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Hoxton Hall
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Hoxton Hall is a performance arts theatre and community centre in the area of , at 130 Hoxton Street, in the London Borough of Hackney.

A grade II* , the theatre was first built as a in 1863, as MacDonald's Music Hall. It is an unrestored example of the saloon style. In the theatre, an iron-railed, two tier galleried auditorium rises on three sides, supported on cast iron columns above a small, high, multi-tiered stage. It survives largely in its original form, as for many years it was used as a meeting house.

The music hall lost its performance licence in 1871 due to complaints by the police; it was sold, and the new owners applied for a licence in 1876, but were again rejected. William Isaac Palmer (1824–1893) purchased it on behalf of the Blue Ribbon Gospel Temperance Mission in 1879. Palmer was an heir to the Huntley and Palmer biscuit family and spent much of his fortune on charity. On Palmer's death, the hall passed to the Bedford Institute, a Quaker organisation dedicated to running adult schools and alleviating the effects of poverty.

Today, the hall is used as a community centre and performance space.


Notable recent performances
  • On invitation from Lisa Goldman, artistic director of the theatre company The Red Room, created video installations and a portfolio of photographic portraits of residents for the site-specific production which opened at Hoxton Hall, to performances on 10 September 2005
  • Robert Newman filmed a television programme entitled A History of Oil for More4 at Hoxton Hall. The show is a mixture of stand-up comedy and an introductory lecture on and . Based on his touring show, Apocalypso Now, Newman argues that twentieth-century Western foreign policy, including World War I, should be seen as a continuous struggle by the West to control oil.

  • Guide to British Theatres 1750-1950, John Earl and Michael Sell pp. 118–9 (Theatres Trust, 2000)


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