Shaftesbury Theatre
Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox venue The Shaftesbury Theatre is a West End theatre, located in Shaftesbury Avenue, in the London Borough of Camden. It opened in 1911 as the New Prince's Theatre, with a capacity of 2,500. The current capacity is 1,416. The title "Shaftesbury Theatre" belonged to another theatre lower down the avenue between 1888 and 1941. The Prince's adopted the name in 1963.
The theatre, the last to be built in Shaftesbury Avenue, was originally intended to house popular melodramas, but has presented a wide range of productions, including Shakespeare, farce, opera, ballet and revue. Companies based at the theatre for London seasons have included the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, the Ballets Russes, Sadler's Wells Opera, Sadler's Wells Ballet, the Royal Swedish Ballet and the dance companies of Uday Shankar and Pearl Primus.
The theatre has presented many musicals that premiered on Broadway, from Funny Face in the 1920s to Pal Joey and Wonderful Town in the 1950s, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and Hair in the 1960s, and more recently Hairspray, Memphis, Motown and Mrs Doubtfire.
The theatre was at risk of demolition in the early 1970s to make way for new roads or for commercial development, but the Save London's Theatres campaign rescued it, and it was given listed building protection in 1974. The actor, playwright and impresario Ray Cooney led a new organisation, The Theatre of Comedy, backed by a substantial group of actors and writers, which leased and then bought the theatre as a home for British comedy. The Theatre of Comedy remains (2023) the owner of the theatre, but the emphasis of programming has shifted from farces and comedies to musicals.
History
Early years
The theatre was designed for the brothers Walter and Frederick Melville by Bertie Crewe and opened on 26 December 1911, the last new theatre to open in Shaftesbury Avenue.<ref name=m143>Mander and Mitchenson (1961), p. 143</ref> The site, at the junction of Shaftesbury Avenue and High Holborn, had previously been what the theatre historians Mander and Mitchenson call "a maze of derelict property".<ref name=m143/> It was originally named the New Prince's Theatre, becoming the Prince's Theatre in 1914. The original capacity of the auditorium was 2,500.<ref>"New Prince's Theatre", The Stage, 14 December 1911, p. 27</ref> The exterior is faced in terracotta and brick stone with a three-tier façade of vertically aligned windows, topped by a pillared cupola above the entrance. The New Prince's was London's first entirely steel-framed theatre, with no supporting pillars in the auditorium to obstruct the view. The original colour scheme of the auditorium was cream and gold.<ref>Coveney, p. 55</ref>
The Brothers Melville, who were already running the Lyceum Theatre, London, intended to continue their policy of staging popular melodramas. Early shows at the New Princes included Carlton Wallace's The Apple of Eden (1912),<ref>"The Apple of Eden", The Daily News, 18 April 1912, p. 5</ref> Arthur Shirley and Ben Landeck's Women and Wine (1912)<ref>"New Prince's Theatre", The Times, 8 February 1912, p. 8</ref> and Walter Howard's romantic drama The Story of the Rosary, (1913),<ref name=m144>Mander and Mitchenson (1961), p. 144</ref> In 1913 the theatre presented a comedy, Brewster's Millions, and Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice with Frank Cellier as Shylock,<ref>Parker, pp. 1030 and 1047</ref> but reverted to melodrama with On His Majesty's Service (1914), When London Sleeps (1915) and For England, Home, and Beauty (1915), which ran for a hundred performances.<ref name=m144/>
In December 1916 Seymour Hicks took over the management, opening with a revival of Bluebell in Fairyland and then reviving The Catch of the Season (February 1917), followed by other popular favourites in his repertory.<ref name=m144/> In 1919 C. B. Cochran succeeded Hicks in the management of the theatre, and in April it had a critical and box-office success with André Messager's romantic opera Monsieur Beaucaire, starring Maggie Teyte; it ran for 221 performances.<ref name="m145">Mander and Mitchenson (1961), p. 145</ref> From September of that year the theatre presented a sell-out eighteen-week season of Gilbert and Sullivan operas by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, returning to the West End for the first time since 1908.<ref name=rw2/><ref>Joseph, pp. 182–183</ref> During the season the company presented ten Savoy operas including the first revival of the 1884 work Princess Ida.<ref name=rw2>Rollins and Witts, p. 2</ref>
