Belfast Telegraph

Arts will be decimated without financial help, warns NI funding body

- BY MICHAEL MCHUGH

THE arts will be “decimated” without a cash injection to recover from coronaviru­s, its main funding body in Northern Ireland said.

Flagship organisati­ons like the Ulster Orchestra are not expected to resume performanc­es until January, the Arts Council of Northern Ireland warned.

The Lyric Theatre in Belfast has put three quarters of its staff on furlough, while the Opera House is closed for renovation­s.

Roisin Mcdonough, Arts Council chief executive, said: “Unless there is a rescue package, the arts sector will be decimated.

“If people cannot open the buildings, if they cannot perform and do what they normally do, it affects our artists.

“They won’t get work, that is why we refer to our artists as the eco-system.

“We can look to the future and try and have a bridgehead into the future, but the scale and impact of the pandemic has been so severe that people are struggling to survive.”

She said the “life-blood” for artists was their audiences.

She added: “They don’t want to lose that contact during the pandemic because they know it is very hard to get it back in the future.

“We are cautiously optimistic that some of our arts organisati­ons will be able to reopen and present work within the next year on a phased basis.”

She warned members of Stormont’s Communitie­s Committee those her organisati­on funded and represente­d faced the loss of millions of pounds in earned income.

She also predicted a significan­t deficit by the end of this financial year unless more help is provided. The Ulster Orchestra has been on the brink of closing in the past over funding cuts.

The only full-time profession­al orchestra in Northern Ireland was founded in 1966.

It plays the majority of its concerts in Belfast’s Ulster Hall and the Waterfront Hall — but is not expected to begin performing again until next year, Damian Smyth from the Arts Council added. He said: “You are looking at a significan­t deficit, if it began earlier, the deficit increases.”

The Lyric Theatre in Belfast is Northern Ireland’s only full-time producing theatre.

Among its alumni are some of the country’s finest actors, including Liam Neeson and Adrian Dunbar.

It has premiered the work of playwright­s like Stewart Parker, Martin Lynch and Marie Jones.

The venue has had to pay back advances on sales for performanc­es during the pandemic, the Arts Council told the committee.

Shows up to July have been cancelled, including the stage musical version of the popular movie charting the life of Belfast punk legend Terri Hooley, Good Vibrations.

Three quarters of its staff are on furlough, but returning to work from July will provide its own financial pressures, the Arts Council said.

The Opera House is a major venue for receiving touring performanc­es from around the UK.

It is closed for refurbishm­ent, but most of its normal revenue comes from the box office.

Mr Smyth added: “You are looking at a very complicate­d logistical problem that is going to have to be solved. All three of them would have considerab­le risk at the moment.”

A Creative Support Fund for small to medium-sized organisati­ons as a response to Covid-19 will open soon, the Communitie­s Department said.

 ??  ?? A play at the Lyric Theatre and (top) the Ulster Orchestra
A play at the Lyric Theatre and (top) the Ulster Orchestra
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 ??  ?? Test: An MOT centre in Belfast
Test: An MOT centre in Belfast
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