Pollock's Toy Museum
Toy museum · London Borough of Camden
Theater building
The Scala Theatre was a theatre in Charlotte Street, London, off Tottenham Court Road. The theatre began as concert rooms in the late 18th century. It then became a private theatre club in 1802, a circus in 1808, and a proper theatre in 1810.
It was operated by a succession of managers under different names until 1835. From 1839 to 1865, under the scenic artist Charles James, it became the home of lurid melodrama and acquired a poor reputation. In 1865 the theatre was reconstructed with an elegant interior, known as the Prince of Wales's Theatre (not to be confused with the later Prince of Wales Theatre).
H. J. Byron, one of the theatre's leading playwrights, and Marie Wilton, its leading lady, assumed its management, presenting burlesque, farce and prose comedies by Byron and a celebrated series of plays by T.
W. Robertson. In 1867, Wilton married Squire Bancroft, the theatre's leading man.
Other plays were by W. S. Gilbert, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Dion Boucicault and Clement Scott.
The Bancrofts managed the theatre until 1880. Edgar Bruce took over the management until 1882, when the theatre went dark, and from 1886 it was used as a Salvation Army Hostel...