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Michael Coveney
By Michael Coveney

Michael Coveney: Cold Cuts at High Tables

Date: 31 March 2011

So, the National and the RSC (and the Royal Opera House) are taking big 15% ("real terms") hits in their Arts Council funding in order to help out the rest of the clientele.

But a similar percentage cut will bite much harder lower down the pecking order, where I'm sorry to see both Northern Ballet and Northern Broadsides unjustly punished, and note warily the same treatment for the Belgrade, Coventry and the Nuffield, Southampton.

Most shocking? The 43% plundering of Dance Umbrella, the halving of the Canterbury Festival's allowance, and the brutal singling out of the Almeida for a 39% cut, though that might encourage a less indulgent splurging of funds on set designs.

Talking of which, you wonder how much the National spent on Anthony Ward's monumental but meaningless dental surgery for Rocket to the Moon last night. And a quick glance down the programme credits suggest where savings might be immediately made: on fees for movement and fight directors (what movement, what fight?) and for a dialect coach who thinks anyone who speaks with an American accent just does bad stage Bronx.

On the whole, though, you have to say the Arts Council has managed this ugly business very cleverly. Most of the right people have the almost standstill treatment (11% cuts) over the next three years: the Bush, Hampstead, Headlong, Hackney Empire, Nottingham Playhouse, Polka, Tricycle, the Royal Exchange in Manchester, Salisbury Playhouse, Kneehigh, the ENO and Warwick Arts Centre.

And there are some startling positive decisions: huge bunk-ups for Punchdrunk, the Norfolk and Norwich Festival, Told by an Idiot, the Arcola and a notable increase for the Young Vic.

Edward Hall's Propeller is a new client with a quarter of a million pound nod per year, while Ed's dad, Peter Hall, has been snubbed at the Rose, Kingston, a real setback for a venue that has tried ever so hard without really winning over public or critics.

But overall, you still have to ask, why have the arts and libraries been singled out for cuts at all in this way? The amounts of money are so small, comparatively, in the national budget, that you wonder, with Nicholas Hytner, what sort of country the politicians want us to survive the economic crisis for. David Hare goes magnificently further in his Guardian comment today:

"What's happening to culture is what's happening elsewhere. The government is crewed by a galley of suck-ups hoping to catch the leader's eye with the daring of their plans... As always with Cameron's coalition, you can only pray that its incompetence will finally mitigate its spite."

And Richard Eyre points out that the government simply doesn't take its funding of the arts seriously. But no government ever has in this country over the past 60 years, and it's a miracle that we have the best theatre in the world as a result. The cynics might say that proves the government is therefore right not to take arts funding seriously.

Quentin Letts in the Mail yesterday unsurprisingly argued that the Arts Council should not concentrate on the adventurous and exploratory so much as the public don't want it. To which you can only reply, with George Bernard Shaw, that the public never knows what it wants until you give it to them. Arts funding surely has to follow where the artist is going, not the public, otherwise nothing changes, nothing improves.

But Letts also, more interestingly, argues that the avant-garde, anyway, is more likely to appeal to self-promoting patrons these days; which says as much about the state of the avant-garde as it does about the monied culture vultures behind them.

This also reinforces a strictly middle-class and metropolitan view of arts and subsidy. It's much more important that the Arts Council maintains its support for the great regional houses, the Hackney Empire and Theatre Royal in the East End, the Oxford Playhouse, Frantic Assembly and the wildly daring Jasmin Vardimon, a choreographer even the dance critics don't like all that much.     

And in taking on the Manchester International Festival as a new client with £500,000 a year, the Arts Council not only responds to artistic, civic and yes, avant-garde, initiatives, it also gives an invaluable green light to the private and corporate sponsors already lining up to support a venture as potentially exciting and important as the Edinburgh Festival first was over 60 years ago.

God is always in the detail. The Arts Council proves that it has got down close and personal with some of the smaller fry in the North West, too. The Octagon in Bolton and the Oldham Coliseum are both on about £650,000 a year; the first is now down by 4.9%, the second up by 5.8%, an indicator, perhaps, of comparative artistic merit, or general efficiency. You learn as much from a nudge in the ribs as a blow to the face.

- by Michael Coveney


Any opinions expressed above do not represent the view of Whatsonstage.com nor any of its staff or contributors beyond the bylined author.



Related Content

Other Posts By Michael Coveney
Michael Coveney: New York honours Matilda with five big awards - 20th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Tales from New York in Kinky Boots - 17th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Finsbury hails its local Park Theatre opening - 15th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Hooray for Halifax and Carrie's ENO debut - 13th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: All change at Trafalgar, Liverpool and Finsbury Park - 10th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Critics come full Circle in centenary bash - 8th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: High old time with High Tide in Halesworth - 7th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Hytner steams on, Sondheim scintillates - 2nd May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Theatre queens and Paris low-life - 30th Apr 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Olivier big winners and Stratford long runners - 29th Apr 2013 blog
 More...
 
Internal Links
ACE Axes Funds to 206 Orgs in Strategic Overhaul - 30th Mar 2011 News
Arts Orgs Across England React to ACE Cutbacks - 30th Mar 2011 News
Live Tweeting: ACE Announce Funding Decisions - 30th Mar 2011 News
Rose’s Bosses Accuse ACE of East London Bias - 30th Mar 2011 News

External Links
Arts Cuts page on Whatsonstage.com


Reader Comments


CommentDate
Same old, same old. And no-one takes David Hare's ranting seriously any more surely? Sadly there is plenty of waste in the arts as there is everywhere else - too many penpushers and beancounters. And Mr Voyce every government wants to be close to Murdoch -I seem to remember Tony Blair cosying up and even giving a speech at one of his sales conferences (for a fat fee?. And if the slimmed down Shakespeare includes Propeller's Dream -hooray! - Peter Harlock

13 Apr 11

This is a government that wants Rupert Murdoch to own everything. Of course they want the market to decide, and if the market says chirpy revivals, and slimmed down Shakespeare, that is, sadly, all we'll get. - Richard Voyce

31 Mar 11


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