1920s
From February 1920 Pretty Peggy, a musical, ran for 168 performances.<ref name="m145"/> In 1920 the perennial favourite Charley's Aunt played at the Prince's for the Christmas season.<ref>Parker, p. 1033</ref> In April 1921 Sarah Bernhardt appeared in the title role of Daniel in a play by Louis Verneuil,<ref name=m145/> and Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes presented a season including Petrushka, The Rite of Spring, and Les Sylphides, starring Lydia Lopokova.<ref>"Return of Lopokova", The Daily Herald, 13 May 1921, p. 3</ref>
D'Oyly Carte returned in October 1921 for a 27-week season during which Ruddigore was seen in London for the first time since the original 1887 run.<ref name=rw2/> There followed Lucien Guitry, Sacha Guitry and Yvonne Printemps in a season of French plays; a musical called The Cousin from Nowhere (1923); The Return of Sherlock Holmes starring Eille Norwood; a comedy, Alf's Button, by W. A. Darlington (1924); and José Collins in a musical play by Franz Lehár (1925).<ref name=m145/>
There were two further successful D'Oyly Carte seasons in 1924 and 1926;<ref name=m145/> the latter attracted widespread notice for controversial new designs for The Mikado by Charles Ricketts.<ref>Joseph, pp. 193–194</ref> Sybil Thorndike appeared in Macbeth with Henry Ainley (1926),<ref name=m145/> and Diaghilev's company returned for a season in 1927, with a programme that included the British premiere of Nijinska and Poulenc's Les biches (under the title The House Party).<ref name=m145/><ref>"E. B.", "Russian Ballet: The House Party", The Manchester Guardian, 26 May 1925, p. 19</ref> In December 1927 George Robey presented his revue Bits and Pieces. The following year Fred and Adele Astaire starred in the Gershwins' musical Funny Face, with Leslie Henson.<ref>Gaye, p. 1390</ref> The run was interrupted by a gas explosion in High Holborn not far from the theatre, but after the reopening the show completed a run of 263 performances.<ref>Gaye, p. 1531</ref> The last major production of the 1920s was a farce, A Warm Corner, starring W. H. Berry; it ran for 238 performances from December 1929.<ref name=m145/>
1930s
In 1930 Berry had another substantial run of 195 performances in another farce, Oh, Daddy.<ref>Mander and Mitchenson (1975), p. 201</ref> For the next few years short runs and revivals predominated at the Prince's. In 1933 Charles Macdona revived Victorien Sardou's Diplomacy with an all-star cast that included Gerald du Maurier, Lewis Casson, Basil Rathbone, Margaret Bannerman and Joyce Kennedy.<ref>"Diplomacy", The Era, 31 May 1933, p. 10</ref>
During the 1934 season the Prince's featured a revival of Edward German and Basil Hood's comic opera Merrie England, which ran for 187 performances.<ref>Gänzl, p. 1375</ref> It was followed by a revival of Sullivan and Hood's The Rose of Persia the following year – the first professional staging of the piece since the original London run in 1899–1900.<ref>"The Prince's: The Rose of Persia", The Stage, 7 March 1935, p. 10</ref> It did not achieve the success of the revival of Merrie England, closing after 25 performances.<ref>Gänzl, p. 1751</ref> In 1935 there was a rare venture into the classics, with a revival of The Alchemist.<ref>Gaye, p. 1347</ref> Two of Ian Hay's adaptations of Edgar Wallace stories followed: The Frog (1936, 483 performances) and The Gusher (1937, 137 performances).<ref name="m202">Mander and Mitchenson (1975), p. 202</ref>
A 1938 success, with 260 performances, was Wild Oats, described as "a song and laugh show" with music by Noel Gay and words by Douglas Furber.<ref>Parker, p. 1837</ref>Template:Refn In March 1939, aiming to attract a new, younger, audience to the theatre, J. B. Priestley arranged to have his comedy When We Are Married – which had run successfully at the St Martin's Theatre at normal West End prices – transferred to the Prince's with tickets at half the usual price.<ref>"Mr J. B. Priestley takes over our Theatre Page", Sunday Pictorial, 19 March 1939, p. 24</ref> Sitting Pretty (1939) was a comedy starring Sydney Howard.<ref>"The Theatre", The Bystander, 13 September 1939, p. 14</ref> Towards the end of the year, Firth Shephard launched a topical revue, Shephard's Pie.<ref>"Firth Shephard", The Stage, 29 March 1945, p. 9</ref>
