Original antique engraving by Robert Wilkinson. Published in Londina Illustrata in 1819-1825.
The theatre interior that is shown in the engraving is the Royalty Theatre, Well Street. An unremarkable 1950s building now occupies the site.The Royalty Theatre was one of London's early Theatres, it was designed by the architect John Willmot with the help of the surveyor John Robinson of Wellclose Square. The Theatre was built in 1785 and was stated in the press of 1787, when it opened, to have consisted of an area some 120 feet by 56 feet. The Theatre's auditorium had two semi circular galleries, the upper one capable of holding 640 people and the lower one 1,000. The Pit could hold 360, the Front Boxes 198, and the side boxes 396. It was known as the East London Theatre from around 1817 for a short time before reverting to its original name, but it was destroyed by fire on the 11th of April 1826.
Robert Wilkinson 1758 - 1825) was a London based map and atlas publisher active in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Most of Wilkinson's maps were derived from the earlier work of John Bowles, one of the preeminent English map publishers of the 18th century.
Wilkinson's acquired the Bowles map plate library following that cartographer's death in 1779. Wilkinson updated and retooled the Bowles plates over several years until, in 1794, he issued his first fully original atlas, The General Atlas of the World.
This popular atlas was profitably reissued in numerous editions until about 1825 when Wilkinson died. In the course of his nearly 45 years in the map and print trade, Wilkinson issued also published numerous independently issued large format wall, case, and folding maps. Wilkinson's core cartographic corpus includes Bowen and Kitchin's Large English Atlas (1785), Speer's West Indies (1796), Atlas Classica (1797), and the General Atlas of the World (1794, 1802, and 1809), as well as independent issue maps of New Holland (1820), and North America ( 1823).
Wilkinson's offices were based at no. 58 Cornhill, London form 1792 to 1816, following which he relocated to 125 Frenchurch Street, also in London, where he remained until 1823. Following his 1825 death, Wilkinson's business and map plates were acquired by William Darton, an innovative map publisher who reissued the General Atlas with his own imprint well into the 19th century.
It is an important work as it provides invaluable visual records in the form of engravings of buildings and places no longer existing or significantly changed and some of the theatre engravings even show detailed views of shows and stage activity, offering an insight as to how theatres were used and the stage sets that were created in the staging of performances. In some instances it even shows the audiences, and how they were placed in the theatre, and some indication as to their behaviour and their reactions to what is happening on the stage.