£1.5 billion for cultural sector; environmental impact of e-tickets and a presumption of theatregoers' tech
News, reviews, features and podcast on theatre across the UK

The British Theatre Guide Newsletter
No 1248: 25 January 2026
Editorial

This has been a week of what some news organisations may refer to as ‘drama’, though it has nothing to do with theatre, in the constituency where I live over an upcoming by-election. However, the MP for Wigan, on the opposite side of Manchester to me, Lisa Nandy, who is also Culture Secretary, has announced a £1.5 billion funding package for the cultural sector, as Philip Fisher reports.

It’s a big number, but theatres will not be getting a very large slice of this particular pie. This is funding is over five years, and more than half is set to go to museums rather than the arts. National Portfolio Organisations—NPOs, or organisations that receive regular revenue funding from Arts Council England—will get an additional £80 million over four years, which would be peanuts to most government departments but to theatres, used to existing on very tight financial margins, it will be a welcome uplift, in fact representing a 5% increase next year.

There is also £425 million set aside for capital projects, from which theatres get to benefit. Although I do remember when National Lottery funding began in the 1990s, it was only available for capital projects and not for regular funding, and there were worries that there would be a lot of lovely new and refurbished theatre buildings but no money to create productions to go in them.

I received my e-ticket for a play I’m reviewing soon at a theatre that up to now has provided real tickets, at least to reviewers. However, not any longer.

I know I’ve complained about e-tickets and e-programmes before in this newsletter. While there are clearly some advantages, the main one I suspect being a cost saving to the theatres, in this ephemeral art form, where everything passes in an evening and lives on only in the memory, a ticket and a programme have provided something tangible and lasting to mark the event, especially if it turns out to be a particularly significant or memorable one.

The e-mail with my e-ticket told me I didn’t need to print the ticket out as I can show it on my phone. This presumes that I have a smartphone, and, believe it or not, not everyone does, even in 2026—in fact, half of the BTG reviewers who regularly visit this theatre do not (okay, there are only two of us so it isn’t really a representative sample, but the point is still valid). It also presumes that I have a printer, whereas printer ownership has dropped dramatically over the last few years.

The use of ‘paperless tickets’ is given as “for environmental purposes”—I assume it means to reduce impact on the natural environment, but now that paper is much more often recycled or from managed sources and the environmental impact of those huge data centres that store everything on our mobile devices is coming under increasing scrutiny, maybe that argument doesn’t hold up as well as it did twenty years ago.

Another theatre a year or two ago told me they weren’t producing programmes any more to reduce their printing and paper usage. That was just after I was handed a printed copy of a press release I’d already had by e-mail in a cardboard folder.

As it happens, I do have a smartphone—and a printer—so none of this is a problem to me, just a minor annoyance. I’m sure, unlike banks that have closed most of their local branches and made it difficult to speak to a human in those that remain, this theatre will be helpful and friendly towards those who can’t or don’t want to embrace everything that modern technology is able to offer.

David Chadderton
Editor
Podcast
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Recent episodes:
Features

Will £1.5 billion package restore national pride?

The government has announced a significant new funding package for the cultural sector.

Philip Fisher, 23 January 2026

News
North West News

Keswick theatre search for new chair

Theatre by the Lake is recruiting a new Chair of Trustees for when Charles Carter comes to the end of his tenure later this year.

David Chadderton, 25 January 2026

Yorkshire News

Praise for “empathetic” cast of Small Island

Director Matthew Xia has praised the “talented, courageous and empathetic” group of artists joining him for a new portrayal of Andrea Levy’s novel Small Island.

Steve Orme, 23 January 2026

Midlands News

Praise for “empathetic” cast of Small Island

Director Matthew Xia has praised the “talented, courageous and empathetic” group of artists joining him for a new portrayal of Andrea Levy’s novel Small Island.

Steve Orme, 23 January 2026

Site-specific plays pop up in Derby

Derby-based theatre company Fifth Word has announced the first site-specific pop-up plays from East-Midlands playwrights Tabby Lamb and John Booker.

Steve Orme, 22 January 2026

Arcade show performed in darkness in shipping container

Immersive theatre producer Darkfield will return to Lincoln with its experience Arcade performed multiple times a day at the Frequency Festival.

