Harrogate Theatre has today been awarded £249,820 from a government rescue fund for the arts.
Other local venues have also been successful, with £238,590 awarded to Deer Shed Festival near Topcliffe, £117,500 to Ripon Museum Trust and £54,339 to Ripon Amateur Operatic Society.
Harrogate Theatre, which will remain closed until next year, said the award would cover its losses from November 2020 to April 2021
This money is in addition to an Arts Council England grant of £395,000 in July and £100,000 raised from an emergency appeal.
It means the theatre has now received nearly £750,000 to help it survive the coronavirus-enforced closure.
David Bown, chief executive of the theatre, said:
“The funding provides an urgent lifeline to Harrogate Theatre and many other arts organisations across the country. We are thankful for this vital intervention, which demonstrates our value to our local area and the wider cultural sector.”
Mr Bown hopes that the money will help the theatre to “return stronger than ever” in 2021.
Read more:
- Harrogate theatre will remain closed until 2021
- Harrogate Theatre gets £395,000 to survive until September
The government handed out £257 million to nearly 1,400 cultural and creative organisations in today’s first round of awards from the £1.57 billion Culture Recovery Fund, which is run by Arts Council England.
Deborah Larwood, the theatre chair, said:
“This support will play a crucial role in enabling us to stabilise the theatre following the devastating impact of the covid pandemic. In these most challenging times we have had to make some very difficult decisions, but this funding gives us the opportunity to focus on planning for the future.”
District theatres support ‘red alert’ campaign to highlight crisis
Theatres across the district are looking at ways they can support a campaign to highlight the struggling live entertainment industry.
The #WeMakeEvents “Red Alert” follows months of closure for venues and a lack of work for freelance workers. Across the Harrogate district local theatres support the message but none have the facilities to light up red this evening.
Harrogate Theatre is looking into projecting red lights at a later date.
David Bown, chief executive of Harrogate Theatre, said:
“Of course we want to support the campaign it’s keeping the plight of theatres in people’s consciousness -our technicians are looking into it. The movement is to remind people of what is happening and the impact on the industry.
It’s the health and safety that we have to be careful with, leaving lights on when no-one is in the building. I can’t say for definite they are going to go ahead but it is something we are looking into.”

Ensuring social distancing in auditoriums is making reopening too difficult for theatres in the district.
Read more:
- Knaresborough theatre says social distancing measures make reopening too difficult.
- Pateley Bridge Playhouse is optimistic for its future after coronavirus having huge ramifications on its finances.
John Pearce, vice-chairman Frazer Theatre, said:
“It’s something we are very much aware of, but unfortunately the Frazer doesn’t actually have any way to light the exterior up red, so we’re not able to join in. We completely support the campaign though, and do think it’s a really effective way to highlight just how many wonderful spaces could be lost without support.
We absolutely hope it makes people think about what could be gone forever if funding isn’t received urgently.”
Both theatres have suspended their reopening until 2021 following doubts over making their return financially viable.
Harrogate theatre will remain closed until 2021Harrogate Theatre has announced it will not reopen until 2021, saying that introducing social distancing in the auditorium would not be financially viable.
The theatre has also warned that 60% of permanent roles may have to be made redundant. It has said this decision is a direct result of the pandemic and the loss of income it has caused.
A theatre spokesperson said:
“We look forward to the day we raise our safety curtain and once again share the magic that live performance in our building brings. Whilst we understand the impact of this decision, as custodians of our organisations we will do everything in our power to safeguard the company to be able to entertain, educate and inspire for the next 120 years.
“We are extremely grateful for the funding received from Arts Council England and Harrogate Borough Council to cover losses incurred from March through to September.”

The social distancing requirements would be too detrimental for the theatre’s finances.
The theatre is heavily reliant on its annual pantomime which is performed over two months in the festive period. Its business model requires 90% of the seats to be sold over the two months, but with social distancing in place only 20% of seats can be used.
