惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
F
Fortinet All Blogs
U
Unit 42
F
Full Disclosure
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园 - 司徒正美
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
The Cloudflare Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
罗磊的独立博客
D
DataBreaches.Net
C
Check Point Blog
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
O
OpenAI News
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
Security Latest
Security Latest
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
P
Proofpoint News Feed
B
Blog RSS Feed
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
H
Help Net Security
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
GbyAI
GbyAI
I
Intezer
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Vercel News
Vercel News
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
IT之家
IT之家
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
腾讯CDC

City AM

As it happened: Stocks mixed as Trump warns takes ‘two to tango’ on Iran peace As it happened: Stocks mixed as Trump warns takes ‘two to tango’ on Iran peace Replace Reeves if Starmer goes, voters tell Labour Right to Buy has been a huge success, of course the left hates it Regional bond revolution risks making Britain more unequal and less prudent Labour may not agree with Blair, but the public does… The world can’t keep consuming more than it produces If performance matters more than privilege then prove it Wayve: London robotaxis will make passengers forget there’s no driver Mandelson Files add insult to injury, but the patient was already beyond saving Blackstone Raises its Largest Asia Private Equity Fund at $13.1 Billion Pension master trusts join forces to tackle outdated transfer systems Iran ‘pulls out of talks with US’ and threatens to strike Israel Anthropic files for IPO as race with OpenAI heats up ‘Be more Trumpian’ – Mandelson discussed dire economy and ‘lack of verve’ with key Starmer ally Deloitte UK appoints first chief AI officer in drive for ‘AI-enabled’ services Private credit is crowded — but disciplined capital still knows where to look Squash players turn to social media to cash in on LA Olympic Games opportunities Interactive Brokers Integrates AI into Client Portfolios – Informed by Agentic Technology, Controlled by the Client WWEX Group and Auctane Complete Merger, Creating Leading Logistics Provider ShipStation Global Sadiq Khan: London tech boom can weather ‘dizzying’ AI risks New mixed gender trophy introduced for coming Hundred season Labour voters lead AI adoption as public remains split on impact North Highland Names Anthony Shaw Global Chief Executive Officer Vyond Appoints SaaS Industry Veteran Scott Ernst as Chief Executive Officer Winston Taylor Completes Historic Transatlantic Combination M&S chief’s pay slashed by £3m after cyberattack turmoil Inside Celonis, the German tech unicorn that won over a fifth of the FTSE 100 Stop and think before asking for a bigger salary Brits back Blair’s growth calls – yet are squeamish over welfare cuts Number of claims management firms halves after FCA clampdown Richard Desmond hit with £40m bill over ‘fanciful’ lottery feud Pub bosses warn tax hikes driving youth unemployment crisis UK manufacturing survives Iran war impact Labour sheds union member support to Reform, poll shows Private equity-backed Ryan triumphs in bidding for European tax adviser Svalner Atlas Wise shares plummet as money transfer firm faces fraud investigation KBRA Releases Research – European Fibre ABS: From Build-out to Securitisation Everbridge Expands Presence in Germany with New Munich Office Iran war triggers slump in selfies, ME Group warns Landlords rush to protect income over Renters’ Rights Act fears Ascensia Diabetes Care Expands CONTOUR® Portfolio with CONTOUR®COMFORT Pen Needles to Bring Greater Stability and Control to the Everyday Injection Experience Corient Completes Acquisitions of Stonehage Fleming and Stanhope Capital Group; Global Assets Surpass US$500 Billion Autobrains and Uber to Launch Agentic AI Robotaxi Program in Munich built on NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion Easyjet fires back at ‘highly opportunistic timing’ as Castlelake weighs takeover bid House prices fall again as property market ‘deteriorates’ Exclusive: Roland Garros star and ATP chief in £450,000 tennis fund raise Milburn NEET review: Anger crackles from the page but will Labour act? Deloitte and KPMG challenge PwC’s iron grip on FTSE 100 clients City policy chairman: 10 years on from Brexit, the UK still needs the EU Fintech firms grew four times faster than traditional banks in 2025 Revolut, Wayve and Elevenlabs join European tech sovereignty push UK music tech faces scale-up crunch as growth funding collapses House prices will fall by two per cent this year – the most since the financial crisis BCG, Bain and Alvarez & Marsal to ramp up entry level hiring despite AI fears NATO military chief presses UK to accelerate defence pledges Ministers back SNP probe as Sturgeon refuses to apologise for Murrell Key Mandelson file withheld by Cabinet Streeting suggests North Sea drilling and NI cuts in latest pitch Manchester City and Spygate prove lawyer gulf is opening in football ‘Defining moment’: UK’s largest train operator enters public ownership Trump yet to make ‘final determination’ on Iran war despite discussions Chaos at Heathrow as burst water pipe causes train cancellations Neil Woodford criticises BP board for ousting ‘shouty’ chairman Easyjet attracts takeover interest from US private credit firm Burnham would end asylum hotel contracts if he was PM, allies say Universal Music rejects Bill Ackman’s $65bn takeover bid How do professional footballers keep their divorces private? Fortegra Completes Acquisition by DB Insurance Training Maestro Size set for profitable Sunday at Sha Tin Trust in Patch to deliver the goods at Sha Tin Iran and Russia to target Fifa World Cup, threat experts say I’m 50 – but I feel young dining at Simpson’s in the Strand London was once a destination for the young, now it’s a compromise Business services staff face redundancies at City law firm Can Newcastle go posh? Our honest review of city’s first five-star hotel IFF Enters Into Agreement to Sell Its Food Ingredients Business to CVC Bank of England’s Bailey: Interest rates hike may not be needed Reeves’ savings package to have minimal impact on inflation rise Natwest and Barclays sweeten mortgage costs as Iran peace hopes ease interest rate fears Arsenal Champions League final tickets on resale sites for £200,000 KPMG Australia boss resigns amid whistleblower scandal KBRA Releases Research – Spanish RPL RMBS: Resilient Performance and an Established Asset Class Ocado shares rocket after striking Asda home deliveries deal Uber wants your journey on tape as safety concerns mount Burnham hits back at Blair with more state control for ‘good growth’ Top banks urge Rachel Reeves to expand small business lending scheme Private equity boom slows down as the deal bar rises for City firms £450m City block approved after developers lop three storeys of plan Champ Rugby: Bedford vs Worcester shows strength of second tier Reeves’ summer of fun won’t deliver growth I’m a social landlord, but London housing needs the private sector Moving abroad won’t save you from the British tax man Beetlejuice musical review: I’ve never heard West End fans scream this loud Asana Acquires StackAI, Adding Cross-System Execution for Human-Agent Teams AAHI’s SLA-SE Adjuvant Technology Powers Lilly’s Acquisition of Curevo’s Next-Generation Shingles Vaccine Bidgely’s EmPOWER AI London Convenes Leaders to Map the Future of Electrification, Load Flexibility, Customer Experience and Energy Affordability Music venues are in dire straits: V&A show asks how we can help KBRA Assigns Preliminary Ratings to Oban Cards 2026-1 PLC Property rich, pension poor: Meet the ‘sleepwalking’ generation
Judi Dench Theatre is a fitting tribute to the great dame 
Eliot Wilson · 2026-06-17 · via City AM