1940s
Productions during the Second World War included another Shephard revue, Fun and Games (August 1941, with a cast including Sydney Howard, Carol Raye and Richard Hearne);<ref>Farjeon, Herbert. "The Theatre", The Tatler, 3 September 1941, p. 8</ref> Wild Rose (August 1942, a revised version of the 1920 musical Sally, starring Jessie Matthews);<ref>Horsnell, Horace. "The Theatre", The Tatler, 26 August 1942, p. 8</ref> Old Chelsea (February 1943, starring Richard Tauber),<ref>"The Prince's", The Stage, 25 February 1943, p. 1</ref> and Halfway to Heaven (December 1943, a comedy starring Howard and Bobby Howes).<ref>"The Prince's", The Stage, 16 December 1943, p. 1</ref>
Sadler's Wells Theatre being closed for the duration of the war, its opera and ballet companies toured, and in 1944 based themselves at the Prince's for London seasons. The opera season included The Bartered Bride, La bohème, Madame Butterfly, Rigoletto, The Marriage of Figaro and Cosi fan tutte;<ref>"Opera at Prince's", The Stage, 3 August 1944, p. 4</ref> the company was led by Joan Cross, and included Peter Pears, Owen Brannigan and Rose Hill.<ref>"The Prince's", The Stage, 10 August 1944, p. 5</ref> The ballet season presented twelve works, including Coppélia, Swan Lake, Carnaval and the premiere of Miracle in the Gorbals, with choreography by Robert Helpmann and music by Arthur Bliss; the company included Helpmann, Margot Fonteyn, Alexis Rassine and Moira Shearer.<ref>"The Prince's", The Stage, 5 October 1944, p. 5</ref>
In 1945 Evelyn Laye starred in Oscar Straus's operetta Three Waltzes,<ref name=m202/> and later in that year Merrie England was revived in a radically revised version by Edward Knoblock, with a cast including Heddle Nash and Dennis Noble.<ref>"The Prince's", The Stage, 13 September 1945, p. 1</ref> In 1946 the theatre staged another Shephard revue, The Shephard Show, with Hearne, Arthur Riscoe, Douglas Byng and Marie Burke.<ref name="m202"/> In 1947 the Prince's came under the direction of Bertram Montague though, according to Mander and Mitchenson, "the new productions were not so successful as the ballet seasons from many parts of the world and the annual pantomimes".<ref name=m202/>
1950s
The next play to achieve a long run was His Excellency, a comedy by Dorothy and Campbell Christie, starring Eric Portman and Sebastian Shaw;<ref>"Vital Quality of 'His Excellency'", The Stage, 1 June 1950, p. 1</ref> it opened in May 1950 and ran for 452 performances.<ref name=g1532>Gaye, p. 1532</ref> In 1951 the theatre presented seasons of dance by Uday Shankar and his Indian Dancers, Pearl Primus and her African Dance company and the Royal Swedish Ballet.<ref>"Indian Ballet", The Stage, 29 November 1951, p. 10; "The Prince's: Pearl Primus", The Stage, 8 November 1951, p. 10; and "The Prince's: Swedish Ballet", The Stage, 15 February 1951, p. 9</ref>
Montague's management ended in 1952. The freehold of the theatre remained in the Melville family until 1961; between 1957 and 1961 the theatre was directed by Andrew Melville.<ref name=m202/> Mander and Mitchenson record that after Montague's withdrawal the theatre was "more often closed than open, though occasional seasons had their successes".<ref name=m202/> The successes included Maurice Chevalier in a limited season in 1952 (presented by Jack Hylton, who had become the lessee of the Prince's) and Antony and Cleopatra from the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, with Michael Redgrave and Peggy Ashcroft in 1953.<ref name=m202/> Two musicals that premiered on Broadway, Pal Joey (1954) and Wonderful Town (1955), ran for 245 and 207 performances respectively. Summer Song, a musical about and reusing music by Antonín Dvořák ran from February to June 1965.<ref name=m202/> The D'Oyly Carte Company returned in 1956 and 1958, for 13-week seasons on each occasion, launching a new production of Patience during the first.<ref>Rollins and Witts, pp. 2 and 181</ref>
1960s
