National Theatre

Watch classic Norwegian drama (such as Ibsen with English subtitles) in the 125-year-old gilded auditorium, or tour the Golden Hall and backstage areas where Norwegian cultural history has been performed for over a century.

This neo-Renaissance building opened in 1899 as Norway's premier stage for Norwegian drama, sitting in the "royal corridor" between Parliament and the Royal Palace on Karl Johans gate. Architect Henrik Bull designed the rough-hewn granite facade topped with a golden dome. The theater houses four stages: the Main Stage (Hovedscenen) is the historic gilded auditorium where large-scale classic productions (often Ibsen) happen, while Amfiscenen and Malersalen host experimental, intimate, or modern plays.

The building is deeply connected to Henrik Ibsen and Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Norway's two greatest playwrights. Their massive statues flank the main entrance like guardians: Ibsen on the left, Bjørnson on the right, both gazing sternly down at the city. A statue of Ludvig Holberg (the "Molière of the North") stands on the hillock between the theater and university behind it.

Guided tours run Saturdays or Sundays (verify current schedule), lasting about 1 hour for roughly 140 NOK. Tours access the "Golden Hall" (gullfoajeen), the Royal Box, and backstage areas. This is the best way to see the lavish interior if you're not attending a play.

The park directly in front transforms into Spikersuppa ice skating rink in winter, free to use. The pond area becomes one of Oslo's most popular outdoor winter activities, packed with families and tourists skating against the backdrop of the golden-domed theater.


Most performances are Norwegian-only. English subtitles are not standard. You must specifically check for "Tekstet på engelsk" on individual play pages. Assume Norwegian unless explicitly stated otherwise.

Highlights


Book an English-subtitled Ibsen performance if one is running during your visit. Check the website specifically for subtitled plays. These typically happen in summer or during cultural festivals.
Take a Saturday or Sunday guided tour to see the Golden Hall, Royal Box, and backstage areas. The interior gilding and historic architecture justify the 140 NOK cost. This is the only way to access these spaces without attending a performance.
Visit Theatercaféen across the street at Hotel Continental for pre- or post-theater drinks. This Vienna-style grand café has been the cultural elite's meeting place for over a century. The Art Nouveau interior and traditional menu are part of Oslo's theater tradition even though it's technically not part of the theater building.


Best time to go


Summer months (June-August) for English-subtitled Ibsen performances when cultural programming targets international visitors. Guided tours normally run Saturdays/Sundays year-round. For exterior visits and the Ibsen/Bjørnson statues, any time works.

Time needed


Plan for 1.5–3 hours including the performance and time to arrive/leave.

Getting there


Use Nationaltheatret station; the theatre stands immediately adjacent to the station exits.

What to do nearby


2.3km
Over 40 sculptures by Dalí, Rodin, and Louise Bourgeois scattered through a wild forest overlooking the fjord. Stand where Edvard Munch painted The Scream's background, all with free 24-hour access.
2.3km Insider pick
A concentrated, ordered presentation of a single sculptor´s entire public programme that lets you study material, form and expression across more than 200 works. It is free, open 24/7, and captures the universal human experience (joy, anger, grief) so perfectly that you don't need to know anything about art to feel it.
2.4km
See and stand underneath the original balsa wood raft that Thor Heyerdahl sailed 8,000 kilometers across the Pacific in 1947 to prove ancient peoples could have crossed oceans

Hotels nearby


1.0km Insider pick
Built in the former headquarters of the Norwegian America Line, the company that shipped thousands of emigrants to the US in the early 1900s. More character than anything else in this part of Oslo. The cocktail bar sits in the old booking hall where passengers once collected their tickets, all dark wood and low lighting. Two-minute walk from the airport train platform.
1.0km
Oslo's biggest hotel. New and fresh. Rooftop bar with fjord views, three minutes from the airport train. Rooms are unremarkable chain-hotel fare. But the rooftop alone makes it a sharper pick than the faceless business hotels nearby, and the location is hard to fault for convenience.
1.0km
A 19th-century station building with real architectural character, three minutes from the airport train platform, literally inside Oslo Central Station.