, on
Calea Victoriei in 2010, replicates the exterior of the old Romanian National Theatre approximately in its original location The August 13, 1843, report of the commission charged with building the theatre determined that construction would cost 20,300
florins (standard
gold coin) of which only 13,000 gold coins were available. In 1846, a new commission engaged the
Viennese architect A. Hefft, who came up with an acceptable plan. Construction got under way in 1848, only to be interrupted in June by the
Wallachian revolution. In August 1849, after Prince
Barbu Dimitrie Ştirbei took power, he ordered that construction be completed. The theatre was inaugurated on December 31, 1852, with the play
Zoe sau Amantul împrumutat, described in the newspapers of the time as a "
vaudeville with songs". The building was built in the
baroque style, with 338 stalls on the main floor, three levels of loges, a luxurious foyer with staircases of
Carrara marble and a large gallery in which students could attend free of charge. For its first two years, the theatre was lit with
tallow lamps, but from 1854 it used
rape oil lamps; still later this was replaced by
gaslights and eventually electric lights. In 1875, at the time its name was changed to Teatrul Naţional, its director was the writer
Alexandru Odobescu. The historic theatre building on
Calea Victoriei — now featured on the 100-
leu banknote — was destroyed during the
Luftwaffe bombardment of Bucharest on August 24, 1944 (
see Bombing of Bucharest in World War II). ==The modern theatre==