D'Oyly Carte made its last Prince's appearances in 1960–61, a nine-week season, presenting ten operas.<ref name=rw2/> In the early 1960s the ownership of the theatre changed hands several times. In June 1961, Hylton, who had been the lessee since November 1951, bought the theatre and adjoining property. The following August he sold the freehold to Television Wales and the West, which sold it on to Charles Clore. In September 1962 it was confirmed that a new partnership between Clore and EMI was to control the theatre. At the same time plans for renovating the theatre were announced. For two years the theatre was more often closed than open. The Stage said that the theatre had "become rather shabby, possibly because success seemed to elude it for long periods, when it remained dark and neglected".<ref name=stage>"The Shaftesbury: The Doors Open on a New Life", The Stage, 28 March 1963, pp. 28–30</ref> King Kong, a South African musical, ran from February to October 1961, and there were what Mander and Mitchenson describe as "several uneventful productions" until Gentlemen Prefer Blondes opened in August 1962. It was still running (and moved to another theatre) when the Prince's closed for reconstruction in November 1962.<ref name=m202/>
The name "the Prince's" was dropped and replaced by "the Shaftesbury". The new owners felt that the old name was too similar to those of two other West End theatres: there were the Prince of Wales and since 1962 a new Prince Charles theatre.<ref>Mander and Mitchenson (1975), pp. 155 and 327</ref> The old Shaftesbury Theatre, further down Shaftesbury Avenue, had closed in 1941, reduced to a ruin during the Blitz, and the owners of the Prince's adopted its name for their theatre.<ref name=stage/><ref>Mander and Mitchenson (1968), p. 213</ref> The old raked stage was replaced with a horizontal one, and lighting equipment described as "the last word in modernity" was installed; the seating capacity of the renovated auditorium was 1,470.<ref name=stage/>
As the Shaftesbury, the theatre reopened in March 1963 with the American musical How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying which ran for 520 performances.<ref name=g1532/> A musical version of J. M. Barrie's The Admirable Crichton, called Our Man Crichton, with Kenneth More in the title role, played from December 1964 till June 1965.<ref name=m203>Mander and Mitchenson (1975), p. 203</ref>
The Shaftesbury reopened on 20 November 1965 with Twang!!, Lionel Bart's musical version of the Robin Hood story. The Times later described it as the most expensive flop in West End history to that date.<ref>Jackson, James. "Ten most disastrous musical flops", The Times 30 March 2013, The Times, 30 March 2013 Template:Subscription required [1]</ref> The critic J. C. Trewin described the first night as "a rout" with "some fairly general booing".<ref>Trewin, J. C. "Twang!!", The Birmingham Daily Post, 22 December 1965, p. 5</ref> The show closed after 43 performances, after which the theatre was closed until October 1966, when success returned with a farce, Big Bad Mouse, originally written by Philip King and Falkland Cary, but extensively and successfully ad-libbed through by its stars, Eric Sykes and Jimmy Edwards – "two comedians abounding in their own exuberance" according to Trewin.<ref>Trewin, J. C. "Big Bad Mouse", The Birmingham Post, 19 October 1966, p. 4</ref> It ran for 634 performances to April 1968.<ref>Herbert, p. 1599</ref>
Theatre censorship ended in Britain on 26 September 1968, and the following night the musical Hair opened at the Shaftesbury. Described as an "American Tribal Love-Rock Musical", the show contained profanity and scenes of nudity unthinkable until then.<ref>Mander and Mitchenson (1975), p. xi</ref> It had an exceptionally long run and was just short of its 2,000th performance when part of the theatre ceiling collapsed and the house had to be closed.<ref>Coveney, p. 59</ref>
1970s
In 1973 the theatre was at risk of demolition, faced by proposals by the Greater London Council for a massive road-building programme and by a plan to build an office block on the site. Nearly twenty years earlier a campaign to preserve the St James's Theatre from demolition and commercial redevelopment had failed, despite high-profile support led by Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh,<ref>Mander and Mitchenson (1968) pp. 482–484</ref> but in the 1970s the campaign "Save London's Theatres" rescued the Shaftesbury (and other theatres).<ref>Coveney, pp. 11 and 59</ref> In March 1974 the theatre was protected by being given official grade II listed building status.
