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London Highlights for July, 2008
by Burlington Bertie
What's on in London. London highlights in July, 2008. A guide to London's summer of Royal pageantry, Henry Wood Promenade Concerts and other music, performing arts, fine art festivals, Jack the Ripper Walks, together with sporting highlights of Wimbledon, Henley and cricket at Lords, together with disabled accessibility notes from the diary of Burlington Bertie, OfftoLondon's Man About Town.

Royal Heritage & Pageantry
Buckingham Palace State Rooms and Gardens
Venue: Buckingham Palace, Westminster, SW1A 1AA, London. Date: Annual summer opening. 9.45am-6pm, 29 July - 29 September, 2008. Tickets: Tickets are timed with entry every 15 minutes. Buy a joint 'Palace Day Out' ticket for Palace State Rooms, Queen's Gallery and Royal Mews: £28.50 (recommended if you have a complete day to spare), or separate tickets for Palace only, (Adult £15.50, Concessions). An audio tour is included in the ticket price. Languages available: English, French German, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, Chinese. Russian. Book online or at ticket office located at the Visitor Entrance in Buckingham Palace Road. Fill in a registration form on your visit for an unlimited admission facility during Summer 2008. Private View: Purchase an exclusive £65 Private View Champagne Tour with a knowledgeable Palace guide on certain August and September dates. Unlimited admission tickets are also available.
London Transport: Nearest Tubes. Green Park, Hyde Park Corner, (Piccadilly Line); Victoria Rail Terminal, (Victoria, Circle and District Lines). Description: Annual summer opening of the State Rooms and Gardens of Buckingham Palace to the public while Queen and court reside in Scotland. 19 state rooms are opened to the public. They form the heart of today's working palace of Britain's monarch and have been lavishly decorated in grandiose style by successive monarchs since George IV, and furnished with some of the finest treasures from the Royal Collection collected by, or gifted to, the monarchs over the past four centuries. These include paintings by such artistic luminaries as Rembrandt, Rubens, Poussin, Canaletto; sculptures by Canova and others; exquisite examples of Sèvres porcelain, Chelsea china; a magnificent horological collection and some of the finest English and French furniture in the world. Each year, The Royal Collection, (chaired by heir to the Throne Charles, Prince of Wales), mounts a special historical exhibition for visitors in the State Ballroom, much used by Queen Victoria in the early carefree years of her reign. The 2008 Ballroom exhibition displays the glittering spectacle of a magnificent State Banquet; since the time of William the Conqueror an integral part of Royal ceremonial, pageantry and state diplomacy marking significant events and formal state visits. The Palace Garden On exiting the Palace onto the 5 acre lawn where Her Majesty holds her annual Palace Tea Parties each July, visitors can enjoy an extended walk through the 39 acre palace gardens that takes them around the 3 acre lake landscaped in Queen Victoria's reign and offers superb views of Nash's Palace Garden frontage, (1825-30), built for King George IV. The garden and lakeside tree-land planting owes much to green-fingered Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother and the present Queen, not to mention the dedication of the palace gardeners.
Dress: The Palace formal dress code is relaxed for the public during the summer access season. However, bags, umbrellas, cameras, video recorders, etc., must be left at entrance for collection later. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. It is essential you book your ticket by telephoning: +44 (0)20 7766 7324 to ensure elevator facilities. Adapted toilets: Yes. Available in the Palace garden at the end of your visit. Burlington Bertie's Verdict: This is a living museum of Britain's ongoing Royal history and culture and should not be missed. I strongly recommend you buy a 'Royal Day Out' ticket and set aside a complete day to see the entire Palace complex and buy quality souvenirs in the royal Collection shop. For the Palace alone, give yourself a full half day. Visit the Royal Mews and Queen's Gallery in the morning, pausing for lunch at the nearby Goring Hotel, and visit the Palace in the afternoon. Check out Royal Palaces and Attractions for a full description of Buckingham Palace, the Royal Mews, the Queen's Gallery, and nearby Clarence House.
Hampton Court Palace: Tudor Kitchens, Cookery and Recipes Venue: Hampton Court Palace, East Molesey, KT8, 9AU. Tel: 0870 751 5175. Date: 11am - 3pm First Saturday and Sunday of each month through September, 2008. Tickets: Live event admission included as part of your Palace admission ticket. Book online. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Richmond. Description: Lecture and demonstration. Watch and hear 'Historia' food archaeologists researching Tudor cookery and ingredients, making traditional Tudor recipes which you can later sample in the Palace's Tiltyard Cafe. See also the Gardens Exhibition during your visit. Situated adjacent to the East Front Gardens, this exhibition will help you to understand the evolution of the historic royal gardens at Hampton Court, from their Tudor beginnings in the early 16th century right up to the present day. The replanted Privy Garden is now restored to its original 1702 glory. Venue Hire You can hire Henry VIII's magnificent Great Hall and other Palace venues with costumed guides, etc., for entertaining, conferences, wedding and civil partnership receptions, your own sumptuous banquets, functions or film location. Check Venue Hire at Hampton Court Palace for details and bookings. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. The ground floor of the Palace is wheelchair accessible and there are limited facilities for viewing the upper floors with the use of an elevator. Adapted Toilets: Yes. See Palace Disabled Access for full details.
Kew Palace: Summer Evening Tours Venue: Kew Palace, Richmond upon Thames, TW9 3AB. Dates: 18 May 2008 - 28 September 2008, Evening Tours: 5pm-6.30pm, Twice monthly, Sundays Only. Normal opening times: Mons. 11am-5pm; Tues-Suns. 10am-5pm. Tickets: Evening Tours: £25. Call 0844 482 7777. Day visits: £5, (Concessions). Pay at Kew Gardens gate. Entrance to Kew Palace is only available with a ticket to the Gardens, (£13, Concessions). London Transport: Nearest Tube: Nearest Tube. Kew Gardens. Car parking outside Brentford Gate, (Thames riverside), entrance. Description: A refuge for the ailing King George III during his 'madness', Kew Palace is especially peaceful after the crowds have deserted the place on a summer's evening. New this year, you can see inside the palace's attics - opened to the public for the first time - where the Royal family's servants lived. Recently discovered early seventeenth century painted decorations and witch marks are a reminder of past inhabitants. Originally a Dutch merchant's house, the small palace - more like a manor house - has recently undergone an extensive restoration. Displays include personal objects, jigsaw puzzles and a doll's house that belonged to George III's children. After the 90-minute Evening Tour, visitors can stay and enjoy wine and nibbles in the royal palace.. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes, to all floors. Adapted Toilets: Yes, at nearby Welcome Centre. Hand operated wheelchairs available on loan. Disabled parking at Brentford Gate and Kew Green.
