Abstract

John Baldwin Buckstone took over the management at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in 1853, assuming control from Benjamin Webster who had been manager since 1837. They had both served in the company of David Edward Morris, the proprietor who had overseen the building of the new Haymarket Theatre in 1821. When Morris died, his estate passed into a trust on behalf of his widow, Maria Sarah. A lease dating from 1871 (now in the Library at the Garrick Club) describes the agreement between Buckstone and Maria Sarah. Not only does the lease detail the arrangement between the two parties, it also includes an extensive 214-page room-by-room inventory of the Haymarket Theatre, revealing hundreds of items accumulated throughout half a century of constant use. This article outlines the peculiarities of the lease and pays special attention to the music and dance holdings which feature prominently in the inventory. The lease is remarkable not only for the diversity, breadth, and specificity of its contents, but also because it serves as a rare document of theatre business and tells us more about the day-to-day life of one of London's most important theatres in the mid-nineteenth century.

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