After the necessary internal repairs the theatre reopened with a well-received revival of West Side Story in December 1974.<ref>Lewsen, Charles. "Masterly musical", The Times, 20 December 1974, p. 7</ref> Other productions in the 1970s included a musical stage version of the BBC television series Dad's Army, starring Arthur Lowe, John Le Mesurier and Clive Dunn (October 1975 to February 1976).<ref>Lewsen, Charles. "Dad's Army", The Times, 3 October 1975, p. 11; and "Entertainments", The Times, 27 February 1976, p. 11</ref> In September 1978 the theatre presented a revival of Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston's 1920s dramatisation of Dracula, starring Terence Stamp, with scenic designs by Edward Gorey; it ran for three months.<ref>Wardle, Irving. "Dracula", The Times, 14 September 1978, p. 12; and "Entertainments", The Times, 4 November 1978, p. 23</ref>
1980s
They're Playing Our Song (1980–1982) starring Tom Conti and Gemma Craven was produced by the actor and writer Ray Cooney. After the end of that run and a nine-month closure Cooney presented his farce, Run For Your Wife with Richard Briers, Bernard Cribbins and Bill Pertwee. This was the first play under the banner of the Theatre of Comedy, founded by Cooney, who said, "We have the finest comedy talents in the world in this country, both performers and writers, and I could never understand why we could not create our own theatre of comedy".<ref name=toc>Warman, Christopher. "Theatre of Comedy launched in London", The Times, 9 May 1983, p. 3</ref> The Theatre of Comedy became the lessee of the Shaftesbury, and later bought the building. The company was funded by a founding group of well-known actors and authors.Template:Refn The intention was for the Shaftesbury to have a programme of British comedy showcasing existing and new talent.<ref name=history>"Our History" Template:Webarchive, Shaftesbury Theatre. Retrieved 18 June 2023</ref>
Substantial runs in the 1980s included Shaw's Pygmalion (1984) with Peter O'Toole, Jackie Smith-Wood and John Thaw;<ref>"Building show around the star", The Stage, 24 May 1984, p. 11</ref> Two into One, another Cooney farce, starring Donald Sinden and Michael Williams, and described by The Stage as masterly (1984–1986);<ref name=roof>"Rowan raises the roof", The Stage, 13 March 1986, p. 5</ref> Saturday Night Live, a revue starring Rowan Atkinson (1986), of which the reviewer in The Stage wrote, "One leaves the theatre genuinely weak from laughter";<ref name=roof/> Osborne's The Entertainer starring Peter Bowles (1986);<ref>"30 years on with Archie Rice", The Stage, 12 June 1986, p. 26</ref> Sondheim's Follies with an all-star cast in a 645-performance run (1987–1989);Template:Refn and M. Butterfly starring Anthony Hopkins (1989).<ref>Hepple, Peter. "Call him madam", The Stage, 27 April 1989, p. 11</ref>
1990s
Sinden and Williams starred again in a Cooney farce, Out of Order, in 1990, which won the Olivier Award for best comedy in 1991.<ref>"Olivier Awards", The Stage, 11 April 1991, p. 13</ref> In 1992 the American television executive Donald L. Taffner, a shareholder in the Theatre of Comedy since 1986, became the majority shareholder and chairman of the company.<ref name=history/> Shows at the Shaftesbury in the 1990s included Kiss of the Spiderwoman (1992–93) with Chita Rivera, Brent Carver and Anthony Crivello,<ref>"This Kiss works wonders", The Stage, 29 October 1992, p. 15</ref> and Suzy Izzard in her show Definite Article (1995), of which the reviewer in The Stage wrote, "you will laugh, laugh again and continue laughing until you feel considerable physical pain. I did."<ref>Gibby, Phil. "Laughing Stock", The Stage, 19 October 1995, p. 18</ref> A revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel ran from September 1993 to March 1994, with choreography by Kenneth MacMillan; the sets, by Bob Crowley, were, in the view of The Times "the biggest star in Nicholas Hytner's lavish production".<ref>Kingston, Jeremy. "Handsome sets, fine songs, strange show", The Times 17 September 1993, p. 36</ref>