The Golden Hinde Venue:Pickfords Wharf/Clink St., London SE1 9DG. Tel: 020 7407 7056. Date: Daily, 10am-5.30pm, 2008. Tickets: £6. (Concessions). London Transport: Nearest Tube: London Bridge. Description: This is an exact working replica of Sir Francis Drake's Naval Flagship the Tudor warship Golden Hinde in which Sir Francis Drake circumnavigated the world 1577-1580. This exact reconstruction, a fully working ship, was launched in Devon in 1973. Since then she has circumnavigated the globe and sailed over 140,000 miles - many more than the original. Her present berth is the St Mary Overie Dock on Thames South Bank, just a short walk from the Clink Prison Museum, Shakespeare's Globe and Tate Modern. This is a living history experience of particular interest to maritime history buffs. Explore the 5 decks and the 22 canons. Venue Hire You can hire the Golden Hinde for entertaining, conferences, wedding and civil partnership receptions, functions or film location. Check website for details and bookings. Wheelchair Accessibility: No.
Summer Sporting Events
Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships
Venue:All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Church Road, Wimbledon, SW19 5AE. Tel: 020 8946 2244.
Date: 23 June - 6 July, 2008 Tickets: Although some tickets are available for all courts at the gate for the first week, expect to queue all night. Ground tickets to watch games on courts 3 - 17 are available at the gate only on the day of play. Demand exceeds supply so early arrival is essential. Offtolondon.com has online booking arrangements for all games on Center Court and Court No.1 including the Finals, though availability is limited so early booking is essential. Overseas visitors should consider an Offtolondon Wimbledon/ accommodation package. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Wimbledon. The courts are seven miles southwest of central London. Travel by public transport if possible. Parking is extremely limited. Description: Tennis has been England's most popular social summer sport since it superceded croquet when fashions freed ladies from long Edwardian skirts. The green lawns of Wimbledon are its pinnacle. King George VI, when Duke of York, set the royal seal of approval on the Wimbledon Championships when he competed in 1921 in the Men's Doubles. The Wimbledon atmosphere is unrivalled by any other tournament on the world curcuit; emerald green courts, the Royal Box graced my members of the Royal Family, the polite and decorously clad Centre Court spectators, the social ritual of champagne and fresh English strawberries, the inevitable "rain stopped play". And of course there are the players, for whom winning at Wimbledon is the ultimate dream.
Dress: Center Court visitors are likely to be expensively dressed in smart casual wear. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Limited wheelchair spaces are available by ballot. Tel: +44 (0)20 8971 2473. Fax: +44 20 8971 2528. Adapted toilets: Yes.

Henley Royal Regatta
Venue: Henley Reach, Regatta Headquarters, Henley-on-Thames, RG9 2LY Date: 2 - 6 July, 2008. Tickets: Try to gain entry to the exclusive Stewards' Enclosure, (for members and their guests), to mix with interesting people. Write to the Regatta Secretary requesting an application form, preferably citing some rowing experience in the past 50 years. Otherwise, choose the Regatta Enclosure, spend money with Keith Prowse Hospitality, or line the free part of the riverside bank, (see Dress below). As with many other major sporting events, Corporate Entertaining facilities have now become an important part of the Henley experience, with tickets for the Temple Island Enclosure and some converted boathouses costing over £150 per head. See Keith Prowse Hospitality for individual and corporate hospitality offers.
Getting there: Nearest airport: Heathrow. Rail. First Great Western run frequent rail services London/Paddington - Henley via Twyford during the regatta. Book online. Road. Leave the M4 motorway at Junction 8/9 for the A404, and then the A4130. The Regatta Committee warns drivers never to underestimate the time it will take to reach Henley by road. Description: Henley Royal Regatta has attracted the cream of world rowing fraternity, Royal Family members as well as London and Home Counties spectators every year since 1839, bar two world wars. Originally staged by the Mayor and civic authorities as a public attraction, this Regatta soon became an important international rowing event for competing eights, fours, pairs and sculls. It is now a social fun event for both international participants and spectators. Best rowing day for spectators: Thursday. Social highlight of the week: The Leander Club Ball. It is unfortunate that Henley clashes with Wimbledon.
Further Information: Online or contact the Secretary, Henley Royal Regatta, Regatta Headquarters, Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire RG9 2LY; tel: 01491 572153; fax: 01491 575509. No email. .
Dress: Henley has its own uniquely strict dress regulations for the Members Enclosures. Ladies wear a hat and hemlines must be conservately below the knee, (unlike Royal Ascot Ladies Day, this is not a fashion show). Gentlemen must wear lounge suits or preferably flannels and club blazer with tie or cravat. If you do not wish to dress formally, there are no dress restrictions in the Regatta Enclosure - but remember this is Henley Regatta, not Glastonbury rock concert. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes in some areas. Adapted toilets: Yes in some areas.
Cricket at Lords
Venue: Lords Cricket Ground, St. John's Wood, NW8 8QZ. Tel: 020 7432 1000. Date: Various, July, 2008. Tickets: Call 020 7432 1000 for ticket options, including corporate hospitality offers or check . London transport: Nearest Tube. St. John's Wood. Description: Lord's is known the world over as the 'home of cricket'; the game's spiritual 'headquarters' and home ground to the MCC, the most famous cricket club of all. It remains the most important cricket ground in the world. Notable 5 and 1 Day matches this summer include England v. South Africa, (10-14 July); England Women v. South Africa Women, (8 August); England v. South Africa, (31 August). Dress: No dress code in public seating. Smart casual expected in Grand stand and Lord's Tavern where Cricket Club ties will be much in evidence. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Limited wheelchair spaces are allocated by ballot. Tel: +44 (0)20 8971 2473. Fax: +44 20 8971 2528. Adapted toilets: Yes.

