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The first floor of Independence Hall is accessible for those with mobility impairments. An audio description tour is available upon request. For those with hearing impairments, the "Birthplace of a Nation" pamphlet provides written information about the rooms shown on the tour and assistive listening devices are also available. American Sign Language interpretation is available by request. You must first reserve tickets and then call the park to arrange for an interpreter at least 14 days prior to your visit. Get the details on how to reserve an ASL interpreter here.


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Church of the Gesu surface parking Lot J is NOT a Marquette Law School parking lot. Students who park there at any time (day or night) will be ticketed and may lose their Eckstein Hall parking privileges.

This ticket is valid for two days for visiting all or any of the following sites:-Amber Fort, Albert Hall, Hawa Mahal, Jantar Mantar (Observatory), Nahargarh Fort, vidyadhar garden, Sisodia Rani garden & Isarlat (Sargasooli)

Murals- Take away a bit of history when you leave Albert Hall Museum in Jaipur. The murals that line the hallway and artefact room are completely different from modern art. Each piece is designed differently from the other, depicting various faces of human life and its evolution.

Alegra has been recreated as a timeless Cirque du Soleil masterpiece for a new generation to enjoy. At the centre of a kingdom that has lost its king, Alegra observes the conflict between the established order and a fresh movement yearning for hope and rejuvenation. The Aristocrats and their pretend king, a fool who claims the throne and wants to maintain the current system, are on one side. On the other side, a new and human movement is emerging from the streets to challenge the established authority.

Music halls can be traced back to the taverns and coffee houses of 18th-century London, where performers sang songs whilst the audience ate, drank and joined in the singing. By the 1830s taverns had rooms devoted to musical clubs where they presented Saturday evening singsongs and 'free-and-easies' (informal entertainment from amateur and professional performers). These became so popular that entertainment was put on two or three times a week. For more middle-class clientele song and supper rooms opened in the 1830s, which served hot food and provided entertainment until the early hours of the morning.

The taverns, saloons and supper rooms would have been noisy and difficult places in which to perform. The audience would chat throughout the acts and could be very rowdy, often throwing things at the performers, such as bottles, old boots and even dead cats. In industrial towns, the favoured object to hurl was an iron rivet. In some halls bottles carried by the waiters were chained to the trays and the orchestra was protected from missiles by steel grilles stretched over the pit where they performed. While women were not allowed in the middle-class song and supper rooms, working-class women visited the taverns. In the early days of music hall they would often accompany their husbands and bring along their children and even babies.

One of the most famous early music halls was The Eagle in London. The Eagle was an East End tavern on the corner of City Road and Shepherdess Walk that presented regular musical entertainment and was doing a roaring trade by 1854. Marie Lloyd, who would become one of the biggest music hall stars, first appeared there in 1885 at the age of 14. The Eagle was sold in 1883 to the Salvation Army and later demolished. Today a new Eagle pub can be found on the same site, which has a display of old music hall prints.

The first purpose-built music hall was the Canterbury Hall in Lambeth, which was opened in 1852 by Mr Charles Morton. It held 700 people, who were seated at tables, with food and drink being served throughout the performance. Entrance was by a sixpenny refreshment ticket. The star performer at the Canterbury was the actor and singer of comedy songs, Sam Cowell. So great was Cowell's success that Morton had to build a larger hall on the same site. The more ornate hall, now with a capacity of 1,500, opened in 1856 complete with chandeliers, balcony and an art exhibition. Admission was sixpence to the floor and ninepence to the gallery (or 2 and 3 in today's money).

Morton encouraged women into his music hall, believing them to have a civilising influence on the men. He introduced 'Ladies' Thursdays', where women could accompany a gentleman to the hall. However, gentlemen did not necessarily take their wives for a night out. Prostitutes would walk up and down the aisles of the auditorium touting for customers, and the halls developed a vulgar reputation.

