
Period
Edwardian
Source
Historic England listing

Description

The Theatre

The Kings Theatre is a purpose-built theatre designed in 1906-1907 by the celebrated theatre architect Frank Matcham for John W Boughton of the Portsmouth Theatres Company. The builder was Frank Corke. Matcham's original drawings survive, though damaged and incomplete; the names of internal spaces used in this description have been taken from these drawings and from contemporary press descriptions. The theatre was constructed around three late 19th-century shops with lodgings above at numbers 24-28 Albert Road, which are included in the listing.

Construction and Materials

The theatre employs a steel frame construction clad in red and brown brick laid in English bond, with stucco rendering. The principal public-facing elements — the hexagonal corner tower and the Albert Road (north) elevation — are stuccoed. The Exmouth Road (west) elevation is built of red brick, whilst the Collingwood Road (south) elevation uses brown brick. The roofs are covered with Welsh slate, and there is a ventilation louvre over the auditorium. The windows in the principal elevations are timber with leaded lights, the vast majority being original.

Plan

The theatre occupies an irregular parallelogram-shaped site. The hexagonal tower containing the principal entrance occupies the sharp north-west corner formed by the junction of Albert Road to the north and Exmouth Road to the west. The front of house areas form a triangular section to the north. Further east along Albert Road are four shop buildings, positioned between the hexagonal corner tower and a stair tower with entrances to the east. The southern part of the building is occupied by the rectangular auditorium and stage, with backstage facilities wrapped around the south-east corner.

Exterior

The theatre demonstrates the eclectic range of Edwardian Classicism, with elements of Baroque, neoclassical, Italianate and Queen Anne Revival styles in evidence.

Hexagonal Tower and Main Entrance

The theatre's main entrance is located in the north face of the three-storey hexagonal tower and was intended to serve patrons of the dress circle and stalls. The entrance is preceded by a splayed, single-storey, bowed open porch constructed of multi-shaded brown faience. This porch features Ionic columns, an entablature and parapet bearing the words 'KING'S THEATRE', and a low pierced balustrade above the plinth. The porch floor is terrazzo with a crown motif. Entry is through two pairs of original double doors, each with geometric bevelled glazing to the upper part; the overlight is painted with Jacobean-style strapwork.

The ground floor of the tower is rusticated and has paired rectangular windows to west and east, with keyed circular windows (occuli) above. At each corner of the tower is an engaged giant Ionic pilaster running through the first and second floors, with blocking to the lower part of the shaft. Each side has a large first-floor window set within an eared architrave with a large keystone and open pediment. At second-floor level, each side features a screen of truncated Doric columns behind which are three windows. The entablature above has a bold cornice and a parapet with consoles to the corners, above which are heraldic lion finials. The parapet bears the words 'KINGS THEATRE' in raised lettering to the north.

The steeply-pitched octagonal roof is topped by a timber cupola, surmounted by a statue of a draped female figure holding a flaming torch. This is a 2009 fibreglass replica of the original.

Albert Road (North) Elevation

At the eastern end of the Albert Road elevation, the block provides the secondary entrance. This has a wide doorway flanked by Doric pilasters, above which is a broken pediment; the frieze bears the name of the theatre. The opening contains three pairs of half-glazed doors. These originally provided an exit from the upper circle as well as access to offices, early access to and exit from the gallery, and early access to and exit from the pit.

At first-floor level there is a large circular window between small square windows. The second-floor stage is framed by channelled pilasters; at the centre is a single window in a keyed pedimented architrave. The top floor takes the form of a loggia, with five small windows set back between unornamented piers. The roof is hipped but gives the impression of being a pyramid.

Between this end block and the corner tower are the three late 19th-century shops (see numbers 24, 26 and 28 Albert Road below). The upper part of the auditorium wall, which is visible rising behind the shops, is of red brick, framed by stone pilasters with ball finials, with a linking storey band above which is a central lunette. Below, the wall is of brown brick with purely functional window openings, and in the well between theatre and shops, of glazed brick.

Exmouth Road (East) Elevation

In the red brick east elevation, extending southwards from the corner tower, the front-of-house section to the north is given a degree of architectural consideration. It has a stuccoed ground floor with pilasters and cornice, a central pedimented oriel window at first-floor level, and stone architraves with keystones to the windows. The northern bay is recessed beneath an open-bed segmental pediment.

To the north of the oriel are two pairs of double doors with painted glass panels: one provides access to the upper circle stairs, the other to the pit. Double doors to the south of the oriel provide access to the gallery stairs. The ground floor is of glazed brown brick southwards of the doors.