The 5th Chap Olympiad Venue: Bedford Square, Bloomsbury, WC1B 3DP. Dates: 1pm-6pm, 12th July 2008. Tickets: TBA. Available online June. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Tottenham Court Road, Goodge street. Carparks: Bloomsbury Square, Holborn NCP. Description: Biggles and Bulldog Drummond are alive and well according to Chap Magazine which organizes this clean limbed, square jawed, loose footed, celebration of stiff upper-lipped fun and games for gentlemen of sartorial good taste. Enjoy a spiffing time taking part in ten Olympic races, or egging on fattie Fforbes-Cunnyngham and his chum Fiona to win the piggy-back hurdle race. Compete yourself in suitable mufti and panama, (or in pith helmet, Sam Brown and shooting stick), if you wish, but expect the 'Bowler and Brolly' brigade to be out in force for the Umbrella Hockey Match and the Hendricks Gin Steeplechase. It's all jolly good fun, and a stiff G&T or two at the Hendricks stand helps the jollity along till its time for a Sundowner 'pinkers'. To register as a competitor, email olympics@thechap.net Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: No.
Summer Horticultural Events

RHS Hampton Court Flower Show Date: 8-13 July, 2008.
Venue: Hampton Court Palace, East Molesey, KT8 9AU.
Description: This is the riverside perfect setting for the world's largest selling horticultural show, featuring an exciting range of flowers, plants and gardening accessories spread over 30 acres; a stunning landscaped sales show with displays from 700 specialist nurseries, market gardeners and exhibitors from around the country, together with the famous Rose Festival - one of the greatest annual gatherings of roses in full bloom in the world that will draw nearly 200,000 visitors to Hampton Court during the week. Good restaurant, snack and bar facilities. A smart charity Gala preview evening, (2 July), with champagne, music and fireworks display, precedes the opening day. Check Offtolondon's Hampton court Flower Show and Champagne Picnics for a full description. Tickets: Book online or telephone 020 7834 4333. London transport: The Palace is in outer London. Rail. Twice-hourly trains run from Waterloo to Hampton Court, (30 minutes). The Palace is a short walk from the station. Road. Situated on the A308 near the A3, M3 and M25. Parking available. From the M25, take exit 12 (then the A308), or exit 15 (then the A312). Tube & Bus. Richmond, the nearest Underground station is connected to the Palace by bus R68. Buses 111, 216, 411, 416, 451, 461, 513 and 727 also stop nearby. River. If you are staying in London and are physically mobile, we suggest you take the train to Hampton Court and make the return trip down the River Thames by London Transport Riverbus, (leaves Hampton Court Pier at 5pm), to Westminster Pier; a delightful journey. You can make the journey both ways by riverbus but this would leave you too little time at the Show. Dress: Casual, unless you are attending the Gala Preview on 4 July, for which you should dress accordingly. Check the weather reports. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes. See Palace Disabled Access for full details.
Kew Gardens: The Year of the Tree Festival Venue: Kew Gardens (Royal Botanic Gardens), Richmond upon Thames, TW9 3AB Dates: 24th May 2008 until 28th September 2008. Tickets: £13 (Adults), (Concessions), Children under 17 Free. Description: Walk among the tree tops at Kew Gardens this summer when you take the new Rhizotron and Xstrata Treetop Walkway. Designed by Marks Barfield Architects, the team who brought us the London Eye, the scenic 200 metre walkway takes you on an educational journey from tree root to leaf tip. Entering through what looks like a crack in the ground, you travel 18 metres up into the air arriving at a canopy of sweet chestnuts, limes and broad-leaved oaks. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes, for much of Kew Gardens. Tree top walkway is not disability accessible. Disability Concessions: See website. Hand operated wheelchairs are available on loan. Adapted Toilets: Yes, at Welcome centre.
Summer Fairs & Music Festivals
BBC Henry Wood Promenade Concert Season 2008
Venue: Royal Albert Hall, Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2AP, and other venues.
Date: 18 July - 13 September, 2008
Description: For nine weeks this summer, the Royal Albert Hall, London's historic and majestic musical venue, once again resounds to the sound of more than 70 great concerts. The season, which began in 1895, covers choral, operatic and symphonic works of music from the 15th century to today's living composers. A widely ranging programme of music ancient and modern, will feature performances by orchestras, soloists and choirs from all over the world. In addition to the nightly Royal Albert Hall concerts, weekly Monday lunchtime performances of chamber and solo music are performed in nearby Cadogan Hall, (in Pont Street, off Sloane Street). In addition, a new, expanded series of more than 70 musical and literary introductions, interviews, workshops and other Proms-related events, (either free to all or free to Prom ticket holders), have been arranged for this season. Times and venues vary. Open air Prom concerts are televised live from London's Hyde Park, Belfast, Glasgow, Swansea and Manchester during the Prom season's final week, and of course 'The Last Night of the Proms' has achieved worldwide popularity through the medium of radio and television. BBC Radio 3 broadcasts every nightly promenade concert live both on air and online, and over half are shown live on TV.
Tickets: Book online, telephone +44 (0)20 7489 8212 or apply in person at BBC Proms Box Office, Royal Albert Hall, Kensington Gore, London SW7. 1400 Standing places are available nightly on a first come first served basis. If you are aiming to attend the 'Last night of the Proms', book seats now or be prepared to dress up and queue on the night with the dedicated for standing only Arena tickets.
London Transport: Nearest Tube. Knightsbridge (Piccadilly Line), High St Kensington (Circle and District Lines) and South Kensington (all three lines) are equidistant to the Hall, (10 minutes walk). Bus nos 9, 10, 49 and 52 pass the Hall. Drivers should give themselves plenty of time to find a parking space.
Dress: No dress code but Arena Prommers dress in party gear for the famous Last Night of the Proms. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets. Yes. Inform box office of your requirements when booking.
