The Guardian Australia

Major Australian musicals cancel shows as more than 90 performers contract Covid

- Elissa Blake

Covid is sweeping through the casts of musical theatre shows in Sydney and Melbourne, with major live production­s forced to cancel performanc­es.

At least 90 performers have tested positive to the highly infectious virus and whole companies have been forced into isolation.

The Sydney festival production of Qween Lear, a musical adaptation of King Lear that was meant to open at the Hordern Pavilion on 7 January, has been cancelled due to a Covid outbreak among the cast.

Frozen the Musical at Her Majesty’s Theatre in Melbourne announced Covid-positive cases on Wednesday and cancelled some performanc­es.

Opera Australia, which this week cancelled performanc­es of Great Opera Hits at the Sydney Opera House, confirmed “more than 20 [Covid] cases across the performing company”. However it said it was still planning to go ahead with its production of La Bohème on New Year’s Eve at the Sydney Opera House. “We are juggling the cast. But it’s still possible,” said a company spokespers­on.

The Sydney production­s of Come From Away and Hamilton have already cancelled several performanc­es leading up to New Year.

Many more casts who were in rehearsals in Sydney this week – including the Sydney festival production of A Chorus Line – are now experienci­ng Covid outbreaks or being forced into isolation as close contacts.

“It’s grim,” a Sydney-based musical theatre performer told Guardian Australia on Tuesday. The performer, who wanted to remain anonymous, painted a sobering picture of the scale of the issue, saying more than a dozen members of the Hamilton cast had been stricken with Covid as well as significan­t proportion­s of the cast of Come

From Away and the Alanis Morissette musical Jagged Little Pill.

On Wednesday three other prominent musical theatre insiders confirmed to Guardian Australia specific numbers of infected cast members in each production, adding there could be more cases since Tuesday.

One producer, who asked not to be named, said there had also been multiple cases among the casts of A Chorus Line and Qween Lear.

A performer who tested positive in Sydney this week, and also preferred not to be named, told Guardian Australia: “Nearly all the performers I know who are positive only have mild symptoms and we are feeling optimistic about getting back on stage. We will have antibodies so hopefully this won’t happen again. It’s frustratin­g because we were so strict. We were wearing masks right up until the moment we go on stage but it’s so contagious.”

Hamilton ticket holders are being contacted with offers of a full refund or to rebook their seats. Performanc­es of Hamilton, which were suspended on 22 December, are scheduled to recommence on 5 January.

“We certainly intend to reopen the show as soon as we can,” said a spokespers­on for the show’s producer, Michael

Cassel.

Guardian Australia contacted producers for Jagged Little Pill, Hamilton, Come From Away, A Chorus Line and Sydney festival for comment and all of them declined to give specific details about the number of positive Covid cases, citing privacy concerns.

‘We need to minimise risk’ Meanwhile, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, another Michael Cassel production – which is currently playing in Melbourne – is “business as usual”.

The producers of Jagged Little Pill, which finished its Sydney run on 19 December, were meeting on Wednesday ahead of the show’s scheduled Melbourne opening on 4 January. “We’ll see where things are at and how performanc­es will proceed,” said a company spokespers­on.

Frozen the Musical at Melbourne’s Her Majesty’s Theatre confirmed in an Instagram post on Wednesday that performanc­es on 29 and 30 December were cancelled due to Covid cases in the company.

Also in Melbourne, Moulin Rouge! The Musical is proceeding as advertised.

Covid is also hitting the independen­t theatre sector. In Sydney, an outdoor production of Shakespear­e’s As You Like It has its Orlando in isolation as a close contact of a positive case. The show is proceeding with a new actor in the role.

The 2022 Sydney festival, which opens on 6 January, said it planned to proceed despite the cancellati­on of Qween Lear as well as the “unforeseen disruption” to the musical theatre show

(stay), the latter which has had two performanc­es cancelled but is now expected to go ahead from 12 January.

“Given the evolving nature of the current Covid-19 outbreak, changes to some performanc­e schedules are expected,” festival organisers said in a statement. “Covid remains an ongoing challenge. However, it’s one that the festival is prepared for, and the safety of audiences, staff and performers is, and always will be, our number one priority.

“Any changes to the program will be actioned and announced as required. We’ll be monitoring the situation, working closely with government, and will follow any advice or orders should these change.”

Festival producers are taking extra measures to ensure their shows will go on. Actors are living in bubbles – in single rooms in the same facility where possible. Casts are being bolstered with extra understudi­es to cover sudden absences.

The State Theatre Company of South Australia is presenting its Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ? at Sydney Opera House from 13 January and is co-presenting the musical Girl from the North Country at the Theatre Royal from 5 January.

“We have understudi­es for every role in Girl From the North Country and we are bringing in understudi­es for Virginia Woolf. This is an extra cost of around $60,000 to $100,000 for theatre companies,” said the company’s artistic director, Mitchell Butel.

“We have all cast members in a bubble in company accommodat­ion in Adelaide and Sydneyso they are not staying with family or friends. No one is mingling and they are doing rapid antigen tests.”

Butel said theatre audiences were still relatively safe compared with many other venues, adding that most theatres still require audiences to check in, prove their double vaccinatio­n status andwear masks throughout the show.

“A theatre audience isn’t there to converse or mingle with as many people as possible, they are there to witness a show,” he said.

“As far as we know, there hasn’t been a single instance of transmissi­on inside a theatre in Australia. But we do need to minimise risk. People are taking their masks off to drink in the foyer. The industry may need to bring back rules that prevent drinking or eating in foyers to keep everyone safe.”

Covid outbreaks are affecting musical theatre production­s around the world. On Wednesday Australian performer Hugh Jackman, currently starring in the Broadway revival of The Music Man, announced he had tested positive for Covid in New York.

In a video posted to social media the 53-year-old Hollywood star announced he had mild symptoms “like a cold … a scratchy throat and a bit of a runny nose, but I’m fine … As soon as I’m clear, I’ll be back on stage.”

 ?? Photograph: Daniel Boud ?? Sydney performanc­es of Hamilton, which were suspended on 22 December due to a Covid outbreak, are scheduled to recommence on 5 January.
Photograph: Daniel Boud Sydney performanc­es of Hamilton, which were suspended on 22 December due to a Covid outbreak, are scheduled to recommence on 5 January.
 ?? Photograph: Prudence Upton/ Opera Australia ?? Opera Australia said its production of La Bohème will still go ahead on New Year’s Eve.
Photograph: Prudence Upton/ Opera Australia Opera Australia said its production of La Bohème will still go ahead on New Year’s Eve.

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