The spokesman said the theatre is cautious to invest in any shows this season in case of further lockdowns. It has moved most of its shows for the autumn season into next year and this winter’s pantomime, Cinderella, will go ahead in 2021.
The theatre’s emergency funding campaign, launched during lockdown, will continue.
Read more:
- Knaresborough’s Frazer theatre has to remain closed due to the restrictions inside the auditorium.
- Harrogate Theatre welcomed further funding but insisted that more support is needed to help the theatre.
Harrogate Theatre gets £395,000 to survive until September
Harrogate Theatre has been on its knees in recent months but has welcomed a £395,000 grant from Arts Council England to help it survive until September.
The money is part of a £90 million fund separate to the government’s £1.5 billion arts rescue package – there are no details for that yet.
David Bown, Harrogate Theatre’s chief executive, told The Stray Ferret that he was “very grateful” for the money but he added that they still needed more support:
“This is a good amount of money and it will help us to survive to the end of September but we still need more support. We have had a fantastic response from Harrogate so far. We understand that a lot of businesses are struggling financially but we are important to the town’s economy.”
Read more
- Harrogate Theatre raises £40,000 in emergency appeal
- Sponsor a seat to save Harrogate theatre from closure
- Harrogate Theatre relief on government arts rescue package
So far more than 1,200 people have donated over £60,000 to keep Harrogate Theatre going. Donate by clicking or tapping here.
The theatre has been losing £1 million every three months since coronavirus forced it to close its doors.
Mr Bown also estimated Harrogate Theatre brings in around £25 million a year to Harrogate’s local economy which is leaving a “huge hole” the longer it remains closed.
Harrogate Theatre relies on the panto season which Mr Bown said they may have to cancel due to social distancing guidelines.
‘Relief’ for Harrogate Theatre as £1.5bn arts rescue package announcedThere was “relief” at Harrogate Theatre as the government announced a £1.5bn rescue package for the arts, but the long-term picture for the venue remains bleak.
Announced late on Sunday evening, prime minister Boris Johnson said the money will help venues “stay afloat and support their staff whilst their doors remain closed and curtains remain down.”
David Bown, chief executive of Harrogate Theatre told the Stray Ferret he welcomed the announcement as it “had been a long time coming” but said they are awaiting further details on how much money might be available to them.
He said:
“It feels as though it’s good news but the devil will be in the detail.”
The government will offer £1.15 billion for cultural organisations which will be made up of £270 million of repayable finance and £880 million in grants, with applications opening later this month.
Mr Bown said the theatre is losing £1 million every three months and an injection of funds could help them become financially stable in the short-term.
In recent days pressure built on social media for the government to rescue the arts sector through the hashtag #SaveTheArts, with several actors making appeals, including Harrogate Theatre patron Reece Dinsdale.
Mr Bown said:
“We’ve all enjoyed Netflix over the last three months but it all starts here. Those actors have to train in theatres. There will be a matrix of consequences for some time to come.”
Read more:
- Harrogate Theatre raises £40,000 in emergency appeal
- Sponsor a seat to save Harrogate theatre from closure
Harrogate Theatre relies on a busy Christmas panto season to help fund it throughout the year which Mr Bown said they may have to cancel due to social distancing guidelines. He said this could have consequences well into 2021.
He added:
“The problem we’ve got is social distancing. We are the antithesis of that. We invite people to come in and share our confined space. That is the opposite of what we’re being instructed to do at the moment.”
Mr Bown also estimated Harrogate Theatre brings in around £25m a year to Harrogate’s local economy which is leaving a “huge hole” the longer it remains closed.
A video was published over the weekend about why Harrogate Theatre is important to the community, which you can watch below.
Ripon Opera Society will be back for more with OliverRipon Amateur Operatic Society, is determined that its show will go on.
The society, which is celebrating its 80th anniversary this year, was due to stage ‘Oliver’ at Harrogate Theatre – a major production that would have brought much-needed revenue to support other activities.
