Lyttelton
Now showing at the Lyttelton
Discount available
30%Off
Cheap Travelling Light Tickets
Was: £47.00 Now: £33.00Valid all performances from 24th April to 2nd June.
Travelling Light
Following Vincent in Brixton and The Reporter, Nicholas Wright's new play is a funny and fascinating tribute to the Eastern European immigrants who became major players in Hollywood's golden age.
Booking from: Friday, 13th January 2012Booking until: Saturday, 2nd June 2012
Matinees: Thursday and Saturday 2.15pm. Sunday 3pm
Evenings: Monday to Saturday 7.30pm
Running time: 2 hours 30 minutes
The Doctor's Dilemma
Disturbingly funny and psychologically incisive, Bernard Shaw?s The Doctor's Dilemma takes on with an irreverent glee the dubious ethics of the men who play God.
Booking from: Thursday, 19th July 2012Booking until: Wednesday, 12th September 2012
Matinees: Wednesday and Saturday 2.15pm and Sunday 2.30pm
Evenings: Monday to Saturday 7.30pm
The Last of the Haussmans
Stephen Beresford's The Last of the Haussmans examines the fate of the revolutionary generation and offers a funny, touching and at times savage portrait of a family full of longing that's losing its grip.
Booking from: Saturday, 23rd June 2012Booking until: Sunday, 16th September 2012
Matinees: Wednesday and Saturday 2.15pm
Evenings: Monday to Saturday 7.30pm
Lyttelton Seating Plan
Lyttelton on the Map
How to get there: Take the Northern or Bakerloo line to Waterloo station. The theatre is a 10 minute walk.
Address:
Southbank
London
SE1 9PX
Nearest Underground: Waterloo
The Lyttelton Theatre (named after Oliver Lyttelton, the first chairman of the National Theatre Board) is a proscenium arch design theatre, conventional in its basic shape though not in the quality of its sightlines and acoustics.
From all 890 seats you can see and hear almost equally well from each of its . No seat is further away, here, from the actor's point of command than the distance from the front row of the dress circle in many older, larger theatres.
There are no view-restricting pillars, circle rails, or other obstacles.
Unlike most traditional theatres, the Lyttelton has an adjustable proscenium. You can make it into an open-end stage; add a forestage; or create an orchestra pit for up to 20 musicians.
The Lyttleton Theatre is part of the National Theatre Complex on London's South Bank. The National Theatre comprises three separate auditoria:
The Olivier Theatre (named after the theatre's first artistic director, Lord Laurence Olivier)
The Lyttelton Theatre (named after Oliver Lyttelton, the first chairman of the National Theatre Board)
The Cottesloe Theatre (named after Lord Cottesloe, chairman of the South Bank Theatre Board)
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