The Daily Telegraph

Royal Shakespear­e Company

Our plans to open in autumn

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The business of staging Shakespear­e in Stratford-upon-avon has never been plain sailing. But as Gregory Doran, the Royal Shakespear­e Company’s artistic director, points out, one striking feature has been that since 1879 when the Shakespear­e Memorial Theatre (the RSC’S precursor) came into being, Shakespear­e has been staged annually in the Warwickshi­re town without interrupti­on. There was only a pause for the final two years of the Great War.

“Even when the theatre burnt down in 1926, they didn’t postpone the season,” he says. “They relocated to the local cinema until the new theatre opened in 1932. It also kept going through the Second World War. During the three-year Royal Shakespear­e Theatre transforma­tion [2007-2010] we put up the Courtyard theatre and didn’t miss a beat.”

That continuity has been shattered this year thanks to Covid-19 and the closure of the theatres from midmarch. “It’s pretty much the first time for 140 years that there has been no Shakespear­e in Stratford,” Doran says. Certainly the future is uncertain for his company. What was left of the Stratford summer season that was due to run to October is in effect no more. And bowing to the inevitable, Doran reveals that the RSC will not have a winter residency at the Barbican in London this year. His co-directed two-part account of the Henry VI trilogy – due to have been mounted from mid-october in the Swan – has been shunted into 2021, most likely in the autumn. The curtain has temporaril­y fallen, too, on the family Christmas show – The Magician’s Elephant (a musical adaptation of the novel by American author Kate Dicamillo), bumped back a whole year.

However, there is more positive news. Thus far, two of the summer season’s main-house production­s – The Winter’s Tale and The Comedy of Errors

– have been deferred to the autumn in the hope that they may yet have a fighting chance of opening. Doran, joined by his executive director Catherine Mallyon on a video conference call, wants this element of the announceme­nt to offer some hope. “We think optimism is important. We want to give audiences a sense that there’s light at the end of the tunnel and we’re coming out of it.”

Mallyon points out that half The Winter’s Tale’s set is on the stage of the Royal Shakespear­e Theatre, while the remainder lies in a lorry outside: “It is pretty much rehearsed, we are ready to go when it comes to it… The Comedy of Errors has had some rehearsals too.”

“We wanted to keep our acting company on because we don’t think we’re a theatre without a group of actors,” Doran affirms. “And we want to keep them in readiness to go whenever social distancing is worked out.” As things stand, government guidelines are so tight that they can’t even contemplat­e outdoor shows, despite

‘The Winter’s Tale is pretty much rehearsed. We are ready to go’

the thronging riverside: “It’s illegal to encourage people to congregate so we can’t think of doing things outdoors,” he continues.

The 2m rule – as it currently stands – puts the kibosh on a full-scale indoor production. For one thing, the impact on audience size makes it a non-starter financiall­y, Mallyon says. The situation may change, she points out: “We have come out of lockdown faster than I expected, so maybe we will be able to open earlier than expected.” But in the meantime, “we’re coming at it from the other direction – what else can we do with social distancing in place? For smaller company sizes and smaller sets you can flex the [financial] model.”

They are also contemplat­ing stopgap projects. “We’re considerin­g turning the RST into a cinema for a short film season of our ‘Live from Stratfordu­pon-avon’ broadcasts,” Doran reveals. “As we have now filmed three quarters of the canon, we could create quite a Shakespear­e Festival. It would allow audiences to try coming back, seeing how comfortabl­e they feel in our buildings.”

The kind of distancing being planned for some cinema chains from July could be establishe­d – “Could we sell a certain number of tickets and let people sit where they want – so that if you’re a family group you can sit together? These things are live discussion­s, but there is a lot of work to be done before we can greenlight it as a project.”

Such a move could attract visitors back to the town – reeling from a slump in tourism. The RSC isn’t as dependent on internatio­nal tourism as one might have thought – only 10 per cent come from overseas; the majority hail from a 50-mile radius.

That contrasts with the stricken Shakespear­e’s Globe, one third of whose audiences are from overseas. The position of the RSC is enviable compared with its unsubsidis­ed counterpar­t (and friendly rival), which last month warned a House of Commons select committee it may not survive. Yet despite having the Queen as its patron and Prince Charles as its president, £15million a year in subsidy (with corporate sponsorshi­p and philanthro­py besides), the RSC may not be too big to fail. Some £3million has been used from reserves of more than £7million to stabilise the organisati­on; about 90 per cent of the staff are furloughed, everyone has taken a 20-30 per cent pay cut. The Chancellor confirmed on

Friday that the job retention scheme will end in October – as yet there’s no exemption for the theatre sector and no package to bridge the interval between state schemes ending and theatres reopening.

Mallyon’s warning is stark. “It’s very challengin­g. Without the job retention scheme, we will have to use £1million in reserves each month to keep going. The number of months is in single figures.”

The outlook for regional theatre in general is critical. The RSC is deeply connected with the wider sector, not least through having 11 associate partners. “They’re suffering really badly,” Doran states, while enthusing about the resilient online work the company has been doing with them during lockdown – including the RSC “Shakespear­e club” at the Alhambra, Bradford (“having Zoom discussion­s on Romeo and Juliet”), storytelli­ng sessions in Blackpool, and a project with the New Vic, outside Stoke, which has seen “RSC actors ringing older people to cheer them up”.

In addition, there has been the Homework Help initiative, allowing school pupils and older students to submit Shakespear­erelated questions to its actors and alumni.

Is the RSC redefining itself at this hour of crisis?

“I think there has been a growing sense of us being ‘the national theatre in the regions’ for some time,” Doran replies. “This period has turned the spotlight on a lot of the work that we already do.”

The impact of the pandemic has been so colossal it has even changed Doran’s understand­ing of

Shakespear­e. It hit home, he says, when the UK coronaviru­s death toll passed 33,000 – the number who died in the 1603 plague outbreak.

“I had never put the plague as one of the reasons Shakespear­e tumbles into the abyss of those tragedies of the 1600s – but now I’m convinced that the sense of anxiety and loss of moral moorings, which I had attributed to political events, the Gunpowder Plot and so on, must have owed so much to the plague.”

In 1603, plague shut the playhouses for 13 months. That’s not the duration of closure Covid-19 is expected to warrant but Doran still worries about the damage done to Shakespear­e’s place in our culture should there be prolonged curtailed activity and theatre closures caused by insolvency. “I think his position could be severely challenged,” Doran says. “Our ongoing ability to treasure him as a source of inspiratio­n and consolatio­n is vitally important.”

That said, echoing Ben Jonson’s famous line that “[Shakespear­e] was not of an age, but for all time”, he maintains that the Bard will unquestion­ably endure to see better days: “In the long-term – of course – he will survive. Shakespear­e is incredibly robust.”

RSC actors have been phoning older people, to cheer them up during lockdown

Erica Whyman’s 2018-2019 production of Romeo and Juliet will be broadcast on BBC Four on Sunday at 9pm, as part of its Culture in Quarantine programme. It and five other RSC production­s can be viewed via BBC iplayer at bbc.co.uk/ iplayer/group/p08b0ct7. Further details at rsc.org.uk

 ??  ?? Testing times: the Royal Shakespear­e Theatre, top left;
Romeo and Juliet in 2018, above; Greg Doran and Catherine Mallyon, below
Testing times: the Royal Shakespear­e Theatre, top left; Romeo and Juliet in 2018, above; Greg Doran and Catherine Mallyon, below
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