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Two Brewers, Covent Garden

Covent GardenLondon building and structure stubsPub stubsPubs in the City of Westminster
Two Brewers, Monmouth Street, Covent Garden 03
Two Brewers, Monmouth Street, Covent Garden 03

The Two Brewers is a pub in Covent Garden, London, at 40 Monmouth Street.Prior to 1935, the pub was known as the Sheep's Head Tavern and features open fires. In 1835, William Spicer, formerly the proprietor of the Tower at Tower street in the Seven Dials became the pub keeper. The 1842 will of "William Filler, Licensed Victualler of Two Brewers Public House, Little Saint Andrews Street, Seven Dials, Middlesex" is held in The National Archives, in Kew, London.Some time before 1940, the address was changed from 6 Little St Andrew Street to 40 Monmouth Street.It is a "theatrical pub", popular with actors and film school students. The pub is part of the Taylor Walker pub chain.In the late 1990s it was also a popular establishment for those working in hairdressing salons, clothing shops and media companies in the surrounding neighbourhood. The eclectic mix of theatre goers, film students and local workers constituted a unique ambience.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Two Brewers, Covent Garden (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Two Brewers, Covent Garden
Monmouth Street, London Bloomsbury (London Borough of Camden)

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N 51.51336 ° E -0.12722 °
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The Two Brewers

Monmouth Street 40
WC2H 9EP London, Bloomsbury (London Borough of Camden)
England, United Kingdom
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Two Brewers, Monmouth Street, Covent Garden 03
Two Brewers, Monmouth Street, Covent Garden 03
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Nearby Places

St Martin's Theatre
St Martin's Theatre

St Martin's Theatre is a West End theatre which has staged the production of The Mousetrap since March 1974, making it the longest continuous run of any show in the world. The theatre is located in West Street, near Shaftesbury Avenue, in the West End of London. It was designed by W. G. R. Sprague as one of a pair of theatres, along with the Ambassadors Theatre, also in West Street. Richard Verney, 19th Baron Willoughby de Broke, together with B. A. (Bertie) Meyer, commissioned Sprague to design the theatre buildings. Although the Ambassadors opened in 1913, construction of the St Martin's was delayed by the outbreak of the First World War. The theatre is still owned by the present Lord Willoughby de Broke and his family. The first production at the St Martin's was the spectacular Edwardian musical comedy Houp La!, starring Gertie Millar, which opened on 23 November 1916. The producer was the impresario Charles B. Cochran, who took a 21-year lease on the new theatre.Many famous British actors passed through the St Martin's. In April 1923 Basil Rathbone played Harry Domain in R.U.R. and in June 1927 Henry Daniell appeared there as Gregory Brown in Meet the Wife. Successes at the theatre included Hugh Williams's play (later a film) The Grass is Greener, John Mortimer's The Wrong Side of the Park, and in 1970 the thriller Sleuth which starred Marius Goring for a long run as Andrew Wyke. After Cochran, Bertie Meyer ran the theatre intermittently until 1967, when his son R. A. (Ricky) Meyer became administrator for the next two decades. The St Martin's was Grade II listed by English Heritage in March 1973.In March 1974 Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap transferred from the Ambassadors to the St Martin's, where it continued its run until the 16th of March 2020 when the show had to be suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, holding the record for the longest continuously running show in the world. It has exceeded 26,000 performances at the St Martin's.