Clockwise from left: Kate Varah, Adrian Lester and David Morrissey
NT boss joins actors in arts education bid
Actors Adrian Lester and David Morrissey have joined National Theatre executive director Kate Varah in calling for the arts to have a more prominent place in education, claiming investment in young people will nurture future audiences and add to the industry’s talent pipeline.
They were speaking to The Stage at the National’s Up Next Gala 2024, which raised £2 million towards the venue’s £125 million Stories Start Here campaign.
Morrissey said: “We don’t seem to be able to deliver the arts to our state school system in a way that it needs to be [in order] to bring up great audiences for the future, as well as creatives on stage.”
Noting the “absence” of the arts from his own education, Morrissey added: “We need to be looking very seriously at all aspects of the arts in our education and what they can do to build a great citizenship.”
Varah said the UK should be “tackling the really important topic of creative arts education in this country”.
Varah recommended improvements such as training bursaries for drama teachers, integrating drama into the core curriculum up to Key Stage 3, ensuring apprenticeship levies were “fit for purpose” and having T Levels [technicalbased qualifications] taught in-house in theatres.
“If we do that, and if we reach young people at that really early stage, then we are providing ourselves as a industry not just with the people who are going to work in our sector, but also with our audiences of the future,” she said.
Lester also spoke about the importance of arts in education.
Lester added: “Schools should be judged not only on maths, science and English, but also the creative arts. Teachers should be able to say to governing bodies: ‘Come listen to our band, our choir, come watch a performance.’ And they shouldn’t be thinking: ‘Look at these people expressing themselves.’ They should be thinking: ‘These are children learning to work, as they will in the upper echelons of the industry, learning [to] slide around each other’s egos, solve problems, think outside the box and be creative.’ That is what any employer would want of their employees.”
Lenny Henry also called for arts to be integrated into the core curriculum, adding that “making sure young people get to go to the theatre” was the area of the National’s work that was closest to his heart.
• The National Theatre’s 450-seat Dorfman Theatre is to close from mid-November this year to allow urgent renovations to take place. The National’s smallest auditorium will undergo upgrades to apparatus including its lighting and dimming systems as part of the previously announced £26.4 million government investment in the Spring Budget.
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