Ceiling collapses at London’s Apollo Theatre

Dozens of people were injured last night after part of theatre roof caved in during packed performance, officials say.

Yesterday evening, a ceiling collapsed at London's Apollo Theatre, wounding dozens of people and prompting a swift search-and-rescue operation.

The London fire department said about 700 people were inside the theatre in the British capital when the incident occurred.

"We saw the ceiling give way and it just opped down onto the stalls. There was dust everywhere and people were screaming," one person who was part of the audience said

People were quickly ushered out of the theatre, he said.

In a message posted to Twitter soon after the incident, the fire department confirmed that all trapped audience members had been freed.

More than 75 people were injured, emergency services said, including seven who were taken to hospital with more serious injuries.

It was not immediately clear why the ceiling caved in.

The incident, which occurred during a packed performance of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, showered audience members with masonry and debris.

Emergency vehicles rushed to the scene, blocking off Shaftesbury Avenue, where the theatre is located.

Witnesses said the ceiling in the four-storey, 775-seat auditorium simply collapsed during the performance, sparking mass panic when theatregoers realised it was not part of the play.

"I heard someone scream... Ushers helped people get out," a witness said.

Thomas Asihen, who manages a fast-food restaurant located on the same block, said people ran into his business covered in dust, and he watched as others were rescued from the theatre by paramedics.

The Apollo Theatre is more than a century old, having first opened its doors in February 1901.

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Joseph MELI
Whilst wishing those injured well this puts a whole new slant on the performance being so good that ' it brought the house down '