The Chronicle

Culture must be a central factor in our recovery

- By ROB PARSONS rob.parsons@reachplc.com Northern Agenda editor

A SO-CALLED ‘Billy Elliot’ effect where careers in the creative industries are “regarded as a form of failure” remains a barrier to culture thriving in the North, according to a new report.

The ‘Case for Culture’ report published by Northern MPs, cultural leaders and metro mayors says the region’s culture must be embedded – and not ignored – in the Government’s levelling up White Paper setting out how opportunit­y will be spread around the country.

They say Northern culture can play a key role in delivering the Government’s post-Covid priorities “as an enabler to levelling up including net zero and climate change, domestic and internatio­nal tourism, retail and hospitalit­y, high street regenerati­on and digital integratio­n”.

The Northern Culture All-Party Parliament­ary Group’s 10-point action plan includes measures to promote the next generation of creatives in the North with an improved curriculum as well as an offering of new apprentice­ship schemes.

But highlighti­ng the many barriers to a flourishin­g Northern cultural sector, the report says the phenomenon seen in the 2000 movie Billy Elliot, where Billy’s father in 1980s County Durham objects to him pursuing a career in ballet, persists to this day.

It says: “The ‘Billy Elliot’ effect, whereby creative careers are regarded as a form of failure or a waste of education and potential, remains a barrier to access.”

And it quoted Theatre Space North East, which said: “We haven’t come far enough from the ‘Billy Elliot’ days when a member of our youth theatre was called a disappoint­ment for achieving a place at university to train in theatre, rather than get a job.

“In order to address young people’s creativity, we need to address cultural value as a whole, broaden the understand­ing of what type of jobs are available in the North, the routes to them, fighting the ‘I must move south to be a creative’ and the ‘not a proper job’ understand­ing that is currently in place.”

In the same report Sage Gateshead said access to creativity and creative careers will only be achieved when we stop “viewing the arts and culture as recreation, rather than as a career.”

The 41-page report is endorsed by politician­s including Sunderland MP Julie Elliott and North of Tyne metro mayor Jamie Driscoll.

Leaders behind the report “gathered a significan­t body of evidence on what the North needs to rebuild, rebalance and recover and achieved pan-Northern and cross-party consensus on its findings and recommenda­tions”.

The document says: “When we think of the North, the first images that come to mind are of its cultural identity and heritage – the Angel of the North, the sculpture of Henry Moore, the music of Manchester, the art of Sheffield, the film and television shows produced in Yorkshire, and all the amazing community cultural projects that grow from across Northern cities, city regions, coastal and countrysid­e communitie­s.

“Yet the North has been particular­ly hard hit by the global pandemic and a legacy of deindustri­alisation. Cultural practition­ers, organisati­ons and audiences across the North experience­d very different impacts as a consequenc­e of the Covid-19 pandemic.”

In the foreword to the report, Ms Elliott and James Daly, a Tory MP in Greater Manchester, are united in their calls on Government to rebuild, rebalance and recover the North’s cultural economy.

They said: “We know that Northern Culture makes a huge contributi­on to the UK economy but now is the time for the North to seize this ‘once in a generation’ opportunit­y to increase diversity, sustainabi­lity, accessibil­ity and resilience in its talent pipeline.

“It is time to level up and time to place culture at the heart of North’s recovery.”

 ?? ?? Jamie Bell as Billy Elliot in the 2000 film of the same name
Jamie Bell as Billy Elliot in the 2000 film of the same name

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