The Tower Music Festival
Venue: Tower of London, EC3N 4AB. Tel: 020 8682 1616. info@towermusicfestival.co.uk Dates: 1 June - 31 July, 2008. Evenings.
Tickets:Book online
London Transport:Nearest Tube: Tower Hill. Riverboat from Westminster or Greenwich. Description: The floodlit Tower of London provides a spectacular backdrop to one of London's newest open-air festivals that brings us world renowned artists as diverse as Joe Cocker, Katherine Jenkins, and Bryn Terfel. As this festival coincides with The City of London Festival, you may be severely challenged to do justice to the wealth of musical choice on offer. Dress:Smart Casual. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Summer Swing at Kew Gardens Date:20 June - 10 July, 2008.
Venue: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 3AB Tickets: From £30. <"http://www.seetickets.com/summerswing/">Book online, (recommended as some events sell out early), or call 0871 231 0834 (24hrs), or buy at gate. London Transport: Nearest Tube. Kew Gardens.
Description: An all-rocking, all-rolling Summer Swing at the 'Swing village' with Jools Holland and his Rhythm and Blues Orchestra, Commitments/Sounds of the Blues Brothers, Lulu, Gipsy Kings. Once the picnics are cleared there'll be standing room only for non-stop dancing as we guarantee night after night of timeless party classics. As always, the Swing Village hosts a variety of foods to buy, and free products to try, with sponsor, Wines of South Africa, providing great deals on an exciting range of wines. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
City of London Festival 2008.
Date:20 June - 10 July, 2008 .
Venue: Various, including St. Paul's Cathedral, many historic City churches and guild halls, Mansion House, etc. Tickets:From £5- £45. Some free events.
London Transport:Nearest Tube: St. Paul's; Bank.
Description: A summer feast of international music and the arts, covering orchestral and chamber music, recitals, opera, literature, visual arts, film, and architectural walks and talks. In addition there is a programme of jazz, late night comedy, and other entertainment afloat on the River Thames. Some free street entertainment. See website for full details, booking info, etc. Dress: Casual. Wheelchair Accessibility: Check individual venues for accessibility and adapted toilets when buying tickets.
Opera Holland Park 2008
Venue:Holland Park, W8. 0845 230 9769 Dates: Ongoing until 11 Aug, 2008. Perfs begin 7.30pm. Tickets: £. Book online or Box Office 0845 230 9769 Concessions, (£37 reduced to £34), are available for specific performances only. See website.
London Transport: Nearest Tube. Kensington, (Olympia); Holland Park. Description: This is London's answer to Glyndebourne. Dress up, order a champagne picnic with reserved table in the theatre and enjoy a fabulous evening of Opera sung by top international singers in the stunning new Opera Holland Park theatre. This year's Festival programme: Il Trovatore by Giuseppe Verdi. June 3, 5, 7, 12, 14, 18, 20. Charity Gala in aid of NSPCC on June 10. La Fille du Régiment by Gaetano Donizetti. June 4, 6, 11, 13, 17, 19, 21.
The Magic Flute by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. June 28, 30, July 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12.
Tosca by Giacomo Puccini. July 1, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13. Charity Gala in aid of Venice in Peril on July 9.
La Gioconda by Amilcare Ponchielli. July 22, 24, 26, 30, August 1, 5, 7, 9.
Iolanta by Pyotr Tchaikovsky. July 25, 29, 31, August 2, 6, 8. Dress: An opportunty to dress up for a smart evening. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes to all but the Terrace. Adaptable Toilets. Check website for special arrangements.
Kenwood House Picnic Concerts Venue: Kenwood House (Iveagh Bequest), Hampstead Heath, NW37JR Date: 7.30pm. 28 June - 23 August, 2008. Tickets: £25-£35. Book online. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Highgate, (20+ mins). Car parking at Kenwood House. Description: The delightful annual series of open air concerts in the beautiful lakeside grounds of English Heritage managed Kenwood House returns after a hiatus caused by licencing problems. This neo-classical mansion was remodelled by Robert Adam between 1764-73 and later donated to the Nation by Edward Cecil Guinness, first Earl of Iveagh in 1927, together with his priceless art collection. The grounds and lake are magnificent and provide a perfect setting for music on a summer's evening. The concerts take place at sunset, and you are encouraged to enjoy the show with a picnic and champagne. This year's line-up begins with Beach Boys genius Brian Wilson and ends with the the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and soprano diva Katherine Jenkins. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes. Car parking in the grounds.
Mostly Mozart at the Barbican Venue: Barbican Centre, Silk Street, EC2Y 8DS. Date: Weekends through July, 2008. Description:An annual Mozart Summer Festival. Concerts, free foyer music, pre-concert events and fireworks, with Mozart the primary theme, though works by Bach, Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Faure are also performed. Mozart highlights for 2008 includes the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra The Academy of St Martin in the Fields, sopranos Danielle de Niese and Alice Coote, 'cellist Claudio Bohorquez, harp and flute duo Sally Pryce and Adam Walker, Garsington Opera, clarinettist Martin Frost, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, violinist Leila Josefowicz, trumpeter Alison Balsom, The Classical Opera Company and pianists Leon McCawley and Steven Osborne. Tickets: Book online, London Transport: Nearest Tube. Barbican, (Circle, Metropolitan and Hammersmith & City lines). Bus 153 runs from Liverpool Street Station to Barbican. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets. Special Access Membership tickets available at sometimes discounted prices.Inform box office of your requirements when booking.
