The Scotsman

Party in the park: How outdoor shows could save our summer

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After more than two months of lockdown and shutdown for the Scottish cultural centre, there has been an unshakable feeling of doom and gloom gathering pace. With each passing week it has felt like walls have been gradually closing in on the nation’s artistic infrastruc­ture. While events and festivals have long since been cancelled, leaving the rest of 2020 looking threadbare to say the least, the first real crack became visible last week when Edinburgh’s Royal Lyceum Theatre announced it was going into hibernatio­n and had been forced to put twothirds of its workforce at risk of redundancy.

It brought into the public domain the kind of issues which hundreds of arts organisati­ons the length and breadth of Scotland have no doubt been grappling with since the first restrictio­ns on events were announced on 12 March.

The Lyceum’s actions had chilling echoes of the moves by the National Trust for Scotland to mothball dozens of its attraction­s and potentiall­y lay off more than 400 staff. Both have sent shock waves across the wider cultural sector and raise an ominous question. If these two long-running and much-loved institutio­ns are having to consider such drastic action, which other cornerston­es of Scottish cultural life are in serious trouble?

Creative Scotland chief executive Iain Munro’s own grim verdict on the early impact of the Covid-19 crisis came last week with a warning that the scale and severity were “daunting” to try to address, despite emergency support, and that many of the organisati­ons and companies it funds “are being forced to contemplat­e their ability to continue”. Most venues seem to believe reopening is likely to be unviable while social distancing measures are in place. There seems little prospect of that ending this year.

But surely there are some glimmers of optimism out there? I had to get to stage three of the Scottish Government’s lockdown road map, which is unlikely to kick in until July, to find any mention of cultural venues reopening. Even then, it is only museums, galleries and cinemas that are listed. But the government has also suggested the first live events will also be permitted again in this phase – albeit it with “restricted numbers and physical distancing”.

Now, this may be something to do with the fact that we seem to have enjoyed an almost unbroken spell of good weather during lockdown, but my head was suddenly filled with images of musicians, actors, dancers and acrobats performing outdoors. I suddenly imagined street performers on the Royal Mile in August, crowds taking their marked-out seats at the Ross Bandstand in Edinburgh or Kelvingrov­e in Glasgow, where official spots for buskers are created. I imagined impromptu performanc­es on waterfront walkways, promenade theatre in parks, and art trails through forests. I could see all-ticket crowds watching dramatic light shows unfold on public buildings and landmarks that have been locked up for months.

All of these may sound ambitious right now, but I think some could be fast-tracked to the second phase, when groups of friends and family will be able to meet up outside, bars and restaurant­s will be able to serve food and drink outside, and sporting events can resume. With imaginatio­n, ingenuity and modest funding they could help businesses with their recovery and bring life, colour and enjoyment back to our public spaces. But, more importantl­y, they could give companies, artists, makers and technician­s some much-needed income and impetus to help get them through the downturn.

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