In 1996–97 the theatre staged Tommy, a musical by Pete Townshend and Des McAnuff (1996–97), with Paul Keating in the title role. The production showcased the Shaftesbury's advanced technical facilities: The Stage called the production "a unique theatrical experience, with scenery that falls faultlessly into place, up, down and sideways ... superb lighting ... wonderfully balanced sound ... and immaculate projection".<ref>Hepple, Peter. "Something to marvel at", The Stage, 14 March 1996, p. 12</ref> The musical itself was less well liked: in his Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre (2001) Kurt Gänzl comments, "London gave it the thumbs down in 11 expensive months".<ref>Gänzl, p. 2059</ref> From May 1998 to October 1999 the Shaftesbury was host to the musical Rent, which, following a recent fashion for musicals borrowing the plots of Puccini operas, drew on that of La bohème;<ref name=g1698>Gänzl, pp. 1698–1700</ref> it starred Anthony Rapp, Adam Pascal, Wilson Jermaine Heredia and Jesse L. Martin from the original Broadway cast.<ref name=g1698/> It was predicted that, reflecting the spirit of the 1990s as Hair had that of the 1960s, Rent might emulate the long run of the earlier show, and there was some disappointment that it ran for less than 18 months.<ref name=g1698/>
2000s
A series of short-lived musicals was a feature of the first part of the decade. These included Lautrec by Charles Aznavour starring Hannah Waddingham (March to June 2000),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Napoleon (September 2000 to February 2001),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Peggy Sue Got Married starring Ruthie Henshall (August to October 2001).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Umoja: The Spirit of Togetherness was well received on opening in November 2001,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> but noise complaints from the inhabitants of the flats near the theatre resulted in the closure of the show three months later.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Further short runs followed for Thoroughly Modern Millie (21 October 2003), starring Amanda Holden and Maureen Lipman;<ref>"Theatre", The Stage, 30 October 2003, p. 9</ref> Bat Boy: The Musical (27 August 2004) by Keythe Farley, Brian Flemming and Laurence O'Keefe, starring Deven May;<ref>"Theatre", The Stage, 2 September 2004, p. 46</ref> and The Far Pavilions (14 April 2005), starring Kulvinder Ghir; it was described by The Stage as "a galumphing great Asian white elephant of a musical".<ref>"The Far Pavilions", The Stage, 21 April 2005, p. 8</ref>
They were followed by Daddy Cool (21 September 2006) by Frank Farian, starring Michelle Collins, Javine Hylton and Harvey Junior,<ref>"Theatre: Daddy Cool, Shaftesbury Theatre", The Stage, 28 September 2006, p. 21</ref> and Fame: The Musical (4 May 2007) by Jacques Levy and Steve Margoshes, starring Ian Watkins and Natalie Casey of which The Times commented, "It really is difficult to find a kind word to say about Karen Bruce's production of this shockingly clumsy spin-off".<ref>Davis, Clive. "Fame", The Times, 15 May 2007 Template:Subscription required</ref>
