Brighton's BOAT sets sail with condensed summer theatre season
For BOAT general manager Will Mytum, it all comes with a huge sense of relief after months of closure and frustration.
“Fortunately we had a lot of stuff ticking along in the background while we were locked down. We never wanted to cancel our whole season before we had to. We were always hopeful that we were going to be able to open at some point.
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Hide Ad“We should have opened on May 1. We usually run May to September. It soon became clear that we were not going to be able to have anything in May or June and for the programme for July, things started to pull out. There wouldn’t have been time to rehearse or for anyone to book accommodation for touring, so basically we had to cancel for May, June and July.
“But I was keeping all the companies in the loop as much as I could. Everyone understood the situation. It is not as if I had any more information than anybody else, but we really didn’t want to cancel the whole season unless we had to. But some of the productions had to drop out because they were not going to tour this year. Several shows moved forward from earlier in the summer to later, so all along we had a fairly full programme for August and September just hoping to be able to go ahead.”
Will was pinning his hopes on the July 4 announcement which then became frustrating when outdoor performances were still not to be given the green light, but then just a week later, the green light finally came… and Will was able to unveil an excellent season ahead.
“There is a good variety of things. I think there is something there for everyone. There are still a few things that we are not yet able to announce because we haven’t dotted the i’s and crossed the t’s, but I think that is good, to be able to announce things as we go along. It has all worked out quite well. A lot of the time we were planning on the worst-case scenario, but we are quite fortunate in that our model means that even if we had been closed for the rest of the year, we would have been fine. We have got very low outgoings compared to other theatres.
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Hide AdThe council are our landlord and they give us a good deal, and I am the only full-time member of staff. The other staff that we employ would only be employed if there was a season on, so a lot of our costs are only costs if we are up and running. If we are just closed, it is not too bad, but that’s not the case for all the indoor theatres who are still waiting to be told when they can reopen fully. And I really feel for them.
“We have reduced our capacity down to 200 from 425. It’s just under half, and it is viable. I think we can break even fairly easily. A lot of the companies that come here work on a box office split. We make as much as we sell, but as I said, our costs are fairly low, and that makes it viable for us. If we had had to reduce our capacity down to a quarter, then it would have been a lot more touch and go. But with the bar open, we can generate revenue, and we always have a donations bucket. And so we are able to have a condensed season with a reduced capacity. We are not going to make a huge amount of money, but it is important for the morale of the staff and the volunteers and the performers and the wider sector to see theatre coming back in some form.”
Season includes
August 8 – The Noise Next Door
August 12-22 – Abigail’s Party
August 25 – The Mikado
August 28 – Sherlock Holmes
August 30 – The Noise Next Door
September 4 – Simon Evans: Work Of The Devil
September 5 – Trumpton Comes Alive
September 6 – The Three Musketeers
September 11 – Twelfth Night
September 13 – The Magic Flute
September 14 – Jekyll and Hyde
September 17 – The Improvised Shakespeare Show
September 18 – Variety Unbound
September 20 – The Alter Eagles
September 23 – Much Ado About Falstaff
September 25 – Blighty, Broadway and Beyond
September 26 – The Great Pig In The Sky
September 27 – The Brighton Beach Boys
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