 |  Updated: 

Judi Dench smiling at a public event, wearing a stylish outfit, with a backdrop suggesting a formal gathering or premiere.
Dame Judi Dench has theatre named after her

On Tuesday, the Shaftesbury Theatre, the largest independent theatre in the West End, announced that it was changing its name. As of February 2027, following a renovation which will include restoration of its unique opening dome, it will be the Judi Dench Theatre, in honour of the 91-year-old actress who boasts an Academy Award, a Tony Award, two Golden Globes, four British Academy Television Awards and six Film Awards, and seven Laurence Olivier Awards.

Dame Judi Dench is more than the sum of her glittering career, though. Her versatility, longevity and very obvious good humour have made her a genuine national treasure, a label too frequently applied to more transient stars. As the old joke runs, to start a riot in Surrey, you need only walk into a local tea room and say, “I think Judi Dench is overrated”.

Dench said that “to have this beautiful theatre renamed after me is truly overwhelming”. This is not empty, soulless branding; she was one of 30 founding members of the Theatre of Comedy Company, a group of actors, directors and writers brought together in 1983 by playwright Ray Cooney, which took on the lease of the Shaftesbury Theatre and later bought the building with the aim of presenting the best of British comedy. Other members included Richard Briers, John Mortimer, George Cole, Nigel Hawthorne, Sheila Hancock, Julia McKenzie and husband-and-wife Maureen Lipman and Jack Rosenthal. Dench is also a close friend of the Taffner family, Donald Taffner Jr currently serving as Chairman of the Shaftesbury Theatre.