The theatre then had a long run with Hairspray: The Musical, which ran from 30 October 2007 to 28 March 2010. It was written by Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman; the original cast starred Michael Ball, Leanne Jones, Mel Smith and Tracie Bennett.<ref>"Musical to make your hair stand on end", The Stage, 8 November 2007, p. 18; and "Entertainments", The Daily Telegraph, 18 March 2020, p. 26</ref> Later in the run Brian Conley and then Phill Jupitus succeeded Ball in the lead role.<ref>"Life's a drag for new Hairspray star Phil Jupitus", The Evening Standard, 2 September 2009</ref>
2010s
During the decade the external façades of the theatre were renovated, and the original early-20th-century canopy was uncovered and restored. The auditorium was reconfigured, air conditioning and ventilation updates, and a fly tower with increased technical capability was constructed.<ref name=history/>
A dance production, Burn the Floor (21 July 2010), starring Ali Bastian,<ref>Craine, Debra. "Critic's choice", The Times, 17 July 2010, p. 269</ref> was followed by another musical, Flashdance (26 September).<ref>"Autumn theatre", The Times, 3 September 2010, p. 10</ref> After that there was a magic show, Derren Brown – Svengali (8 June 2011).<ref>Maxwell, Dominic. "Theatre", The Times, 15 June 2011, p. 12</ref> The theatre returned to musicals with Rock of Ages (27 September 2011);<ref>Maxwell, Dominic. "Jukebox show tries too hard to be jokey", The Times, 29 September 2011, p. 19</ref> that was followed by a second run of Burn the Floor (6 March 2013),<ref>"Entertainments", The Times, 6 March 2013, p. 11</ref> which was succeeded by a new musical by Tim Rice and Stuart Brayson, From Here to Eternity, (30 September 2013).<ref>"From here to obscurity? Tim Rice's West End gamble", The Times, 5 September 2013, p. 8</ref>
A revival of The Pajama Game (13 May 2014), which transferred from the Chichester Festival, was notable for being the first West End show to be crowd funded.<ref>Read, Simon. "Stage set for investors as West End gets crowd funded". The Independent, 12 April 2014, p. 49</ref> It was followed by Memphis, starring Beverley Knight (22 October 2014);<ref>"Singer shines in this soulful spectacle", The Evening Standard, 24 October 2014, p. 21</ref> After a short season by a touring "magic spectacular" The Illusionists – Witness the Impossible (14 November 2015), Motown, presented the story of the Motown record label founder Berry Gordy (March 2016).<ref>Williams, Holly. "Please stop, in the name of love", The Independent, 11 March 2016, p. 47</ref>
On 20 November 2019 a new musical & Juliet opened at the Shaftesbury.<ref>Dex, Robert. "First Night", The Evening Standard, 21 November 2019, p. 3</ref> The run was interrupted when the COVID-19 pandemic forced West End theatres to close on 16 March 2020.<ref>Curtis, Nick. "The show will go on – but when?", The Evening Standard, 19 March 2020, p. 25</ref>
2020s
The theatre reopened on 30 June 2021 with the musical Be More Chill (30 June 2021),<ref>Stewart, Gregg. "Be More Chill at the Shaftesbury Theatre" Template:Webarchive, Theatre Weekly, 6 July 2021</ref> after which & Juliet resumed its interrupted run in September.<ref>Davies, Paul T. "& Juliet", Template:Webarchive BritishTheatre. 18 February 2022</ref> Another American musical, Mrs Doubtfire, opened on 12 May 2023, with music and lyrics by Karey and Wayne Kirkpatrick and a book by Karey Kirkpatrick and John O'Farrell.<ref>"Much better than the film: Mrs Doubtfire, at Shaftesbury Theatre", The Spectator, 3 June 2023 Template:Subscription required Template:Webarchive</ref>
The theatre is scheduled show the musical Avenue Q from March to August 2026.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>