The external walls containing the auditorium and stage are functional in appearance, with scattered fenestration, though at gallery level interest is provided by shaped gables, with an eared sign to the parapet announcing 'THE KINGS THEATRE'. A further three pairs of double doors provide exits from the pit, stalls, and dress circle. Further south is the stage exit, and at the southern end, behind the stage, a tall opening for stage scenery. The opening has chamfered jambs and boarded doors to the lower part with a rising section above.

Collingwood Road (South) Section

To the south of the stage, with its southern elevation to Collingwood Road, is a lower wedge-shaped section containing dressing rooms and offices, narrowing to the curved south-west corner at the junction with Exmouth Road. Built of brown brick, its rows of windows have red-brick, cambered-arched surrounds, and the elevation is functional in character. The window openings hold fixed timber frames with horizontal casement sections to the tops.

To the east is a two-storey section containing the stage door, with a taking-in door above. High on the wall of the theatre behind is a large painted sign: 'KINGS THEATRE'. The roughcast elevation above is framed by inset stone scrolls, giving some presence to this side of the theatre as seen from a distance. The eastern parts of the theatre are largely obscured by other buildings and are not designed to be seen.

Interior

The interior of the theatre is a well-preserved example of the period. The complex and ingenious plan which served the theatre's hierarchical seating arrangement, whilst making the most economical use of a constrained site, remains legible. Separate entrances (and exits), box offices, circulation and communal spaces, and interlocking staircases at the southern ends of the front of house section survive. Greater movement by the public across these areas is now possible than was originally intended. Levels of decoration reflect the status of the location; the overall survival of decorative features and finishes is very good. Some original signage survives, including room names painted on the glazed sections of doors.

Main Entrance, Vestibule and Dress Circle Areas

The main entrance to the north was intended to serve the dress circle and stalls. The entrance opens to a hexagonal vestibule with the box office (reconstructed) to the east. The foyer is paved with black and white marble, and the circular ceiling is supported on pendentives, each occupied by the relief figure of an angel with spreading wings. Circular windows — glazed or painted — fill the lunettes.

The staircase to the dress circle rises through an archway and leads to the domed foyer, with corner corbels shaped like opening flowers. The ceiling is decorated with husk swags and masks, whilst on the wall is a painting of a nymph with a lute and a small cupid (amorino) set in a plasterwork frame. To the west an archway leads to a raised seating area lit by the large oriel window; this gives on to what was originally the ladies' WCs.

The long Dress Circle Saloon, located across the north end of the auditorium, retains its original serpentine panelled bar with marble top and inset mirrored back bar. Access to the stalls was via staircases located to either side of the boxes, next to the stage.

Stalls Saloon

The Stalls Saloon is a near-triangular room to the east of the stalls, entered via a stair screened by imitation marble (scagliola marble) columns on pedestals. The original curved, marble-topped counter survives to the south end, along with the stepped semi-circular back bar.

Pit Areas

The passages to the pit — the cheaper area to the rear of the stalls — from the entrances on Exmouth Road and Albert Road have brown-glazed brick to half height, with painted brick above. The ramped passage from Albert Road leads to the box office, a small grilled opening set into an alcove.

The Pit Saloon is clad to dado height in tiling with an Art Nouveau flavour; the southern wall is not tiled. The boarded bar is an interwar replacement, though the back bar appears to be original. Original shelving for drinks survives around the room. The tiling continues into the lounge area to the east, provided for ladies, with a hatch from the bar; this area has now been partitioned with WCs in the eastern portion.

Upper Circle Areas

The entrance to the main upper circle stair from Exmouth Road has the Art Nouveau tiling used elsewhere and incorporates a box office. This has an angled painted timber frontage with an opening to each side and a balustraded top. The walls of the stair are finished with painted plaster.

The Upper Circle Saloon is a hexagonal room within the tower. The semi-circular bar is a reproduction; the painted glass windows are mainly original, having been recently replaced; the ceiling is covered with lincrusta (a type of embossed wallcovering).

Gallery Areas

The stair to the gallery, leading from Exmouth Road, interlocks with that to the upper circle. The gallery stair is lined with glazed bricks. The gallery box office is on the early-entrance and exit stair from Albert Road, and is a tiny lobby with its own circulation.

The former Gallery Saloon is entered through single doors with simple stained glass panels. The bar has glazed bricks to the north wall whilst the southern wall is curved, following the line of the auditorium. The angled steel beams supporting the gallery seating slope upwards and span the ceiling.

