Britain's theatres are temples of storytelling, each with its own atmosphere and history. We want to know which stage you'd most love to take your seat in front of.
Put the items in your preferred order.
The Globe Theatre
An open-air reconstruction where groundlings stand and the elements are part of the show. Watching the Bard performed here feels closer to time travel than theatre.
The Royal Opera House
A palace of plush red velvet and chandeliers where opera and ballet reach their grandest expression. Even the foyer feels like an event in itself.
The National Theatre
A concrete cathedral to modern drama whose three stages have launched countless landmark productions. Polarising on the outside, electric within.
The Bristol Old Vic
A Georgian gem operating continuously since 1766, beautifully restored and still buzzing with bold new work. History and innovation share the same boards.
The Edinburgh Festival Theatre
A glass-fronted Victorian auditorium that hosts opera, ballet and headline Fringe acts each summer. The beating heart of Scotland's theatrical year.
Drag the photo to reorder
Was the 1707 Act of Settlement's anti-Catholic clause Britain's most enduring constitutional embarrassment?
π History Β· 25 votes
Which athlete unintentionally broke the world record in the men's long jump at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics by 55 centimetres?
β½ Sport Β· 25 votes
Which UK seabird performs a spectacular aerial 'sky-dance' courtship and nests on remote sea cliffs, with a major colony on the Bass Rock?
πΏ Nature & Animals Β· 24 votes
Which painter created the famous ceiling frescoes in the Sistine Chapel?
π³ 25 votes