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  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_011.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_003.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_012.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_009.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_007.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_001.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_008.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_005.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_010.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_006.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_004.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 13/09/2012. London, England. Actor Simon Callow performs the one-man show "The Mystery of Charles Dickens" at the Playhouse Theatre from 13 September to 10 November. Callow brings Dickens' story to life, as well as 49 of his well-known characters from Bill Sikes to Miss Havisham. The Mystery of Charles Dickens first premiered in 2000 before being revived in 2002. This production marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens. The play was written by Peter Ackroyd. Photo credit: Bettina Strenske/LNP
    LNP_SimonCallow_BST_002.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/09/2018. Bristol, UK. The Bristol Old Vic Theatre in King Street reopens on Monday 24th September following a multi-million-pound transformation, with speeches including here from actor SIMON CALLOW. The dramatic redevelopment, by leading theatre and Stirling prize-winning architects Haworth Tompkins, is designed to create a warm and welcoming venue to attract wider, more diverse audiences, and to place the theatre at the heart of the city's public and cultural life. A full-height timber and glass-fronted foyer, revealing the original auditorium façade to the street for the first time, acts like a covered public square. Huge sun-shading shutters, incorporating the text of Garrick's inaugural 1766 address and a poem by former Bristol city poet Miles Chamber, highlight the theatre's long history and look forward to its future role in the whole community. The internal layout of the theatre has also been completely transformed, with the restoration of the Georgian Coopers' Hall as a public assembly room for Bristol, a new studio theatre created in the old barrel vaults, mezzanine galleries, winding staircases and viewing platforms. Together, they provide new flexible spaces for productions, events, experimental theatre and city-wide participation. The Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English speaking world. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_BRISTOL_OLD_VIC_180924_SCH_24.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 28/01/2015, UK. The Ruling Class - Gala Night, Trafalgar Studios, London UK, 28 January 2015; Simon Callow. Photo credit : Brett D. Cove/Piqtured/LNP
    LNP_Celebrity040215_013.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 28/01/2015, UK. The Ruling Class - Gala Night, Trafalgar Studios, London UK, 28 January 2015; Simon Callow. Photo credit : Brett D. Cove/Piqtured/LNP
    LNP_Celebrity040215_014.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/09/2018. Bristol, UK. The Bristol Old Vic Theatre in King Street reopens on Monday 24th September following a multi-million-pound transformation. Picture shows l-r: SIMON CALLOW actor, MILES CHAMBERS former Bristol Poet Laureate, EMMA STENNING Bristol Old Vic Chief Executive, TOM MORRIS Bristol Old Vic Artistic Director, in viewing platforms in the original wall of the theatre from 1766, 252 years old. The dramatic redevelopment, by leading theatre and Stirling prize-winning architects Haworth Tompkins, is designed to create a warm and welcoming venue to attract wider, more diverse audiences, and to place the theatre at the heart of the city's public and cultural life. A full-height timber and glass-fronted foyer, revealing the original auditorium façade to the street for the first time, acts like a covered public square. Huge sun-shading shutters, incorporating the text of Garrick's inaugural 1766 address and a poem by former Bristol city poet Miles Chamber, highlight the theatre's long history and look forward to its future role in the whole community. The internal layout of the theatre has also been completely transformed, with the restoration of the Georgian Coopers' Hall as a public assembly room for Bristol, a new studio theatre created in the old barrel vaults, mezzanine galleries, winding staircases and viewing platforms. Together, they provide new flexible spaces for productions, events, experimental theatre and city-wide participation. The Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English speaking world. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_BRISTOL_OLD_VIC_180924_SCH_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/09/2018. Bristol, UK. The Bristol Old Vic Theatre in King Street reopens on Monday 24th September following a multi-million-pound transformation. Picture shows l-r: SIMON CALLOW actor, MILES CHAMBERS former Bristol Poet Laureate, EMMA STENNING Bristol Old Vic Chief Executive, TOM MORRIS Bristol Old Vic Artistic Director, in viewing platforms in the original wall of the theatre from 1766, 252 years old. The dramatic redevelopment, by leading theatre and Stirling prize-winning architects Haworth Tompkins, is designed to create a warm and welcoming venue to attract wider, more diverse audiences, and to place the theatre at the heart of the city's public and cultural life. A full-height timber and glass-fronted foyer, revealing the original auditorium façade to the street for the first time, acts like a covered public square. Huge sun-shading shutters, incorporating the text of Garrick's inaugural 1766 address and a poem by former Bristol city poet Miles Chamber, highlight the theatre's long history and look forward to its future role in the whole community. The internal layout of the theatre has also been completely transformed, with the restoration of the Georgian Coopers' Hall as a public assembly room for Bristol, a new studio theatre created in the old barrel vaults, mezzanine galleries, winding staircases and viewing platforms. Together, they provide new flexible spaces for productions, events, experimental theatre and city-wide participation. The Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English speaking world. