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Future still uncertain for º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest regional theatre

Boss of Theatre Royal Plymouth says it will have to make 'changes' if Covid restrictions are not lifted by late November

Theatre Royal Plymouth: the statue Messenger is wrapped in tape as part of the #MissingLiveTheatre campaign

If social distancing rules for theatres are not relaxed soon Plymouth’s under-threat Theatre Royal has until late November before it will have to take further action to ensure its survival, its chief executive says.

Adrian Vinken, boss of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest regional theatre, said it is not economically viable to open its main Lyric auditorium under the current restrictions.

The theatre put 100 jobs at risk in June 2020 after the coronavirus lockdown wiped out income, but was rescued by an £806,000 lifeline grant from the Arts Council in July.

Mr Vinken said at the time that this cash bought the venue “vital extra time” but now says hard decisions will have to be made before the end of the year if audiences can’t return.

Adrian Vinken, chairman of Destination Plymouth

He has said the Arts Council bailout,, would help “bridge the gap” between the end of the Job Retention furlough scheme, at the end of October, and “the point at which we can open again and return to trading sustainably”.

But now he says: “If we get to late November and hear nothing we will have to look at further changes.” He would not be drawn on what those changes might entail.

The Government allowed theatres to reopen from August 15, following a five-month closure, but many, including Plymouth Theatre Royal, said it was not economically viable to operate with capacity slashed to 30% or 40%.

“At the moment we can’t open with social distancing, economically it would be impossible to open the Lyric,” Mr Vinken said, but added: “We are talking to the Government on a regular basis.”