FESTIVAL THEATRE (SHAW FESTIVAL)
Queen St
Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON
HOW TO GET HERE From Toronto, follow the Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW) toward Niagara. Once across the Garden City Skyway at St Catharines, take the Niagara-on-the-Lake exit (38B). From the traffic light at York Road, The Shaw is signposted - left onto York Road, then right onto Highway 55. Follow 55 (Niagara Stone Road) east until it ends at the golf course. Turn right into downtown Niagara-on-the-Lake. There you'll find the Royal George Theatre and the Court House Theatre; the Festival Theatre is two blocks farther on.
From Detroit, take highways 401 and 403 to Hamilton, Ontario, and join the QEW toward Niagara. Then follow the same route as the traffic from Toronto.
From New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania, cross the Niagara River into Canada at Buffalo, at Niagara Falls, or at Lewiston, NY. You can take the QEW to Highway 55 if you like, but we usually recommend the Niagara Parkway instead. It takes a little longer, especially in the busy summer months, but it's a beautiful drive - down the Niagara River gorge, past orchards and vineyards, right to the door of our Festival Theatre.
ABOUT
The Shaw Festival is the second-largest repertory company in North America, and the only theatre in the world that specializes in plays written by Bernard Shaw and his contemporaries (1856-1950): "plays about the beginning of the modern world."
Their productions run from April to October each year, in three very different theatres. Here you can see up to a dozen plays performed by one of the world's finest acting companies, in a beautiful village just 20 minutes down-river from Niagara Falls and only two hours from Toronto.
(861 seats)
This is the first building that you see when you come into Niagara along the parkway. Out of a grove of oaks and then across the Commons, the Festival Theatre nestles among its trees and gardens. This is their flagship theatre. It's commodious and elegant - all rose-coloured brick and shingled roofs. Here they do the plays that need "scale", some size and grandeur, whether they be dramas or comedies. And where on a summer evening you can stroll in the gardens and watch the moon rise over old Fort George.
PAST PRODUCTIONS
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