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The show must go on: musical theatre cancellations lead to industry calls for urgent government help

Rob Mills and Natalie Bassingthwaighte in Waitress. Just days after Waitress was cancelled, Beetlejuice announced it would end its Brisbane run three weeks early and cancel its tour to Perth, Adelaide and Sydney. Photograph: Jeff BusbyView image in fullscreenRob Mills and Natalie Bassingthwaighte in Waitress. Just days after Waitress was cancelled, Beetlejuice announced it would end its Brisbane run three weeks early and cancel its tour to Perth, Adelaide and Sydney. Photograph: Jeff BusbyThe show must go on: musical theatre cancellations lead to industry calls for urgent government helpIn the space of a week, two major musicals, Waitress and Beetlejuice, and a $20m opera were forced to cancel shows amid skyrocketing costs, putting hundreds out of work

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Australia’s theatre industry is in desperate need of tax reform to keep it alive, experts have warned the federal government, after two major touring musicals and a $20m opera cancelled shows in the space of a week, citing skyrocketing costs and soft box office sales.

Broadway musical Waitress, starring Rob Mills and Natalie Bassingthwaighte, announced on Sunday that it would end in Melbourne on 19 July, and will not tour to Sydney in August as planned.

And Beetlejuice, which was written by Australian performer Eddie Perfect and has been staged on Broadway and the West End, announced on 20 June that it would cancel its Australian tour and end in Brisbane three weeks early. The show was originally set to go to Perth for three weeks, Adelaide for two and Sydney for seven.

Both productions cited multiple factors including rising production costs, the costs of touring, cost-of-living pressures such as interest rate rises that were affecting sales, and lower consumer confidence changing ticket-buying behaviour.

View image in fullscreenEddie Perfect as Betelgeuse in Beetlejuice: The Musical. Photograph: Michelle Grace HunderCrossroads Live Australia chief executive John Frost, who produced Waitress, said in a statement that “whilst audience enthusiasm for our work remained strong, attendance levels and box office have not been sufficient to support the cost of the production”.

Beetlejuice’s production company, Michael Cassel Group, said in a statement that “for a production of this scale, the current logistical realities of touring across vast distances between Australian cities have created increasing cost pressures that ultimately made continuing the run unsustainable.

“While audience enthusiasm for the show has been encouraging, a more cautious consumer environment combined with the economics of moving a production of this magnitude could not be justified. It is a difficult decision, and not one we made lightly,” the statement read.

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And on Friday, blockbuster Italian opera Aida announced it would no longer come to Adelaide in February 2027 despite selling 17,000 tickets, due to the huge rise in production and touring costs amid the Iran-US war.

TEG Live’s head of touring, Claudia Coffey, told ABC Adelaide that the company lost $2m and five years of work by cancelling Aida now, but “bringing 400 people and 28 containers became totally untenable,” adding, “if we sold every single ticket to the show with the increased freight costs and travel costs, we would be at a loss”.

Graeme Kearns is chief executive officer of Foundation Theatres, which runs Sydney’s Capitol Theatre, where Beetlejuice was headed, and the Lyric, where Waitress was meant to go. He told the Guardian that the two theatres will now likely be dark for 30 of the next 40 weeks, which would mean “hundreds of people will be out of work, from performers and musicians to wardrobe, wigs, makeup, stage technicians, administrators, ushers and bar staff.

“It will be a very difficult six months ahead of us all. We will of course try to find alternatives for the theatres, but with short lead times and tough economic conditions, that will be very difficult to achieve,” he said.

View image in fullscreenPerformers Beau Woodbridge and Georgia Laga’aia rehearsing for Dear Evan Hansen in 2024. The show’s Canberra and Adelaide legs were cancelled due to soft ticket sales. Photograph: Prudence Upton/Sydney Theatre Company“Buying a ticket for a show, no matter how good the show is, is at the very apex of discretionary expenditure … Encouraging patrons to buy a ticket to something they are unfamiliar with is more difficult than I have ever seen.”

Some theatre lovers responded to the news by lamenting online that they had waited too long to buy tickets. But Suzanne Jones, CEO of Jones Theatrical Group which is now staging the musicals Pretty Woman and Book of the Mormon in Australia, and Mrs Doubtfire at the end of 2026, said major musicals needed more than just sales.

“The market is there, but the costs are rising faster than the ticket prices are, and that’s just a squish,” she said. “Freight costs, labour costs – all of those things are going up at a greater rate than ticket sales are.”

Other musicals that recently cut their tours short include Back to the Future and Dear Evan Hansen, the latter calling off the Canberra and Adelaide legs due to ticket sales.

Jones is one of a number of Australian theatre industry experts calling for desperately needed tax concessions similar to those available to other cultural industries. Australian films currently receive up to 40% tax offsets on production costs, while games and television receive 30%.

View image in fullscreenSuzanne Jones, a prominent Australian producer and the CEO of Jones Theatrical Group. Photograph: Supplied“Musicals cost tens of millions of dollars to get on the stage – the Wickeds and the Hamiltons didn’t get written on a Saturday and put on on a Monday,” Jones said. “Reform would help a lot.”

In 2014 UK introduced similar measures called “Theatre Tax Relief” or TTR, which allow theatre companies to claim huge tax deductions on production costs: 45% for touring productions and 40% for non-touring. Analysis found that £38m of TTR in just one year resulted in at least £163m extra investment in UK theatre.

“The UK has demonstrated that theatre tax relief creates production, creates jobs, attracts investments and strengthens the entire industry. We should be having that conversation here,” Jones said.

“I don’t think taxpayers should support commercial musicals simply because they’re musicals, as much as I love them. I think government should support industries that create jobs, attract investment, generate tourism and deliver a return to the economy. And commercial theatre does all of those things.

“The UK doesn’t have theatre tax relief because it’s culturally valuable. It has it because the government decided it was economically valuable.”

Jones said she was called “once a week” by international productions asking to bring their shows to Australia. When they find out there’s no tax incentives, they scrap the idea.

Analysis by lobby group Live Performance Australia in 2024 found a similar tax offset in Australia of 25-40% would pay for itself by generating additional economic activity, create 4,650 new jobs and increase the number of new productions in Australia by up to 73%.

The Media Entertainment and Alliance (MEAA), which is now assisting the cast, crew and musicians affected by the cancellations of Waitress and Beetlejuice, said it was “completely devastating for everyone involved”.

But while it supports tax reform, the MEAA said the financial pressures on audiences must also be addressed. It is advocating for a “cultural pass”, which would see young Australians receive government-funded vouchers of up to $200 to spend on theatre tickets.

Read more“When Beetlejuice fell over, they said, ‘If we had the tax incentive, the show could have kept going’ – which [would be] great, obviously we want our members in work. But I think there’s a bigger issue that goes to access and ticket pricing,” MEAA chief executive Erin Madeley said. “For a family of four, it can be between $500 and $1,000. We’ve got to do something to stimulate audience participation and get more bums on seats.”

The MEAA went to Canberra last week to consult with minister for the arts, Tony Burke, on the next national cultural policy, while representatives from industry body Live Performance Australia are heading there this week.

Burke told Guardian Australia: “Consultation and development on the next National Cultural Policy couldn’t be happening at a more important time.

“Cost of living pressure always has a particular impact on ticket buying in the arts. The impact on live theatre needs to be fully appreciated.”

Read original at The Guardian

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