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Theatres turn red in campaign for Government support to save venues and jobs

Theatre Royal Plymouth was among hundreds of venues across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to take part in day of action as unions say 6k job have already been lost

Theatre Royal Plymouth lit in red on September 30 as part of the #WeMakeEvents and #LightItInRed campaign

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest regional theatre and hundreds of other venues around the nation have held another day of action to highlight the threat the live entertainment industry is under from continued Covid restrictions.

was among venues on the evening of September 30 as part of the global #WeMakeEvents and #LightItInRed campaign to raise awareness of the peril facing the events sector.

Under the slogan "red alert", the campaign saw venues in 25 countries lit in red light, to draw attention to the continued uncertainty about when concerts and shows can resume, and the precarious position actors, musicians and stage crew find themselves in.

In the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ 2,335 buildings registered to take part, under the slogan Stand As One, covering cities such as London, Plymouth, Exeter, Bristol, Cardiff, Birmingham, Coventry, Leicester, Nottingham, Stoke-on-Trent, Manchester, Liverpool, Hull, Norwich, Sunderland, Newcastle, Leeds, Bradford, Sheffield, Belfast, Edinburgh, Inverness and Glasgow.

Theatre Royal Plymouth shows its support for the #WeMakeEvents and #LightItInRed campaign

The campaign has been backed by Glastonbury festival organiser Emily Evis, and other leading figures and companies in the entertainment business.

Although venues have been allowed to reopen with social distancing measures in place, there are hardly any plays, concerts or gigs actually taking place compared before the lockdown began in March.

Musicians are already cancelling events for 2021 as uncertainty continues, and the entertainment workers union, Bectu said the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ may already have seen 6,000 redundancies in the sector.

The #WeMakeEventscampaign wants the introduction of a Government-backed insurance scheme, which would ensure organisers can recover costs if concerts are cancelled due to a local lockdown.