Relief

Saville Theatre - Khaki

Erection date: 1931

This shows Ernie Lotinga in the play 'Khaki'.

Site: Odeon (Saville) Theatre (5 memorials)

WC2, Shaftesbury Avenue, Odeon Covent Garden

The ‘Drama Through the Ages’ frieze is by Gilbert Bayes. The listing says "Bayes' frieze is one of the largest and most important works of public sculpture of its age, and won him the silver medal of the Institute of Sculptors for the best piece of applied sculpture of its year. It is 129 feet long and made from artificial stone."

At each end of the frieze, around the corners, there is a winged angel pulling back the curtain to reveal this cavalcade. Note also that the two plays chosen to begin and end the frieze are well-chosen. St Joan, a tragedy set in the medieval period, begins the procession and leads seamlessly into the Minstrels. Khaki, a comedy set in WW1, follows on naturally from the Twentieth Century.

Ornamental Passions has done a wonderful analysis of this complex frieze with a complete set of good photos (the traffic makes it very difficult to photograph). There are probably portraits of other actors but we can't identify any - let us know if you can.

Built in 1931 as the Saville Theatre, in a bold Art Deco style by Sir Thomas Bennett (who went on to design the Smithfield Poultry Market). The theatre was run by Brian Epstein from 1965 until his death in 1967 and it saw performances from some of the names of the time: Yoko Ono, Cream, Bee Gees, Rolling Stones, etc. and the Beatles filmed the “Hello, Goodbye” promo here (along with dancing girls in grass skirts). The theatre became an ABC cinema in 1970 and was taken over by Odeon in 2001. There is apparently little of the original interior left.

2018: The building is looking unloved - see the cracks in our photo for the Chester Players - and we noticed one section lower down on the building where a lump of stucco had been knocked off and not repaired. That old developers' trick of failing to maintain a building and then claiming it's so far gone that demolition is the only solution - that can't be happening here, surely.

2021: Camden rejected a planning appeal for conversion to a hotel. This would have gutted the interior and, of course, added floors on top.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Saville Theatre - Khaki

Subjects commemorated i

Khaki

A very successful comedy burlesque written by Herbert C. Sargent and Con West...

Read More

Ernie Lotinga

Comedian and film actor.  Born Sunderland.  Best known for a series of films ...

Read More

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Saville Theatre - Khaki

Created by i

Gilbert Bayes

Born 6 Oval Road, Camden Town. Also did the bronze group with clock at the en...

Read More

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Saville Theatre - Khaki

Also at this site i

Saville Theatre - Holmes

Saville Theatre - Holmes

Ornamental Passions thinks this probably represents Tod Slaughter in the role...

Read More

Saville Theatre - Saint Joan

Saville Theatre - Saint Joan

George Bernard Shaw wrote his play Saint Joan with Thorndike in mind, and thi...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

CI - 7 - Coffee

CI - 7 - Coffee

EC3, Cornhill, 32

The carved doors are at the right of the building, behind the cyclist in our picture.  According to Esoteric London these panels, listed ...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
Battishill Gardens

Battishill Gardens

N1, Napier Terrace, Battishill Gardens

This stone frieze (13 metres long, 2 metres high) was originally unveiled on the Hall of Commerce in 1842.

3 subjects commemorated, 5 creators
Murray House

Murray House

EC2, Bridgewater Street, Murray House

The puzzle here is: what does this image depict? The Barbican? And what do the fox and heavenly bodies represent? 

1 subject commemorated
CI - 3 - Bread

CI - 3 - Bread

EC3, Cornhill, 32

This entry will increase your word power: "Soke" - the territory under the jurisdiction of a particular court; "Seigneurial" - belonging ...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
Lloyds of London 1958 building

Lloyds of London 1958 building

EC3, Gracechurch Street

Phillip Ward-Jackson in his encyclopaedic "Public Sculpture in the City of London" identifies these reliefs as representing the four elem...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator