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Audiences said participating in Zoom performances made them feel part of a community and provided them the opportunity to do something with friends and family.

Digital transformation will be key to ensuring survival of theatre industry during coronavirus, research shows

Digital transformation will be key to ensuring the survival of the theatre industry during coronavirus because people are willing to pay to see shows online, new research shows.

Virtual performances can help theatres to keep functioning in lockdown or when outdoor performance is not possible.

Around three quarters of those who responded to a new survey said they would purchase tickets to watch a live Zoom theatre production at any time, even when theatres were re-opened.

Audiences said participating in Zoom performances made them feel part of a community and provided them the opportunity to do something with friends and family. They also said it reduced feelings of isolation and loneliness.

The research, by Professor Pascale Aebischer and Dr Rachael Nicholas, from the University of Exeter, was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council as part of the UKRI Covid-19 Research and Innovation funding.

Experts have analysed the lessons learned from the successful digital transformation of Oxford’s Creation Theatre and its co-production with Big Telly of The Tempest on Zoom earlier this year during lockdown. Academics surveyed thirteen administrative and creative staff involved in the production and analysed 93 responses to an online questionnaire sent to audiences who attended a Zoom performance of The Tempest in April and May 2020.

Their report of initial findings includes a digital toolkit for companies who want to produce live digital theatre while working remotely, and the report also has advice on Zoom performance offered by Creation Theatre’s The Tempest team, a set of guidelines drawn up in consultation with a representative of Equity, and a checklist for Zoom performance compiled with Creation Theatre’s Production Manager.

Professor Aebischer said: “Although efforts to provide free art content during lockdown has been appreciated, we need to ensure this doesn’t become a substitute for audiences paying for tickets. This creates jobs, new productions and ensures freelancers – who make up around half of all staff in the industry - can continue working in the industry.

“While many in the industry are focusing their efforts on bringing back physical performances in outdoor settings, with winter approaching and the threat of further lockdowns, the ability to switch rapidly back to a digital mode of performances will be ever more important to the survival of the industry.”

Most people who took part in the research said they wanted to watch an adaptation of a well-known play or novel, suggesting that familiarity with a work may be an important factor in audiences wanting to engage with Zoom theatre. However, similar proportions of respondents also said they would be interested in watching new work.

When the production of The Tempest had been performed the year before, it reached 3,368 individual audience members with summer visitors from 11 countries. The Zoom version in 2020 reached more than 1,200 households in 27 different countries, allowing the company to develop its audience in exciting new ways and provide access to its shows to people previously excluded from theatre-going.

The critical and financial success of the production, for which Creation Theatre charged £20 per viewing device, is helping it stay open during lockdown, make a small profit and continue to produce new work with an international reach. The overwhelming majority of those surveyed said the performance was good value for money, particularly as they were charged per-device, and 79 per cent said they would be willing to pay to watch other Zoom theatre, both in and out of lockdown.

Audiences said they found it easy, or very easy to use Zoom technology during the performance. Watching ‘live’ as the actors performed was important to them, as was the fact the production was designed so they could participate and feel a sense of community as an audience.

Challenges include Zoom fatigue, which affects performers and viewers. Performers also had to cope with Zoom time lag, and use mobile phones, improvisation skills and the goodwill of audiences to cope with internet disruption.

The Zoom production was also effective at reaching new audiences. 27 per cent of respondents said that they had not heard of Creation Theatre before watching the Zoom production. A total of 13 per cent of respondents said that they rarely attended live theatre performances.

The project’s full report will be published later this year. This initial report can be found at https://www.creationtheatre.co.uk/about/digital-theatre-transformation/

Date: 14 August 2020