Shanghai Daily

Theaters in UK adapt to social distancing

- Pauline Froissart

London’s West End has traditiona­lly drawn people from all over the world to see its shows but theaters have been forced to reinvent themselves because of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Fifteen million tickets are sold each year for performanc­es including top attraction­s such as “The Phantom of the Opera,” “Les Miserables” and Agatha Christie’s “The Mousetrap,” a play that has been performed since 1952. But the pandemic brought the curtain down on venues in March, leaving theaters facing an uncertain future where continued social distancing measures threaten their existence.

Louis Hartshorn and Brian Hook, co-founders of Hartshorn-Hook Production­s, are among the first to adapt to the new reality, announcing the reopening of an immersive adaptation of “The Great Gatsby” to open in October.

“The show will be reimagined as a masquerade ball,” Hook said.

Spectators are invited to wear masks, which they can integrate into their disguise, and gloves if they wish. The audience will be reduced to 90, down from 240 previously, and the schedule has been changed to allow for a thorough clean-up.

“The good news is that tickets are selling and people want to come back,” added Hook.

But Hartshorn admitted that “we have to do extremely well in order to break even because the numbers are against us.”

Tourist trouble

Another immediate challenge is the lack of tourists, with hotels, restaurant­s and museums closed until at least early July.

The introducti­on on June 8 of a 14-day quarantine for most travelers arriving in the country has also tempered hopes of a swift recovery.

“Around a third of attendees in London theaters are overseas tourists and for the moment of course there is very little prospect of having overseas visitors,” Julian Bird, head of the UK Theatre lobby group, told a recent parliament­ary committee.

Up to 70 percent of theaters could go bankrupt by the end of the year, he warned.

The current crisis has left a 3 billion pounds (US$3.7 billion) hole in theater revenues this year, a fall of more than 60 percent, according to a study by Oxford Economics for the Creative Industries Federation.

This estimate does not take into account the possible reluctance of the public to return when allowed, with the federation warning of 200,000 job cuts without government interventi­on.

To survive, some theaters are offering alternativ­e products.

At London’s Old Vic Theatre, actors Claire Foy and Matt Smith, stars of the hit TV series “The Crown,” will perform the play “Lungs” without an audience, while keeping their distance.

Each performanc­e will be filmed and broadcast live to the 1,000 people who purchased tickets at the usual prices of between 10 pounds and 65 pounds, although all will enjoy the same view.

It’s a bold gamble when many other theaters, such as the National Theatre in London, have posted free online performanc­es of plays filmed before the pandemic. Shows that involve audience participat­ion could be the big winners, according to Brian Hook.

“We were already on a boom for immersive theater before this crisis. I think now might be a very positive time for that,” he said.

One Night Records will launch one such project in early October, taking ticket-holders on a journey through musical genres from the 1920s to the 1950s in a secret location called “Lockdown Town.”

“Because the venue is so large and because immersive has this special gift — which is territory, you know, space. That’s why we’re able to do it,” One Night

Records general manager Tim Wilson said.

But he, too, has had to adapt, selling tickets in groups of four and transformi­ng the free stroll into a linear route.

In the traditiona­l world of theater, social distancing measures are a real headache.

With people having to remain 2 meters apart, under current rules, the Royal Shakespear­e Company, said it can only accommodat­e 20 percent of its usual audience.

“With the furlough scheme changing in nature over the coming months and then coming to an end, that’s a moment of extreme vulnerabil­ity,” Catherine Mallyon, executive director of the Stratford-upon-Avon based company said.

“And how would we do the performanc­es with social distancing? ‘Romeo and Juliet’ 2 meters apart, it’s quite hard to imagine,” she said.

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s walk past the Sondheim Theatre, which would be showing “Les Miserables,” but is closed down as part of the COVID-19 pandemic-enforced lockdown measures in London. — AFP
Pedestrian­s walk past the Sondheim Theatre, which would be showing “Les Miserables,” but is closed down as part of the COVID-19 pandemic-enforced lockdown measures in London. — AFP

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