Steve Orme, 21 January 2026

You can also find us on Apple News.
Reviews

Woolf Works: I Now I Then / Becomings / Tuesday
Royal Ballet at Royal Ballet & Opera

Matilda the Musical
Royal Shakespeare Company at The Lyric, Theatre Royal Plymouth

The Olive Boy
Free Run Productions at Southwark Playhouse Borough

Daphne in Concert
Seattle Opera at McCaw Hall

Managing Your Money
Nick Hern Books

The Talented Mr. Ripley
The Faction, Jack Maple, Thomas Hopkins, Sams Entertainment, Carl Moellenberg at Grand Opera House, York

Murder at Midnight
Original Theatre, Joshua Beaumont and Huw Allen at The Lowry, Salford

The Rocky Horror Show
Trafalgar Theatre Productions at Sunderland Empire

Top Hat
Kenneth Wax and Jonathan Church Theatre Productions at Lyceum Sheffield

Sherlock Holmes and the Hunt for Moriarty
Blackeyed Theatre at Everyman Theatre Cheltenham

Safe Haven
Arcola Theatre and HeronBrook Advisory at Arcola Theatre

The Winter’s Tale
Stratford Festival at Stratford Festival Theatre

Modern Milestones: Deep Song / CAST [X] / Lacrymosa / Kinaesonata / Troubadour
Yorke Dance Project at Linbury Theatre, Royal Ballet & Opera

ROTUS: Receptionist Of The United States
Suzanna Rosenthal Productions at Park Theatre, London

Guess How Much I Love You?
Royal Court Theatre in association with Brian & Dayna Lee at Royal Court Theatre

Here There Are Blueberries
Tectonic Theatre Project at Seattle Rep at the Bagley Wright Theater

Running this week
London

+ more in London

North West

+ more in North West

North East
  • Weird (Michael Harrison) - Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne,
  • Strictly Come Dancing Live UK Tour - Utilita Arena Newcastle, Newcastle Upon Tyne,
  • Cinderella (Varna International Ballet) - Darlington Hippodrome, Darlington,
Yorkshire

+ more in Yorkshire

Midlands
  • Justin Time To Rock (Imagine Theatre) - Theatre Royal and Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham,
  • The VERY Best of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons (Sisco Entertainment & Sweeney Entertainments) - Nottingham Playhouse, Nottingham,
  • Please Do Not Touch (China Plate and Belgrade Theatre in association with Birmingham Hippodrome) - Birmingham Hippodrome, Birmingham,
  • The Woman in Black (PW Productions) - The Alexandra, Birmingham,
  • The Signalman (Middle Ground Theatre Company) - Derby Theatre, Derby,
  • Blood Brothers (Bill Kenwright Ltd) - Belgrade Theatre, Coventry,
  • Christmas Carol Goes Wrong (Kenny Wax and Stage Presence) - Theatre Royal and Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham,
  • All Is But Fantasy (Royal Shakespeare Company) - The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon,
  • Robin Hood (Crossroads Pantomimes) - Birmingham Hippodrome, Birmingham,
  • The BFG (Royal Shakespeare Company, Chichester Festival Theatre and Roald Dahl Story Company) - Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon,
South West
South East
  • The Nutcracker (Varna International Ballet) - Cliffs Pavilion, Southend-on-Sea,
  • Dance of Death (Orange Tree Theatre) - Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond,
  • Swan Lake (Varna International Ballet) - Theatre Royal Brighton, Brighton,
  • Barnum (Watermill Theatre) - Theatre Royal Windsor, Windsor,
  • The Nutcracker (Varna International Ballet) - Theatre Royal Brighton, Brighton,
  • Cinderella (Varna International Ballet) - Theatre Royal Brighton, Brighton,
  • Peppa Pig’s Big Family Show (Fierylight) - Beck Theatre, Hayes,
  • Death on the Nile (Fiery Angel) - Chichester Festival Theatre, Chichester,
  • Dear England (National Theatre) - New Theatre Oxford, Oxford,
  • Tina – The Tina Turner Musical (Stage Entertainment, Joop van den Ende and Tali Pelman, in association with Tina Turner) - Milton Keynes Theatre, Milton Keynes,

+ more in South East

Scotland
Wales
Online

+ more in Online

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