Toast the City Awards Judi Dench

Judi Dench: One of the great actresses

Few would argue with Dench’s status as one of Britain’s greatest actresses. She made her professional stage debut nearly 70 years ago, in September 1957, playing Ophelia in the Old Vic’s production of Hamlet at the Royal Court Theatre in Liverpool. She made her first appearance in London is the same role later that year; the eponymous Prince of Denmark was played by John Neville, not quite 10 years her senior; he was seen as Sir John Gilegud’s natural successor in the Shakespeare canon while his friend Richard Burton was tipped for the mantle of Sir Laurence Olivier.

Having been involved in the 1950s revival of the York Mystery Plays, a cycle of Middle English dramas performed for the feast of Corpus Christi in the mediaeval city, Dench attended the Central School of Speech and Drama and won the Gold Medal as Outstanding Student. She has scarcely been out of work since then, and has mastered seemingly almost every genre, from major films like A Room with a View, Pride and Prejudice and the eight James Bond features in which she played M, to television performances in Love in a Cold Climate and the situation comedies A Fine Romance and As Time Goes By. 

Her roster of theatrical roles is immense. Dench has played Katherine of Valois, Juliet, Titania, Lady Macbeth, Viola, Joan of Arc, Sally Bowles, Major Barbara Undershaft, Portia, the Duchess of Malfi, Beatrice, Regan, Lady Bracknell, Cleopatra, Gertrude, Madame Ranevskaya, Arkadina and Mistress Quickly.

An actor who had a bit of everything

It is much more than longevity, however. To see Dench at work is always to watch an exercise in inch-perfect performance. In John Madden’s enjoyable hokey Shakespeare in Love (1998), playing Queen Elizabeth I, she appears on screen for five minutes 52 seconds across four scenes – less than five per cent of the film. Yet you cannot watch anything else when she is on camera, and Dench rightly won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, seeing off Kathy Bates, Brenda Blethyn, Rachel Griffiths and Lynn Redgrave.

Dench has extraordinary range. Bernard Levin called her “a comic actress of consummate skill, perhaps the very best we have”, and even in gentle 1980s sit-coms she was able to make a great deal from not very much. Yet she was utterly compelling alongside Ian McKellen in Trevor Nunn’s 1976 minimalist, stripped-back Macbeth; all Michael Billington could say in The Guardian was “If this is not great acting I don’t know what is”. She could have been a cipher as the new M in GoldenEye, Pierce Brosnan’s first outing as 007, yet her character developed more significance and depth than either of her predecessors, Bernard Lee and Robert Brown, both fine actors.

As a Shakespearean, where she began in 1957, Dench numbers among the very best. More than that, she came to Shakespeare at a pivotal time, when clear, classical declamation—the tradition in which Gielgud had been raised—was giving way to greater naturalism and more varied interpretation. She joined Peter Nunn’s Royal Shakespeare Company only nine months after its formation and appeared in a dozen plays with the RSC. With Ian Richardson, Vanessa Redgrave, Ian Holm, Ian Bannen, Diana Rigg, Christopher Plummer, Dorothy Tutin and others, she shaped the Shakespeare we know today.

Judi Dench was a musical icon, too

Her roles in musical theatre have wanted for little, in Cabaret, The Good Companions and A Little Night Music, and there was as much sympathy as disapproval for her presence in Tom Hooper’s disastrous Cats (Dench stoically said “I didn’t read anything about the response to it, nor have I seen it”).

Dench is only the second non-royal woman to have a West End theatre named after her, following Lord Lloyd-Webber’s New London Theatre being rechristened the Gillian Lynne Theatre in 2018; the legendary choreographer Dame Gillian Lynne died two months afterwards. It is to be hoped next year’s renaming of the Shaftesbury does not have the same effect on Dame Judi.

They are not the only London playhouses to be named after living people: the Gielgud and the Sondheim were both dubbed during their eponyms’ lifetimes, as were the Olivier and Dorfman stages at the National Theatre. Harold Pinter, Noël Coward and Ivor Novello were not honoured until after their deaths.

Dame Judi Dench will be 92 this December, and her loss of eyesight to macular degeneration means she has effectively retired. No actress has ever had a West End theatre named in her honour, and there is no-one more fitting than Dench, a performer who has demonstrated the ability to do anything and to reassure audiences that any film or play will have some merit. 

So let’s welcome the Shaftesbury Theatre’s decision and remind ourselves how lucky we are to have not just her body of work but Dench herself with us. There is, after all, nothing like the Dame.