Motor Show Music Festival Venue: ExCel London Exhibition Centre, 1 Western Gateway, Newham, E16 1XL. Dates: 8pm, 23 July, 2008 - 3 August, 2008 Tickets: £25-£32.50. Book online. Ticket includes access to Motor Show 4pm-9pm. London Transport: Check online. Description: A remarkable line-up of talent is headlining this series of dockside concerts to entice greying rockers at Excel during the summer Motor Show: Alice Cooper (24th July), Status Quo (25th July), Squeeze (26th July), Chicago (31st July), UB40 (23rd July), Deep Purple (30th July) and theMeat Loaf, (2nd August). Concert tickets also give you access to the Motor Show. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Banqueting House Lunchtime Concerts Venue: Banqueting House, Whitehall, SW1A 2ER, Tel: 0870 751 5187 Date: 9, 30 July 2008. From 12 noon. Tickets: £15 inc. buffet lunch. Book by venue telephone or in person. Carers for disabled visitors free. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Westminster, Embankment. Description: The renowned monthly lunchtime concerts of chamber music and song recitals. This is the perfect way to admire the Rubens ceiling, a pictorial paean to the Stuart belief in the 'Divine right of Kings', a concept that cost Charles I his head but left us with this magnificent fresco. See website for concert details. Venue Hire You can hire the historic and impressive Banqueting House for entertaining, conferences, wedding and civil partnership receptions, functions or film location. Check Venue Hire for details and bookings. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes for portable/standard size wheelchairs.
Summer Theatre & Dance Festivals
Shakespeare's Globe: 2008 Summer Season Date: Until 5 October, 2008. Venue: 21 New Globe Walk, SE1 9ED. Tel: 020 7401 9199. Tickets: £5 - £35. London Transport: Nearest Tube. Southwark. Description: This summer's 'Totus Mundus' season features new productions of 'King Lear', 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', 'Timon of Athens' and 'The Merry Wives of Windsor' plus world premieres of three new plays and a return of John Dove's production of 'The Winter's Tale'. Step into Tudor London at the Globe and join in the hearty audience participation! Dine before or after the performance, at the nearby Oxo Tower Restaurant or the Yakitori Wheelchair Accessibility: Make your requirements known when booking. Mobility friendly toilets. Venue Hire You can hire the Swan at the Globe with its view overlooking the Thames for entertaining, conferences, wedding and civil partnership receptions and functions or film location. Check website for details and bookings.
76th Regent's Park Open Air Theatre Summer Season Venue: Regent's Park, NW1 Tel: 0870 060 1811 Date: 2 June - 13 September, 2008. Morning, afternoon and evening perfs. Tickets: £. Book online London Transport: Nearest Tube. Baker Street. Description: A programme of Shakespeare, Gigi, comedy and music recitals in the most perfect open air parkland setting. A Midsummer Night's Dream, (8 July - 2 August); Romeo and Juliet, (2 June - 2 August); Gigi, (6 August - 13 September). Also a series of Sunday evenings of Comedy and Music. Check the website for full details. Wheelchair Accessibility: Check website for special seating arrangements and discounts. Make your requirements known when booking. Adapted Toilets.
Sadlers Wells: West Side Story
Venue: Sadlers Wells, Rosebury Avenue, EC1R 4TN. Tel: 020 7863 8198.
Date: 22 July - 31 August, 2008. Tues-Sat, 7.30pm. Sun, 5pm. Mats Wed and Sat, 2.30pm. Description: The show which changed the face of musical theatre forever returns 50 years after its London debut for a summer season. Joey McKneely's vibrant new stage production of the classic dance musical comes to Sadlers Wells after wild critical acclaim in Tokyo, Paris and Beijing. See video clip. Wheelchair Accessibility: Check website for special seating arrangements and any discounts. Make your requirements known when booking. Adapted Toilets.
Royal Opera House, Covent Garden
Venue: Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, WC2. Tel: 020 7304 4000 Date: July, 2008. London Transport: Nearest Tube. Covent Garden. Tickets: Book Online. Description: A summer season of Opera, (La Nozze di Figaro , The Rake's Progress); Dance, (Faeries, an Arthur Rackham inspired show for families), and Ballet. July sees the exciting London debut of the famed National Ballet of China with Natalia Marakova's much admired Swan Lake, (28-30 July). Marakova, who first danced with the Kirov Ballet, famously danced here in the 1980 Royal Ballet production of Swan Lake and later choreographed the Royal Ballet's legendary 1989 production of La Bayadere. Backstage tours are also available during the afternoons preceding performances. Check website for details. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes. Check with Box Office for special seating arrangements and any discounts. Make your requirements known when booking.
Offtolondon Theatre Breaks and Offers Date: Ongoing. Venue: West End and City theatres Tickets: Online booking for all seats, accommodation, etc. Description: Your guide to London's theatre programme, concert and events with online booking facility. Top musicals Billy Elliot, Cabaret, Chicago, Gone With The Wind, Lion King, Mama Mia, Phantom of the Opera, Spamalot, Sound of Music, Stomp, We Will Rock You, and more continue to draw capacity audiences nightly. Book your tickets online now. Wheelchair Accessibility: Most London theatres, some hotels, (such as the newly refurbished Russell Hotel near the British Museum), and many restaurants are now wheelchair accessible with Accessible Toilets in their public areas, and have special accommodation facilities for wheelchair users. It is however essential that you make your requirements known when booking.
Fine Art & Cultural Exhibitions
O2: Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharoahs Venue: O2 Exhibition Centre, Millennium Way, SE10. Date: Daily, 10am-5pm. Ongoing. Ends 30 August, 2008. Tickets: £15, timed entry. (Concessions). Book online - Weekend tickets are the first to sell out. Book Hotel & Tutticket Break from £63.50. London Transport: Nearest Tube. North Greenwich. Thames travel: Riverline O2 Express to Queen Elizabeth II Pier. Description: For more than 3,000 years Tutankhamun's treasures lay unseen beneath the Egyptian sands until unearthed by Howard Carter in 1922/23. When they were shown at the British Museum in 1972 they were the ultimate 'must see' event. Now Tutankhamun returns in a spectacular new exhibition of 130 priceless treasures from the tomb and other Valley of the Kings royal burials, under the auspices of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities and its ebullient Director, Dr. Zahi Hawass. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Royal Academy Summer Show
Venue: Burlington House, Piccadilly, W1J 0BD. Tel: 020 7300 8000.
Dates: 9 June - 17 August, 2008. 10am-6pm daily. Fridays 10am-10pm. Tickets: £7, (Concessions). Book online or Tel: 0870 8488 484.
London Transport: Nearest Tube. Green Park; Piccadilly Circus.
