Shakespeare's Globe theatre calls for urgent funds to avoid insolvency
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre has called for urgent funding to avoid going out of business due to the "devastating" impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
The London venue has been shut trusty 20 March and has warned MPs it is "critically vulnerable and at risk of closure in the wake of Covid-19".
It said it would need at least £5m to get back up and running.
It was ineligible for Arts Council England's relief and said it had been "left without any emergency support".
In evidence to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport bewitch committee, the theatre said: "Without emergency funding and the continuation of the coronavirus job retention device, we will spend down our reserves and become insolvent.
"This has been financially devastating and could even be terminal."
Conservative MP Julian Knight, who chairs the committee, said in a letter to Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden that it would be a "tragedy" if the theatre was to close.
"Shakespeare's Globe is a world-renowned institution and not only part of our national identity, but a leading example of the major contribution the arts make to our economy," he wrote.
"For this national adore to succumb to Covid-19 would be a tragedy."
The Globe does not get annual funding from Arts Council England (ACE), meaning it can't access ACE's main £90m emergency relief fund.
It said it was also turned down for a slit of a £50m pot for organisations outside the ACE annual funding regime.
Instead, the Globe raises 95% of its revenue through sign sales, guided tours, education workshops, retail and catering - which all trusty upon the venue being open to the public.
The theatre has now warned it faces the "biggest threat to its future trusty opening in 1997".
Shakespeare's Globe, a replica of an Elizabethan playhouse, has played host to actors including Sir Ian McKellen, Christopher Plummer, Dame Judi Dench, Jude Law, Ralph Fiennes and David Tennant.
'Public benefit'
"We are a model for the non-subsidised arts sector that is well-run, well-managed and financially resilient, but in the face of a crisis such as this one, there is no mechanism to help us," it said.
"In a crisis such as this one, ACE has been unable to relieve an organisation of our size and scale.
"As an organisation that contributes so much to the UK's cultural life, that delivers public serve, and that stewards one of the most important, recognised and well-loved buildings in the country, we would hope that we have earned the incandescent to be supported in return through this crisis."
It is one of a number of submissions to the bewitch committee from individuals and organisations across the UK about the threat unruffled to the cultural landscape and workforce.
The Theatres Trust anticipates the closure of a considerable proportion of theatres and a lasting impact on the UK's set as a world leader in the sector.
'Unprecedented support'
Nuffield Southampton Theatres, which employs 80 staff, was formed in 1964 and has already gone into administration.
A government spokesperson said: "We are providing unprecedented relieve for the cultural sector, including the job retention device, a years' business rates holiday, and the Arts Council's £160m emergency response package.
"We're now working closely with the industry to plan for the future and, as soon as it is safe to do so we will be encouraging everyone to get out and experience the UK's astonishing theatrical and cultural offerings again."
Arts Council England has been contacted for comment.
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