Committee member Hannah Ruddy, told The Stray Ferret:
“We were due to have a four-day run at Harrogate Theatre in April and eight weeks beforehand had sold 40 percent of the tickets for our performances – a very healthy position to be in two months ahead of the opening curtain, but then COVID-19 meant that we had to postpone.”
Harrogate Theatre, itself in lockdown, announced last week that it had raised £40,000 in an emergency fundraising campaign and has agreed alternative dates next April, when the society, will be able to come back once more with its ‘Oliver’ production.
The society, which moved to its new base in Allhallowgate, Ripon in 2015, where there is a maximum seating capacity of 120, has been staging its major productions at Harrogate Theatre for many years. It had other fundraising activities cancelled, including an 80th anniversary dinner scheduled for next month, so the search is on for other funding sources.
The fingers of members are tightly crossed in the hope that the lockdown will have eased sufficiently later this year, for the musical ‘Chicago’ be staged between 23rd and 29th November at the Allhallowgate venue.
To off-set the cost of holding eight performances over seven days, a fundraising page has been set up at www.gofundme.com/f/ripon-operatic-society for anybody wishing to make a donation.
In addition to looking forward to the re-start of rehearsals and future performances, the society is in the process of making its Allhallowgate base a community arts hub, providing a rare space in the city that other performing and artistic groups can use.
Hannah pointed out:
Harrogate Theatre raises £40,000 in emergency appeal“Though we have been temporarily held up in our plans, I think about Oliver and the first line of the musical, which asks: ‘Is it worth the waiting for?’ and I know that the answer from all of our members is a resounding yes!”
Harrogate Theatre has announced that it has raised £40,000 in its emergency appeal.
The theatre, which has always been widely supported, has faced a funding crisis as it was forced to lower its curtains in March, due to coronavirus.
Alex Monk, a spokesperson from the Theatre told the Stray Ferret:
We rely on a very small amount of public funding, most of our earnings are from ticket sales, so our income has been stripped away, It’s been a worrying time… To raise £40,000 ( and still rising) is just phenomenal… a lot of that has been from audience members that have donated their ticket money from a cancelled show to our emergency fund.
We need £4,000 a week to keep the theatre going…Things are all moving and changing very quickly.. Our current closure notice is up until July at the earliest.
We are exploring models for social distancing in the theatre for when it is safe and possible to open our doors. This does reduce the capacity to around a third which would have severe financial implications.
Members of the community are pulling together to help raise money to try and keep the theatre-going.
Dance Matt, a children’s entertainment business in Harrogate is doing a virtual 12-hour dance-a-thon children’s mini disco starting at 8 am tomorrow. All money raised will go to the theatre’s emergency appeal. Matt Pullan, who runs the company, has raised £410 so far, with a £500 target.
It’s a very special place to me, I used to go to the panto every New Years Eve with my gran. I’m sure the theatre has touched us all at some point, so I wanted to do something to raise money to contribute… It will be a long 12 hours, but it will absolutely be worth it.
Alex Monk thanked Matt Pullan for his gesture:
Sponsor a seat to save Harrogate theatre from closureThis is just one of many of the kind offers we have received. It shows the real strength and place that Harrogate theatre holds.
A Harrogate theatre has launched an emergency appeal and invited people to sponsor its seats.
With coronavirus forcing Harrogate Theatre to cancel its shows for the foreseeable future, the 120-year-old venue now faces “a very uncertain future.”
The theatre has asked people to make a donation, buy tickets for the autumn and winter shows, join its membership scheme and now to sponsor a seat.
It costs £600 to sponsor a seat or £1000 a pair for a five-year term.
That money gets an engraved gold plate featuring the sponsor’s name, with a certificate and invitation to a thank you event a the theatre.
“And now we’re levelling with you – we have never needed your support more than we do today. None of us are entirely sure what the next few weeks and months hold, but the one thing we know is that when all the dust has settled, we want to still be here to bring that joy that everyone will so desperately need.”