Description: The two centuries old Royal Academy Summer Exhibition is now world's largest open submission contemporary art exhibition, with a tradition of showcasing work for sale by unknown and emerging artists alongside that of more established and even august names. Past Royal Academicians include William Blake and JMW Turner, whose work is now permanently on exhibition at Tate Britain, (see Shophound Alexia's Free London for details), and more recently Sir Peter Blake and David Hockney, whose 2007 English landscape exhibit took up an entire gallery wall and will be the largest painting ever hung at the Royal Academy. The Summer Exhibition attracts over 11,000 submissions of which only 1,200 are accepted for show; paintings, sculptures, photographs, drawings, prints and architectural models, most of which you can buy, though what you may like may well have received a red sticker at the opening Private View. This event is very much a part of the London social scene and some 150,000 visitors will pass through the galleries before it closes. Tickets to the Private View, (obtainable from the Special Events Manager), are a notable and sometimes memorable occasion. Friday late evenings are a popular option, with table service dining and jazz music, (advance booking recommended). Dress: Artistically casual - or casually artistic. The opening Private View is artistically smart or artistically eccentric, or possibly an idiosyncratic and occasionally flamboyant fusion of the two. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes to all floors. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Free Range - Art & Design; Degrees Shows
Venue:The Old Truman Brewery, 91 Brick Lane, E1 6QL. Tel: 020 7770 6100.
Dates: Ongoing until 23 July, 2008. Opening Thursdays 6pm-10pm & Show Days; Fridays-Mondays 10am - 7pm.
Tickets: No entry fee, but do buy something from a student...he may be tomorrow's Picasso!
London Transport: Liverpool Street Station.
Description: This is Europe's largest graduate art and design show and the hottest way to buy art straight from the artist. Over the 8 week period thousands of students from the UK's top art and design colleges will exhibit their work giving them the best opportunity to promote their work to you, their potential buyer. Over 100,000 art lovers visited the show last year, putting it in league with the Royal Academy of Art and the Victoria and Albert Museum. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
London Festival of Architecture Venue: British Museum, Great Russell Street, WC1B 3DG and other venues. Dates: 20 June - 20 July 2008. Tickets: Various. Book online. Some events are free. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Various. Description: A celebration and exploration of the city's buildings, streets and spaces - with over 600 exhibitions, lectures, public space installations, guided walks, bicycle rides, boat tours, parties, design workshops and debates. The buzz of activity over the month of the Festival moves across five key 'Hubs', with large-scale public events taking place in a different Hub each weekend; Kensington, Chelsea & Knightsbridge; Canary Wharf, Stratford & Thames Gateway; King's Cross, Bloomsbury & Covent Garden; Southwark & South Bank; Clerkenwell & the City of London. As a start to the Festival you can see what London would look like if it was made of jelly in the Quad at University College London, (Gower Street, WC1E 6BT, 8am-1pm, 4 July). Architectural Jelly Design Competition entries from top architects reveal the best jelly moulded buildings. Look out for performers in jelly costumes, jelly wrestling and dancing around the jelly altar. £5 will buy you a ticket, and perhaps a spoonful of jelly before the latest Canary Wharf skyscraper design melts in the summer sun! Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Tate Modern: Cy Twombly: Cycles and Seasons Venue: Tate Modern, 25 Sumner Street, Southwark, SE1 9TG. Tel: 020 7887 8888. Dates: 19 June - 14 September, 2008. Tickets: £10, (Concessions). Main galleries are free. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Southwark, Blackfriars. Check online for travel details. Description: Coinciding with Cy Twombly's 80th year, this will be the first major retrospective in the UK for twenty years of his work. This is a unique opportunity to examine his paintings, drawings and sculpture across his long and distinguished career. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes. Some parking spaces for disabled visitors are available on the west side of the building. Wheelchairs and electric scooters are available on request for use by visitors. Reservations are compulsory for all disabled parking spaces. Check online for details and concessions.
National Gallery: Radical Light: Italy's Divisionist Painters 1891 - 1910 Venue: Sainsbury Wing, National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, Westminster, WC2N 5DN Dates: 10:00-6pm Daily. Late nights Wed 9pm. 18 June - 7 September, 2008 Tickets: £8, (Concessions), £4 Tue 2.30pm-6pm. Children Under 12: Free. The main gallery is free. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Charing Cross, Leicester Square. Carparks: St.Martin's Lane NCP, Trafalgar Masterpark. Description: Inroducing the Divisionists, a little known late nineteenth century Italian movement, to Londoners. Italy's Divisionist painters are so-called because, when they first showed in Milan in 1891 critics were sharply divided. The group, who included Giovanni Segantini, Angelo Morbelli, Emilio Longoni and Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo, used a technique close to the French pointillism to convey their response to the social unrest of a newly unified Italy. Their method, daubing unmixed, undiluted stabs of colour directly to the canvas, helped them to capture the light - as well as the changes they witnessed - in a vibrant, radical way, that had more to do with the physics of light. Also included in the exhibition are works by Futurist artists Giacomo Balla, Umberto Boccioni, Gino Severini, whose emerging movement fed on the Divisionists. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Imperial War Museum: For Your Eyes Only Venue: Imperial War Museum, Lambeth Road, SE1 6HZ. Tel: 0207 416 5320.
Date: Until 1 March 2009.
