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Circus Tavern, Manchester

86 Portland Street
Manchester
M1 4GX

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Reviews (Current Rating Average: of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


ROB Camra left this review about Circus Tavern

A famous and tiny pub on one of the main drags in Manchester. The bar is is effectively a piece of wood across a corner. The only beer on cask is Tetleys Bitter, which is by no means my favourite beer, but it is well kept. Photos all around the walls of the two small rooms. It's OK to pop in for one, but it is a tourist trap.

On 1st March 2013 - rating: 6
[User has posted 3227 recommendations about 3138 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


paulof horsham left this review about The Circus Tavern

Basically a corridor with a tiny 'bar' squeezed in and a couple of rooms to the right (both pretty small as well). Given the cramped nature of the place, you're encouraged to take a seat (if there's any free) and conversation with other visitors is pretty much guaranteed. Ale choice has doubled since John Bonser's visit - Robinson's 'Dizzy Blonde' was available in addition to the Tetleys when I popped in.

Worth seeing but, given the lack of space, you'll probably want to be moving on after a couple (which gives everyone else a chance, after all).

On 16th December 2012 - rating: 7
[User has posted 462 recommendations about 434 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


John Bonser left this review about The Circus Tavern

A few days away in the Manchester / Stockport area gave me the opportunity to revisit some old favourites that I hadn’t done for yonks and this was a good starting place.

In the heart of the City Centre, The Circus Tavern is truly one of Manchester’s must see pubs. It’s an amazing survivor in a city that has inevitably had much redevelopment over the years. Flanked by fast food outlets with garish brightly coloured frontages, The Circus Tavern is unassuming and could easily pass unnoticed by the casual passer by

As we approach the pub, we see a painted message high up on the wall of the small pub frontage proclaiming that the pub has “The Smallest Bar in Europe, The Biggest Welcome in the World”. We also see the familiar blue plaque denoting it as one of Tetley’s Heritage Inns.

Inside, we find a small narrow corridor with two basic rooms leading off on the right, one behind the other. The front room has fixed bench seating around the perimeter, bell pushes and room for only 4 tables. The light coloured walls are decorated with a fine collection of photographs of people who have dropped in over the years – Malcolm Allison, Kevin Keegan, Mike Tyson and, inevitably, George Best, amongst them. Many photos feature “Greek George”, the former landlord, who has now moved on. Being situated on one of Manchester’s busiest roads, the windows rattle and shudder when a bus or large lorry thunders past.

The rear room is similar in size and style and is decorated with photographs of past and present United and City players and teams. A strict neutrality is observed with both clubs given equal billing on wall space. Somewhat unusually, amid all these football prints and photos, there’s a signed team photo of the England Cricket team who played in the 1993 Ashes series.

The pub is listed in CAMRA’s National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors.

The bar counter is effectively in the corridor and is little more than a small cubby hole under the stairs with room for only one person to serve at a time. There’s no proper cash register – money is put in a small coin drawer behind the bar counter. For obvious reasons, a notice here tells you to keep the bar area clear, but, pleasingly, the irritating habit of staff asking you to sit down and taking your order at the table, which I remember from an earlier visit, appears to have been discontinued.

A solitary handpump serves Tetleys Bitter - £ 2.80p – but you come here for the atmosphere and experience, not the beer.

I’ve been in here a few times over the years now and I still regard it as one not to be missed.

On 2nd April 2012 - rating: 7
[User has posted 560 recommendations about 560 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Rex Rattus left this review about The Circus Tavern

There was just the one real ale on here – Tetley’s Cask – but it was OK. This place makes the last pub I was in – The Grey Horse Inn – look positively enormous. When we ordered our drinks the barmaid asked us to sit in the front room and that she would bring our drinks in to us. I’ve never had that service in London, although I don’t think that I’ve been in a pub with such a small and cramped area around the bar counter. The “Front Room”, which is the only room, had four tables and chairs in it, a fireplace, and nothing else. Every inch of the walls is covered with photographs, mostly of people I didn’t recognise. I did recognise the photo of Beverly Callard, as well as that featuring Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. I can believe that Beverley might have visited this pub, but Fidel and Che? I doubt it. But one of my companions pointed out that Karl Marx used to frequent the nearby and now-demolished Grey Horse, so anything is possible. I remain unconvinced.
We were the only customers when we arrived at around 1.30 PM on Monday, but it soon got crowded when a further half dozen or so customers arrived. This is a very welcoming and atmospheric little pub, but I can readily see the disadvantages of visiting when the customer numbers rise into double figures! But I would definitely visit again.

On 23rd September 2011 - rating: 8
[User has posted 2606 recommendations about 2520 pubs]


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peter ashworth left this review about The Circus Tavern

Supurb pub,Roger Button says it all in his review.A definite must see pub when anywhere near Portland Street.

On 8th December 2010 - rating: 9
[User has posted 2321 recommendations about 2277 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Clive Thompson left this review about The Circus Tavern

You have to visit the Circus Tavern if you are in the area, even just so that you believe how tiny it is. They will often close the doors on busy nights when it fills up. If you can get a spot in one of the two rooms you are lucky, if not then you are stuck drinking in the corridor.

On 7th October 2009 - rating: 6
[User has posted 777 recommendations about 697 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Roger Button left this review about The Circus Tavern

The Circus Tavern has been operational for over two hundred years and has survived the ravages of heavy wartime bombing and the subsequent major city redevelopment schemes. This is probably the smallest pub in Manchester and it shows. The bar itself is little more than a cupboard under the stairs, with room for no more than one person to serve and one person to queue. Every inch of bar space is precious. There is not even room for a proper till, the money being placed into a small coin drawer that pops in and out of its hidey-hole beneath the optics. The size of the bar may in fact be the pubs biggest drawback, being only able to stock a limited selection of drinks however all but the fussiest drinkers would appear to be catered for. The rest of the pub consists of two tiny rooms leading from a wooden partition that forms a corridor from the bar. The cosy front room is simply furnished and the lightly coloured walls are bedecked with photographs of local celebrities. The rear room is similar but the décor is geared towards the football fraternity. Both City and United's supporters clubs use the pub, an unusual choice of venue given the logistics of having organised meetings in such a small space. One wall of the room is dedicated to the red and white of United with photographs of old players and matches mixed in with various items of memorabilia whilst, in a rare example of football harmony, the adjacent wall pays homage in a similar fashion to the pale blue of City.
The pub is at it's best when it is at its busiest and most claustrophobic. It is virtually impossible to move without squeezing past other customers and, in a different environment, one could possibly feel quite uncomfortable. In the Circus Tavern, however, bodily contact is necessary, unavoidable and all done with great tact and northern humour. Striking up a conversation with a complete stranger in such intimacy is almost expected and all adds to the fun of being there in the first place. What the Circus Tavern lacks in size, it more than makes up for in atmosphere and ambience. It is truly one of the few great, unspoilt inner city pubs left in the country.

On 20th November 2005 - rating: 9
[User has posted 1239 recommendations about 1233 pubs]

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