The Ambassadors, as it was originally known, and St Martin's were conceived
by their architect, W G R Sprague, as companions, born at the same time in
1913, but World War I interrupted the construction of the latter for three
years. The Ambassadors was built with the intention of being an intimate,
smaller theatre and is situated opposite the renowned Ivy Restaurant,
favourite haunt of the theatrical elite.
The auditorium is decorated in an
elegant Louis XVI style and the horseshoe shaped single balcony is only a
few steps up from ground level, while the stalls are built underground.
Charles B Cochran recognised the Ambassadors lent itself perfectly to
intimate revue and a period of sophisticated 'miniature revues' were
performed at the Ambassadors at the beginning of the First World War.
The
world's longest running and most famous play, The Mousetrap, started its run
at this small theatre, with Richard Attenborough and his wife Sheila Sim,
who were the first of generations of casts to perform in what has become a
seemingly permanent tourist attraction. Since The Mousetrap, The Ambassadors
has enjoyed numerous other successes, including the Royal Shakespeare's hit
production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses in the 80s.
Since ATG took over the
New Ambassadors, it has become the only commercial West End theatre
currently producing its own work and presenting limited seasons of work
throughout the year from some of the country's best and most exciting
companies, writers and artists. Building on the achievements of the Royal
Court Theatre at the Ambassadors, ATG has been responsible for developing
and producing a wide range of work with the Royal Court Theatre, the Royal
National Theatre, Out of Joint, and Shared Experience amongst many others.
Audiences at the New Ambassadors have experienced a variety of hugely
successful productions including Drummers, Last Dance At Dum Dum, Mark
Ravenhill's Some Explicit Polariods; Shared Experience's Mother Courage,
Jane Eyre, A Doll's House and Mill on the Floss; Speed-the-Plow by David
Mamet, the award-winning Spoonface Steinberg, the highly acclaimed Stones in
His Pockets, Krapp's Last Tape starring John Hurt, Charlottes Jones' In
Flame, Conor McPherson's Port Authority, The Vagina Monologues, Boston
Marriage by David Mamet starring Zoe Wanamaker, A Day in the Death of Joe
Egg starring Clive Owen, Victoria Hamilton and Prunella Scales, Marc Salem's
Mind Games, Marion and Geoff, Ed Byrne, One for the Road written by and
starring Harold Pinter, Maria Friedman, Lee Hall's new version of A Servant
to Two Masters, the Donmar Warehouse production of Kenneth Lonergan's Lobby
Hero and The Woman Who Cooked Her Husband starring Alison Steadman and Daisy
Donovan.
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