It’s curtain up on Sunday shows as midweek in West End suffers
Weekday matinees that traditionally attracted day-trippers and foreign tourists will be phased out
WEST END shows are turning to Sunday matinees and scaling back their weekday performances in an attempt to lure people back to the theatre.
Midweek matinees were popular with foreign tourists and domestic daytrippers, but the pandemic put paid to both.
Sunday, traditionally a day of rest for performers, is now being promoted as the perfect day for a trip to the theatre.
Two of the West End’s biggest new musicals – Disney’s Frozen, at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, and Back to the Future, which opened at the Adelphi Theatre this week – will have Sunday matinees and fewer midweek shows.
The Phantom of the Opera and Hamilton have dropped midweek matinees altogether, while The Lion King will only offer them during school holidays.
Around three-quarters of West End productions are now running after Covid restrictions were lifted, with the remainder opening this month or next. Thirty of them are offering Sunday matinees. The arrangement was made possible after a deal struck with unions in October, agreeing that performers would forgo additional Sunday pay.
A spokesman for the Society of London Theatre said: “Shows are offering Sunday performances because it’s a family-friendly time and more people are able to get into central London at the weekend. We want to encourage as many people back to the theatre as possible.”
Back to the Future’s producer, Colin Ingram, said he was considering dropping Wednesday performances. “Until we get proper air corridors opened between the UK and the US, Asia, Scandinavia – big points of tourism interested in the West End – things are going to be quite tough,” he told The Guardian.
Prior to the pandemic, 30 per cent of West End audiences were from overseas. Around 40 per cent of overnight visitors to London went to the theatre.
Advance ticket sales for the big West End shows are healthy, the Society of London Theatre said. Back to the Future’s preview performances were at 99 per cent capacity.
This weekend will see Trafalgar Square transformed into an open-air theatre for West End Live, a promotional event featuring performers and excerpts from shows including Matilda the Musical, Jersey Boys, Les Misérables
and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cinderella.
It is free to attend, but all adults will have to show proof of vaccination status or a negative Covid test to gain entry.