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_BRISTOL_OLD_VIC_180924_SCH_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/09/2018. Bristol, UK. The Bristol Old Vic Theatre in King Street reopens on Monday 24th September following a multi-million-pound transformation. Picture shows l-r: TOM MORRIS Bristol Old Vic Artistic Director, EMMA STENNING Bristol Old Vic Chief Executive, MILES CHAMBERS former Bristol Poet Laureate, SIMON CALLOW actor, in a viewing platform in the original wall of the theatre from 1766, 252 years old. The dramatic redevelopment, by leading theatre and Stirling prize-winning architects Haworth Tompkins, is designed to create a warm and welcoming venue to attract wider, more diverse audiences, and to place the theatre at the heart of the city's public and cultural life. A full-height timber and glass-fronted foyer, revealing the original auditorium façade to the street for the first time, acts like a covered public square. Huge sun-shading shutters, incorporating the text of Garrick's inaugural 1766 address and a poem by former Bristol city poet Miles Chamber, highlight the theatre's long history and look forward to its future role in the whole community. The internal layout of the theatre has also been completely transformed, with the restoration of the Georgian Coopers' Hall as a public assembly room for Bristol, a new studio theatre created in the old barrel vaults, mezzanine galleries, winding staircases and viewing platforms. Together, they provide new flexible spaces for productions, events, experimental theatre and city-wide participation. The Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English speaking world. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_BRISTOL_OLD_VIC_180924_SCH_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/09/2018. Bristol, UK. The Bristol Old Vic Theatre in King Street reopens on Monday 24th September following a multi-million-pound transformation. Picture shows l-r: TOM MORRIS Bristol Old Vic Artistic Director, EMMA STENNING Bristol Old Vic Chief Executive, MILES CHAMBERS former Bristol Poet Laureate, SIMON CALLOW actor, in a viewing platform in the original wall of the theatre from 1766, 252 years old. The dramatic redevelopment, by leading theatre and Stirling prize-winning architects Haworth Tompkins, is designed to create a warm and welcoming venue to attract wider, more diverse audiences, and to place the theatre at the heart of the city's public and cultural life. A full-height timber and glass-fronted foyer, revealing the original auditorium façade to the street for the first time, acts like a covered public square. Huge sun-shading shutters, incorporating the text of Garrick's inaugural 1766 address and a poem by former Bristol city poet Miles Chamber, highlight the theatre's long history and look forward to its future role in the whole community. The internal layout of the theatre has also been completely transformed, with the restoration of the Georgian Coopers' Hall as a public assembly room for Bristol, a new studio theatre created in the old barrel vaults, mezzanine galleries, winding staircases and viewing platforms. Together, they provide new flexible spaces for productions, events, experimental theatre and city-wide participation. The Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English speaking world. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_BRISTOL_OLD_VIC_180924_SCH_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/09/2018. Bristol, UK. The Bristol Old Vic Theatre in King Street reopens on Monday 24th September following a multi-million-pound transformation, with speeches including here from former Bristol Poet Laureate MILES CHAMBERS, watched here by actor SIMON CALLOW. The dramatic redevelopment, by leading theatre and Stirling prize-winning architects Haworth Tompkins, is designed to create a warm and welcoming venue to attract wider, more diverse audiences, and to place the theatre at the heart of the city's public and cultural life. A full-height timber and glass-fronted foyer, revealing the original auditorium façade to the street for the first time, acts like a covered public square. Huge sun-shading shutters, incorporating the text of Garrick's inaugural 1766 address and a poem by former Bristol city poet Miles Chamber, highlight the theatre's long history and look forward to its future role in the whole community. The internal layout of the theatre has also been completely transformed, with the restoration of the Georgian Coopers' Hall as a public assembly room for Bristol, a new studio theatre created in the old barrel vaults, mezzanine galleries, winding staircases and viewing platforms. Together, they provide new flexible spaces for productions, events, experimental theatre and city-wide participation. The Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English speaking world. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_BRISTOL_OLD_VIC_180924_SCH_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 11/09/2012. London, UK L-R Simon Callow, Nick Clegg. Nick Clegg makes a speech at a reception to celebrate the Governments Consultation on Gay Marriage. Today, 11 September 2012. Photo credit : Stephen Simpson/LNP
    LNP_cabinet_SSI_043.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 11/09/2012. London, UK L-R Simon Callow, Nick Clegg. Nick Clegg makes a speech at a reception to celebrate the Government's Consultation on Gay Marriage. Today, 11 September 2012. In the speech he withdrew comments about opponents of gay marriage which in an early draft released to media he called them "bigots". Photo credit : Stephen Simpson/LNP
    LNP_clegg_speech_SSI_081.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 01/12/2012. Simon Callow attending service of celebration and dedication to remember all those in the entertainment industry lost to AIDS at St Paul's Church in Covent Garden, London. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_AIDS_SERVICE_TAK_002.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 01/12/2012. Simon Callow attending service of celebration and dedication to remember all those in the entertainment industry lost to AIDS at St Paul's Church in Covent Garden, London. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_AIDS_SERVICE_TAK_001.JPG