London Transport: Nearest Tube. Lambeth North; Elephant and Castle; Waterloo, (wheelchair accessible); Southwark, (wheelchair accessible). Tickets: £8.(Concessions). Book online. The rest of the museum is FREE. Description: A celebration of the centenary of Ian Fleming's birth with a fascinating exhibition devoted to his James Bond, the 007 gizmos and gadgetry, and Fleming's own remarkable life and wartime experiences. A special book is available to accompany the exhibition. Wheelchair Accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes, on all floors bar the 3rd and 4th. Accessible cafe on ground floor. The Museum has a number of manual, folding frame wheelchairs that can be borrowed for the duration of your visit. Check for full details
Skin+Bones: Parallel Practices in Fashion and Architecture Venue: Embankment Galleries, Somerset House, Strand. WC2R 1LA. Tel: 020 7845 4600. Date: Until 10 August, 2008. London Transport: Nearest Tube. Temple. Tickets: £8.(Concessions). Book online. Description: The first major international exhibition devoted to the complex relationship between fashion and architecture. Skin+Bones: Parallel Practices in Fashion and Architecture., an installation designed by architect Eva Jiricna. Taking the early 1980s as its starting point Skin+Bones examines the many visual and conceptual ideas that unite the two disciplines. The exhibition is organized by The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), and features the work of internationally renowned names such as Vivienne Westwood, Alexander McQueen, Comme des Garcons, Yohji Yamamoto, Future Systems, Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid. After huge success in Los Angeles and Tokyo, the exhibition opens in London with specially selected new pieces including work by Boudicca, Thomas Heatherwick, Martin Margiela, and Hussein Chalayan. Wheelchair Accessibility: YES. Adapted Toilets. However no details are shown on the official website, a surprising ommission by a registered national charity. Call 020 7845 4600 for details.
Museum Summer Specials
British Museum: Hadrian - Empire and Conflict Venue: Great Russell Street, WC1B 3DG. Dates: 24 July - 26 October 2008. Tickets: £12, (Concessions). London Transport: Nearest Tube: Tottenham Court Road, Russell Square. Carparks: Bloomsbury Square, Holborn NCP. Description: This special exhibition with artefacts from 28 museums worldwide and recent excavations, explores the life, love and legacy of Hadrian, Rome's most enigmatic emperor, Hadrian who ruled an empire from AD 117-138 that by his death comprised much of Britain, Europe west of the Rhine, northern Africa and the Middle East. A capable and, when necessary, a ruthless military leader, he realigned and stabilised the imperial borders and quashed revolt, stabilising a territory critically overstretched by his predecessor, Trajan. Hadrian had a great passion for architecture and Greek culture. His extensive building programme included the Pantheon in Rome, his villa in Tivoli and the city of Antinoopolis, which he founded and named after his male lover Antinous Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Handel House Museum: Handel and the Divas Venue: 25 Brook Street, W1K 4HB Dates: Until 16 November 2008 Tickets: £5. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Bond Street. Carparks: Grosvenor Hill NCP, Welbeck street NCP. Description: London home to the baroque composer George Frideric Handel from 1723 until his death in 1759. It was here that he composed some of the greatest music in history, including Messiah, Zadok the Priest and Music for the Royal Fireworks. The Museum celebrates Handel's life and works, displaying portraits of Handel and his contemporaries in finely restored Georgian interiors and bringing live music back to his house. Recitals take place every Thursday evening and regularly at the weekends. A special exhibition looks at the composer's great operatic stars, including Margherita Durastanti, Francesca Cuzzoni, Faustina Bordoni, Susannah Cibber and Kitty Clive. These female singers played an important role in Handel's choice of subject and the development of his musical style. Here they're remembered through exhibits such as a rare chalk and graphite sketch of Margherita Durastanti by Phillipe Mercier, oil portraits of Kitty Clive and Susannah Cibber and Willem Verelst's portrait of Anna Maria Strada del Po. Live music recitals of the composer's works complement the exhibition. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes, from Lancashire House entrance. Disabled Toilets: Yes. Disabled parking in Brooks Mews.
Natural History Museum: Amazing Butterflies Venue: Cromwell Road, SW7 5BD Dates: 10am-5pm daily. Until 17 August 2008 Tickets: £5 (Adults), £3.50 (Children & Concessions), Free (Children Under 3). Timed entry. London Transport: Nearest Tube: South Kensington, Gloucester Road. Carparks: Union Car Parks, Harrington Road. Description: Explore the life cycle of some of the world's most beautiful creatures this summer in the giant maze and butterfly house at the Amazing Butterflies, the new family exhibition at the Museum. Live through their whole lifecycle from caterpillar to adult butterfly at the butterfly house where you can walk among the real-life tropical butterflies from America, Africa and Asia. Visitors inspired by what they've seen are encouraged to get involved in The Butterfly Monitoring Scheme where volunteers monitor the number and type of butterflies along a two to four kilometre route. Go to www.ukbms.org to register and to www.butterfly-conservation.org for more information. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes, in main building.
Science Museum: The Science of Survival Venue: Exhibition Road, SW7 2DD. Dates: 10am-5.45pm daily. Until 2 November 2008 Tickets: £6. London Transport: Nearest Tube: South Kensington, Gloucester Road. Carparks: Union Car Parks, Harrington Road. Description: The exhibition is set to be one of the most exciting and thought provoking family attractions of the year exploring how we shall survive on a changing planet. In this fun, hands-on exhibition, the adults of today and tomorrow can explore how their lives and others could be affected by changing climate and resources, and get a glimpse of how we might live in 2050. IMAX 3D Cinema: Various programmes including 1. Secrets of the Pharaohs: Mummies 2. Sea Monsters. 3. Space Station. 4. Dinosaurs Live. £7.50, (Concessions). Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
Doctor Who Exhibition Venue: Museum Hall, Earls Court Exhibition Centre, Warwick Road, SW5 9TA Dates: 10am-5pm. Until 18th September 2008 Tickets: Adults £9, Children £7. London Transport: Nearest Tube: West Brompton, Earls Court. Carparks: Broadwood Terrace NCP. Description: The time travelling Doctor lands his TARDIS outside Earls Court Exhibition Centre for the largest ever Doctor Who display in the UK. See props, costumes, monsters and creatures from all the latest episodes of the hit BBC TV show. Memorabilia includes set pieces from the present series starring David Tennant as the Timelord and comedian Catherine Tate and with guest appearances from Billie Piper. On display are the famous blue phonebox the TARDIS, trusty sidekick K9 and a clutch of the Doctor's famous enemies, the Daleks being the most satisfyingly terrifying to children of all ages! The Museum Hall entrance is opposite West Brompton Station. Wheelchair accessibility: Yes. Adapted Toilets: Yes.
