The marks of its long history in Knole

Knole has been a family home for over 400 years, but everything here is on a grand scale. There may be seven courtyards, two entrance towers and four long galleries, but the Sackvilles – who have lived here since 1603 – continue to make this a living, working house, full of atmosphere. Knole has 365 rooms, seven courtyards and a footprint of four acres. It’s a house of superlatives where even the tiniest details are special.

Knole House

Knole House

Knole is one of England’s most important and complete historic houses, built as a palace by the Archbishops of Canterbury, gifted to Henry VIII, remodelled by the Sackville family (who have lived here for 400 years). Knole wears the marks of its long history with quiet dignity: dominating its medievaldeer park, the house contains a world class collection of furniture and textiles from royal palaces, worn by light, time, damp and pests but still glinting in a series of state rooms evoking extraordinary wealth and grandeur, now passed and faded.

Knole House

The front of the house is deceptively unimposing, even low key. But like everything at Knole, the best is to be found by going further in. The magic of Knole can be found in every corner. There’s so much to see. For example, the largest gallery, the Cartoon Gallery, is named after the five gargantuan paintings that dominate the room. They’re so impressive that it can be easy to forget to turn around. If you do, you’ll see older decoration – a series of intricate flower paintings above a faded, but riotous display of sea creatures and exotic animals painted onto the walls.

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For such a great house with such a long and distinguished history, it’s no surprise that with each visit you can see something new. Come and experience the magic for yourself.  More about Knole >

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Rock of Ages Musical Shaftesbury Theatre, London, UK

Rock of age

ROCK OF AGES, starring Justin Lee Collins and Shayne Ward, is the “insanely fun” (New York Time Out) worldwide smash hit that features a raucous mix of 28 eyebrow-scorching tunes including Don’t Stop Believin’, We Built This City, The Final Countdown, Wanted Dead or Alive, Here I Go Again, Can’t Fight this Feeling and I Want To Know What Love Is.

Set in LA’s infamous Sunset Strip in 1987, ROCK OF AGES tells the story of Drew, a boy from South Detroit, and Sherrie, a small-town girl, both in LA to chase their dreams of making it big and falling in love. ROCK OF AGES takes you back to the times of big bands with big egos playing big guitar solos and sporting even bigger hair! This five-time Tony Award nominated musical, now being made into a movie starring Tom Cruise, opens here at the the Shaftesbury Theatre in September.

Donmar Theatre Covent Garden London UK

Donmar theatre. Covent garden. London. UK
Donmar theatre. Covent garden. London. UK

Schiller's Luise Miller

In a new version by Mike Poulton
8 June – 30 July 2011
Run Time: 2 hours & 30 mins including 1 interval

“The stuff of seduction is also the stuff of politics. Lies and promises!”

Blood of ancient nobility and son of the most powerful statesman in the land, Ferdinand is willing to forsake his fortune for the love of Luise, daughter of a humble musician. But in a world governed by deception and greed, where power is everything, their future happiness and liberty are beyond their control.

Schiller’s masterpiece of power and politics explores the battle between honour and corruption, between truth and betrayal.


Inadmissible Evidence

by John Osborne
13 October – 26 November 2011

‘I can’t escape it. I can’t forget it. And I can’t begin again.’

Bill Maitland, a middle aged lawyer, struggles to avoid the harsh truths of his life and keep a hold on reality. As those closest to him begin to draw away, he puts himself on trial to fight for his sanity.

John Osborne’s poignant, witty and intensely compelling portrait of loss, betrayal and defeat releases the author’s characteristic display of soaring rhetorical venom to powerful effect.

West End: The Cambridge Theatre

Covent garden theatre tonight

The Cambridge Theatre is a West End theatre, on a corner site in Earlham Street facing Seven Dials, in the London Borough of Camden, built in 1929-30. It was designed by Wimperis, Simpson and Guthrie; interior partly by Serge Chermayeff, with interior bronze friezes by sculptor Anthony Gibbons Grinling. The theatre is built in steel and concrete and is notable for its elegant and clean lines of design. The theatre was refurbished in 1950—the original gold and silver décor was painted over in red, and candelabras and chandeliers were added. In 1987, in order to restore the original décor, the theatre was once again refurbished, this time by Carl Toms. The theatre has a circular entrance foyer, with Grinling’s bronze frieze depicting nude figures in exercise poses, the theme continues into the main foyer, with dancing nudes, marble pilaster up lighters and concealed lighting.

The Cambridge Theate: English Heritage

The Cambridge Theatre is a rare, complete and early example of a London theatre adopting the moderne, expressionist style pioneered in Germany during the 1920s. It marked a conscious reaction to the design excesses of the music hall and contemporary cinemas. Theatres looked for a new style appropriate to the greater sophistication of their entertainment and found it in the Germanic moderne forms of simple shapes enlivened by concealed lighting, shiny steelwork and touches of bright colour; this was not taken up by cinema designers until 1935.

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