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  1. The Novello Theatre has a smallish entrance, which means when we arrived there was a queue of people. The staff at the entrance were efficient & polite which meant the queue moved fairly quickly. Inside a small foyer. We were in the stalls, centre seats in row e. Seats were very comfortable & view excellent.

  2. 0344 482 5100. Stage Door: 020 7759 9611. The Novello Theatre’s box office is located within the theatre building on Aldwych and is open on performance days from 2 ours 30 minutes before the show begins, until 15 minutes after curtain up. The box office remains open between shows on matinee days. Pre-purchased tickets can be arranged for ...

  3. The Novello Theatre has a smallish entrance, which means when we arrived there was a queue of people. The staff at the entrance were efficient & polite which meant the queue moved fairly quickly. Inside a small foyer.

  4. Friday: 12:00 PM - 06:00 PM. Saturday: 12:00 PM - 06:00 PM. Sunday: Closed. Aldwych, London, WC2B 4LD. 0344 482 5138. novellotheatrelondon.com. During the First World War, Novello Theatre was under management husband and wife Julia Neilson and Fred Terry. The entrance to the theatre pit was bombed in a Zeppelin raid and 19 bombs hit the Strand.

  5. Novello Theatre. Call Customer Service on 0344 482 5151 † Phone lines are open Monday - Saturday 10am - 7.30pm. †Calls to Delfont Mackintosh Theatres 03 numbers cost no more than a national rate call to an 01 or 02 number. Box office opening times: From 2 hours and 30 minutes before the start of the show, until 15 minutes after curtain up.

  6. The Novello Theatre dates back to 1905, when it originally opened as the Waldorf Theatre. It was designed in a traditional Victorian style as a twin to the Aldwych Theatre. Together they bookend the famous Aldwych Hotel. The theatre has a classic façade and was Grade II listed by English Heritage in 1971. Throughout the 20th century, the venue ...

  7. The theatre was originally called the Waldorf Theatre and opened in 1905 and was re-named the Strand Theatre in 1913. The theatre took itss current name in 2005 after a £4.5 million refurbishment to celebrate its centenary; the famous composer Ivor Novello lived in a flat above the theatre for almost four decades.