London Walks
Hampstead, A National Portrait Gallery Walk
Date: 25, 26 July, 10.30am-3.30pm. 2008. Venue: The Walk starts at National Portrait Gallery. Tickets: £15/£10 concessions. Pay at Gallery. London Transport: Nearest Tube. Charing Cross Station. Description: The leafy North London village of Hampstead, celebrated as the home to artists, writers and intellectuals, is the perfect location for a summer walk. The day begins with a lecture tracing the stories of Hampstead's most famous residents including John Constable, John Keats and Lucian Freud and is followed by a guided walk through some of London's most beautiful eighteenth-century streets, led by historian and Blue Badge Guide Owen Joseph. Travel to Hampstead is not included although the group will be accompanied to Hampstead on the London Underground by the guide.
Jack The Ripper's Sinister London Venue: Selected departure points by coach. Date: Fridays, Sundays. from 6.40pm Description:Tread in the footsteps of the infamous Jack The Ripper down the dark, narrow, gas-lit alleyways immortalized in such films as "From Hell". Led by one of the renowned London Blue Badge Guides, you will visit four murder sights. Your "Ripperologist" will run through some of the suspects who sparked a Victorian Whodunit that'll leave you as gripped as its victims. Approx. 4 hours.
Blood & Tears Walk
Venue: Start from outside Barbican Tube Station. Date: Daily except Tues and Suns. 7pm and afternoons. See website for details Tickets: £7, (Concessions). Pay Guide at start. London Transport: Nearest Tube: Barbican, (Circle line, Metropolitan line and the Hammersmith & City line). Description: This award-winning Horror London walk by qualified researcher and former professional actor Declan McHugh is now in its eighth year. The walk took years of research and covers sites connected with London's darkest past, including places associated with grave robbers, serial killers (including Jack the Ripper), secret tunnels, witchcraft and conspiracy. Learn about London's hidden history of Horror! Prisons, Prostitutes and Punishment; Highwaymen, Hangings and Hauntings; Disease, Disaster and Death.
Jack the Ripper Walk Venue: Aldgate, Whitechapel, Spitalfields. EC. Tel: 020 8530 8443 Date: Daily. 7pm-9pm. Tickets: £6.50. Online Booking London Transport: Aldgate East, (District, Hammersmith and City Lines). Description: Guided Exploration of the Whitechapel and Spitalfields alleys and pubs where serial killer Jack the Ripper murdered at least five and possibly many more prostitutes in a reign of terror during 1888.
The Shakespeare City Walk Venue: Starts from Blackfriars Tube Station, Exit 8. (Circle and District Line). Date: Mondays and Fridays, 11am. 2007. Tel: 020 7625 5155 before date for confirmation. Tickets: £6.(Concessions). Book online or pay guide at start. London Transport: Nearest Tube. Blackfriars. (Circle & District Line). Description: Former professional actor Declan McHugh leads you on a 90 minute walk through the City of London, uncovering often little-known monuments and locations with connections to Shakespeare's life, his friends, his loves and his work, while declaiming the Bard's poetry and prose in true thespian style.
Free London Art & Museum Collections
Permanent collections in many galleries and museums are entry free. Individually mounted temporary exhibitions within specified rooms may carry a ticket charge however, (bookable online or at the door). Shophound Alexia's Free London list gives full details including address, opening times, getting there and description.
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Burlington Bertie's Top Tips
A Night 'On the town' While in London, treat your partner to a superb evening out 'On The Town' with OfftoLondon's theatre and dinner package.
Choose your Hotel Use OfftoLondon's hassle-free and secure booking facilities to obtain the best internet prices for your overnight, 'City Break' or longer term accommodation requirements; from de-luxe 5-star hotels to comfortable hostels.
Book your tickets online Book before your visit book all your tickets with Offtolondon.com. This way you will ensure best seats and best prices at the events, exhibitions and shows of your choice without the hassle of price bargaining and queuing on the day.
London Transport Oyster Card The Central London congestion charge zone for visitors driving in London now covers all main areas of attraction. It makes sense to travel by the safe London Transport bus or Tube. Buy a multi-journey Oyster Card before you arrive, (you can top this up at will), and you will save money, time and hassle.
Something for the Weekend? Add spice to your London visit with a "Weekender" visit to Paris or Rome. Cheap and speedy travel now brings these city gems within easy reach of all. Day trips via Eurostar to Paris for a morning's shopping, afternoon visit to the Louvre and evening meal on the Seine are now a popular excursion option for Londoners. Or make an overnight stop and hit the January Sales! Offtolondon's associated companies, travel specialists Offtoparis and Offtorome will take care of all your travel and accommodation requirements and show you the sites.
Disabled Accessibility Check this site managed by the London charity Artsline for a comprehensive list of venues, events and site map for disabled accessibility and parking, facilities for visually and hearing imparied, and concessions.

NYC Breaks
The weak dollar makes the Big Apple a most attractive option for UK and European visitors. New York has never been better value! Spend time soaking up style on Fifth Avenue at Bergdorf Goodman or Saks Fifth Avenue. Buy your digital cameras and gadgetry for fabulous prices at specialist Adorama on West 18th Street. Take in a Broadway Show, dine superbly and see all the landmark sites. New York! New York! Its a Wonderful Town! Check it all out on our sister site A Traveller's Guide to New York where you will find discount hotels, NYC tours, information on NYC neighborhoods and more.
 Discovering London - Full Day London City Tour 8.5 - 9 hours - Drive to Westminster, past Downing Street, home of the Prime Minister, and on to the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben. Stop for a visit inside Westminster Abbey, site of many royal coronations. Visit Poets' Corner and the tombs of many well-known scientists and monarchs. Also see the Chapel of Henry VII.
Stop near Buckingham Palace to see the colourful ceremony of the Changing of the Guard before driving through busy streets and past peaceful parks to Piccadilly, home of London's Theatreland. Pass Trafalgar Square with its impressive Nelson's Column and fountains, before reaching a traditional London pub for lunch.
The afternoon starts with a cruise on the River Thames, during which a Thames Waterman will point out the places of interest along the way. Disembark to visit the Tower of London where you will meet the Beefeaters clad in Tudor uniforms, hear the legend of the ravens and some spine chilling tales from the Tower's 900 year history. You will also see the Crown Jewels, magnificently displayed in the new Jewel House.
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