Royal Variety Show 1981 Full set of tickets

A FRAMED FULL & COMPLETE SET OF UNUSED TICKETS, for the ROYAL VARIETY SHOW NOVEMBER 23 1981 at Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London. (Balcony through to Private Box set of tickets) In the presence of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II

Executive Producer:  Louis Benjamin, Musical Director:  Richard Holmes Producer: Norman Maen.

This unique rare framed set of unused tickets for the 1981 Royal Variety Show must be one of a kind. The printer (we have a letter confirming provenance) framed these for posterity and now we are able to offer them for sale on the Van Amstel Art & Memorabilia website. Below are the history and full details of what these commemorative tickets represent. 

It was back to the Theatre Royal at Drury Lane for the 1981 Royal Variety Performance in front of the Queen. That fine actor Robert Hardy - possibly best known for his part in TV's All Creatures Great And Small  - gave the formal welcoming speech. This led to anything but a formal celebration of black music with 'One Mo' Time!' The evening was peppered with surprises, not least when Are You Being Served?  TV star John Inman found his 'customer' was none other that the lovable British boxing champ Henry Cooper. And astronomer Patrick Moore popped up to play, of all things the xylophone. The show was knitted together with his usual style by Dickie Henderson. A new star was born in comedian Lenny Henry, by now a major TV performer in great demand. Pop music 'buff' (and lyricist) Tim Rice introduced '25 years of British Pop' with the likes of Marty Wilde, Acker Bilk, Lulu, Adam and the Ants and Donovan. And Tim Rice's partner on many hit musicals was featured in another slot - 'the music of Andrew Lloyd Webber' with the composer himself, his brother Julian on the cello and Elaine Paige. A French finale came with the marvellous Mireille Mathieu and, of course, the gorgeous Can-Can girls. 1981 was another innovation, again stimulated by the need to counter the mounting costs of staging the Royal Variety Performance. For the first time sponsorship was introduced to pare down, in the words of EABF General Secretary, Reg Swinson,  'unavoidable ever-increasing production costs, as a prudent and acceptable alternative to increasing seat prices.' The organisers also set out with the aim of raising the best part of £200,000 for the charity from the night's show. In the end, the figure was £209,000, slightly more than double the return from the show of only two years earlier. To quote Reg Swinson again, 'It was the hand of Louis Benjamin that wrought these fantastic results, he taking the initiative to increase the return on television fees for the UK and overseas, the box office, brochure advertising and the introduction in 1981 of sponsorship.' There was almost what amounted to a royal exchange surrounding the appearance of the dancers from Paris. Earlier in the year Princess Anne had been invited as guest of honour at the new Moulin Rouge revue. When it came to planning the Royal Variety Performance, Louis Benjamin invited the Bluebells Girls to take part in the show and for the first time this century, the Moulin Rouge was closed so that they could appear that night on the Royal Variety. Although one of the most quintessentially French institutions, seven of the sixteen dancers in the Bal Du Moulin Rouge were English!

CAST FOR THE EVENINGS PERFORMANCES DICKIE HENDERSON - HOST

ROBERT HARDY

"ONE MO' TIME" - WITH THAIS CLARK, VERNEL BAGNERIS, SYLVIA 'KUUMA' WILLIAMS, TOPSY CHAPMAN, PATTI BOULAYE, PEARLY GATES, PRECIOUS WILSON, THE CLARK BROTHERS & KENNY LYNCH

LENNY HENRY, ITZHAK PERLMAN, JOHN INMAN, TIM RICE

LONNIE DONEGAN, MARTY WILDE, ACKER BILK, THE SEARCHERS

DONOVAN, LULU, ALVIN STARDUST, ADAM, AND THE ANTS

THE SHADOWS, CLIFF RICHARD, CAMBRIDGE BUSKERS

ANITA HARRIS, JIMMY TARBUCK, ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER

STEPHANIE LAWRENCE, JULIAN LLOYD WEBBER, ELAINE PAIGE

MIREILLE MATHIEU.

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