Royal Variety Performance
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The Royal Variety Performance is a gala evening held in the United Kingdom once each year, usually in a theatre in London's West End. Comics and other entertainers perform before royalty and a television audience. The show raises money for the Entertainment Artistes Benevolent Fund.
First show
The first performance, on July 1, 1912, was called the Royal Command Performance, and this name has persisted informally for the event. This was held in the Palace Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue, London, in the presence of King George V and Queen Mary. The king said he would attend a once-yearly variety show, provided the profits went to the Variety Artistes' Benevolent Fund, as the EABF was then known. This first staging was a lavish occasion, and the theatre was decorated with 3 million roses draped around the auditorium and over the boxes.
The organisers did not invite Marie Lloyd, one of the most famous Music Hall artists of the time, because of a professional dispute. She held a rival performance in a nearby theatre, which she advertised was "by command of the British public". The name of the event was changed to prevent possible royal embarrassment.
Further performances
The show was frequently staged in the London Palladium theatre, and in the 1950s and 1960s a television show based on the same idea, called Sunday Night at the London Palladium and hosted by Bruce Forsyth ran for over 20 years. Television coverage of the royal show itself traditionally alternates each year between the BBC and ITV.
Almost every sort of act concievable has at one time or another been presented to the monarch at the Royal Command Performance, including The Beatles in 1963 and Blue Man Group in 2005.
The Royal Variety Performance provides most of the funding for Brinsworth House, a home for retired members of the entertainment profession and their dependants.
The 2005 performance, held in the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff, was the 77th Royal Variety Performance and had a strong Welsh flavour to it that included Charlotte Church, Katherine Jenkins, Bryn Terfel, and the Regimental Band of the Royal Welsh.
16 Performances have been cancelled because world conflict or the Royal Family's official mourning.