Inspired by the success of the Canterbury, music halls opened up across London, including Wilton's Music Hall (1853), the world's oldest surviving grand Victorian music hall. By 1875 there were 375 music halls in Greater London, which meant a lot more performers were required. Throughout the 1860s it became more common for women to perform in the halls. Performing was a means of escape and independence for working-class women. Many women achieved, if not stardom, a decent living on the halls.

The Alhambra and its rival the Empire, both in Leicester Square, were among the most famous and largest halls, but were also notorious for prostitutes who frequented the bars and promenades. In these halls the seating had been arranged like a regular theatre, with rows of seats facing a stage and the bar and refreshment rooms separated from the auditorium.

As music hall became more popular, the main attraction for the audience became the entertainers rather than the food and drink. The big stars were so successful that they would perform in numerous halls each night, frantically crossing London in their carriages. By performing in several venues a night, the top stars could earn big money. They worked hard but the stresses of this lifestyle meant that many died young. By the end of the 19th century, there could be as many as 20 acts per show and performances would last up to four hours. Soon music halls were presenting shorter, twice-nightly programmes. Performers were now contracted for a period of time, rather than by performance, which meant that popular performers no longer had to dash across London to appear in several halls in one evening.

Opened on 24 December 1904, The London Coliseum was the largest and most luxurious variety theatre. It was designed by the theatrical architect Frank Matcham for the impresario Oswald Stoll. Stoll started his career at the age of 14, assisting his mother in running the Parthenon Music Hall in Liverpool, and ended it owning a string of vast music halls. In many ways, Stoll was an unlikely music hall manager. He spent most of his life in a little suburban house in Putney in South West London. He didn't drink or smoke, and not only did he not swear, he had signs put up backstage prohibiting his employees from using any coarse language.

The Coliseum was at that time the only theatre in Europe that had lifts. It also had a marble staircase and a tea room on every floor. Oswald Stoll was a teetotaller who wanted to create entertainment for families. For the first time seats in the Coliseum could be booked in advance for performances. There were four performances of the variety show daily. As well as traditional music hall acts, Stoll introduced musical spectaculars, ballets (including the Diaghilev Ballet), and short dramatic plays with major theatrical stars like Sarah Bernhardt.

The performers included music hall stars Alfred Lester, Gus Elen, Dan Leno, Vesta Tilley, Vesta Victoria and the great Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova, but with a few notable omissions, such as Marie Lloyd, whose act was considered too risqu for the Royal party. In defiance Marie Lloyd booked a performance for the same night at a nearby theatre. The posters for the event proclaimed: 'Every performance by Marie Lloyd is a Command Performance by Order of the British Public'. She played to a sell out audience.

The Worshipful Company of Pewterers is one of the older Livery Companies in the City of London, dating back to at least 1348. Their hall is the third they have owned and dates to the 1960s, with a refurbishment in 2011.

If an event is sold out, we are unable to sell any more tickets or process any ticket exchanges/resales. Our ticketing partner, See Tickets has a fan-to-fan resale site, which can be accessed through their website, here.

Yes, if you have an authentic and valid ticket, issued originally via one of the official ticketing outlets. However, we cannot validate re-sale tickets from sites such as Viagogo, Seatwave, Stubhub, GetmeIn etc so purchasing from these sites is at your own risk.

If you have a ticketing query, you will need to contact your ticketing provider directly. If your ticket was purchased through the Albert Hall website, you will need to contact our ticketing partner, See Tickets, who can be contacted here.

We operate a Challenge 25 policy at our Bars. Challenge 25 is a policy whereby anyone buying alcohol who appears to be below the age of 25, seven years above the age required to buy alcohol in the UK, can be asked to provide an acceptable form of ID.

The nearest car park is in the Great Northern Leisure NCP located directly opposite the hall which provides 24hr secure parking, however, we would encourage guests to travel by public transport where possible.

www.royalalberthall.com, their own site provide the service for this venue.

The Albert Hall site allows you to select actual seats yourself from those available at most performances (for a few, it still only allocates "best available" automatically). It also allows you to view photographs of the auditorium from various blocks, giving some idea of the view - an excellent feature, feels the monkey. Simply follow the link on their site from their "seating plan" diagram. e24fc04721

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