Around 1891, Lyons met
Harold Hartley, an entrepreneurial publisher and mineral water manufacturer. As Hartley told it in his memoirs,
Eighty-eight: Not Out (1939): One evening later on Lyons, who had never travelled, asked me if I had ever been to Venice, as he had an idea that it might be reproduced with its canals in an attractive form. Being well acquainted with Venice, I at once realised its possibilities and thus "Venice in London" was born. Visions of the Grand Canal, with its churches, palaces, and gondolas flashed through my mind. Between 1891 and 1893 they staged
Venice in London, a spectacular, at the
Olympia, which combined catering by Lyons, entertainments and opportunities to purchase souvenirs with a stage show. Theatrical impresario
Imre Kiralfy, who specialised in such events, designed and directed the show and lent his name to the production to increase its public appeal. It required the import of 100
gondolas from Venice with Venetian gondoliers. According to
The Times, 4,893,980 people visited the event in its first year with 24,737 visiting on
Boxing Day 1892. ==Personal life==