The Auditorium

The auditorium itself has sweeping cantilevered tiered dress circle, upper circle and gallery, combining good sightlines with maximum seating capacity. (Originally designed to seat over 2000 people, the seating has been reordered and renewed to provide greater space and comfort.) The rich Baroque decoration makes use of elaborate sculptural detail throughout, particularly to the two tiers of boxes flanking the proscenium arch.

The main ceiling is oval, with lunette panels painted with groups of small cupids (amorini), divided by winged plaster figures. The central roundel surrounds a ventilation gasolier consisting of gas jets with a grille, above which a funnel leads through the roof. The segmental proscenium arch is of scagliola imitating Brèche Violette marble.

On the ground floor, the pit benches which originally occupied the rear area of the auditorium have been removed and the stalls seating extended. The walls of the former pit area are lined with tiling with an Art Nouveau motif; there are alcoves for fire hydrants. Cast iron columns towards the rear provide additional support to the dress circle above.

The rear wall of the dress circle is of painted plaster with a lincrusta frieze. The horseshoe-arched upper circle has lincrusta to the rear wall and lincrusta-covered columns providing additional support to the gallery. In the gallery, the majority of the seating is in the original bench form, though replaced. The rear wall is lined with glazed bricks.

Backstage Areas

To the east of the stage is the scene dock, housing painted backdrops, and reached by a plain timber stair. The dock includes a platform and frame for painting scenery. The theatre remains a 'hemp house', with the fly bars suspended on hemp ropes with surviving winches, though additional computer-operated bars have also been installed between the original bars.

The backstage area to the south is functional, with painted brick walls. Dressing room fittings are simple and have largely been renewed, though some elements survive, and doors have been replaced. To the south-west is a large room marked 'wardrobe', with both clothes-washing and kitchen facilities; the original wardrobe room is on the third floor of the tower and is now the theatre's archive room.

Basement

The basement area, now largely used for storage and carpentry, houses the heating chamber, as well as the former band room, which has a strong metal door, and a room for the electrician. It is understood that the basement also contains a central vacuum cleaning plant run by an electric motor, which collected dust via pipes with inlet points; this was probably a slightly later addition.

Numbers 24, 26 and 28 Albert Road

A row of three terraced buildings, thought to date from the 1870s, consisting of shops with lodgings above, sited between the two towers on Albert Road.

Construction and Materials

The buildings are of brick with stuccoed frontages. The roofs are tiled and slated; there are brick stacks.

Plan

Each building has a rectangular footprint with a projecting stair wing to the rear. These wings were originally longer but were rebuilt in truncated form as part of the development of the theatre.

Exterior

The front elevations have a restrained Italianate character. The ground-floor shopfronts are separated by rusticated pilasters, and the fascias separated by rounded (pulvinated) consoles. Each shopfront has a doorway set between angled (canted) plate-glass windows in basket-arched timber frames. The panelled stallrisers survive to number 26, and tiled entrances survive to all three.

Above ground-floor level, the houses are separated by pilasters with paired console corbels supporting a heavy cornice. There is a panelled parapet above with ball finials above the pilasters. The parapet is not original to the row but was added shortly after the opening of the theatre in 1907. Above number 24 the parapet has lost its detailing.

On the first floor each house has a large angled (canted) oriel window with segmental-headed glazing, and above that are pairs of narrow windows in moulded architraves. The second-floor windows rest on a moulded storey-band.

The rear elevations are of brick with segmental arched window openings. The rear elevations of the rebuilt stair-wings are blind.

Interior

Though the interiors are of some interest as later 19th-century shops with lodgings above, there has been much alteration, and those historic features which do remain are of fairly standard types; the interiors are therefore considered to be of lesser interest.

Each building originally had a ground-floor shop with a room behind; the partition survives only in number 26. Though the small rear room survives here, the chimneypiece has been replaced, as have others within this building. Numbers 24 and 26 have shuttered display compartments behind the shop windows.

Each building has a very tight stair within its compact stair tower, branching to reach the first and second floors. Bulbous moulded newel posts survive. Within the lodging areas some doors, architraves, skirting and cornicing survive. In each building, the first-floor oriel window has a window-seat or deep sill.

Painted stone chimneypieces with chamfered jambs and moulded brackets survive in the upper rooms to number 24. Number 28 has been subject to the greatest alteration, with few features surviving; the upper floors are in use as offices and the building is linked with the theatre at first-floor level.

Detailed Attributes

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