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Andrew Scott on the red carpet
Andrew Scott: ‘Hopefully, there is some night or two nights a week when you can get something like a sale rack.’ Photograph: Jeenah Moon/Reuters
Andrew Scott: ‘Hopefully, there is some night or two nights a week when you can get something like a sale rack.’ Photograph: Jeenah Moon/Reuters

‘It’s frustrating’: Fleabag star Andrew Scott urges West End to slash ticket prices

This article is more than 6 months old

Actor says seats costing £150 are driving away young people and risk keeping theatre ‘elitist’

Actor Andrew Scott has suggested cheap theatre tickets should be put on a “sale rack” so that young people can see West End productions without having to spend £150.

The actor, known for television roles such as the “hot” priest in Fleabag and Moriarty in Sherlock, has won two Olivier Awards for his theatre work.

His most recent production, Vanya, an adaptation of Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya will be shown in cinemas this month.

Scott, 47, told BBC Radio 4’s Broadcasting House programme: “No matter how zeitgeisty or how modern you think your play is, if you are having to spend £150, no person between the age of 16-25 or beyond is going to be able to afford that. That is frustrating to me.

“Hopefully, there is some night or two nights a week when you can get something like a sale rack, you have to be prepared to rummage a little bit. It is important that it doesn’t remain an elitist art form,” he said.

Last November The Crown star Dominic West called West End ticket prices “crazy”.

David Tennant, the former Doctor Who star, said some tickets had become “ludicrously” expensive and warned that young people would be deterred from going to the theatre.

“We have to look after the industry from the bottom up because we won’t be making great telly and we won’t be making Oscar-winning movies if we don’t still have a thriving theatre scene,” Tennant said.

Tickets for Plaza Suite, which stars husband and wife Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker, cost from £125 to £395.

National Youth Theatre artistic director Paul Roseby has also warned that theatre had become a luxury.

A survey by The Stage newspaper showed the average price of the most expensive tickets was £141, but the average price of the cheapest had risen by more than inflation to £25.

More on this story

More on this story

  • ‘It’s licensed touting, essentially’: has sky high ticket pricing turned London theatre into the wild West End?

  • Ignore the West End critics – there are plenty of cheap theatre seats

  • Top-price West End theatre tickets rise by 9% in a year and reach £300

  • The Guardian view on culture: fight for the arts in our era of austerity

  • Edinburgh festival slashes ticket prices to increase youth participation

  • The Guardian view on theatre pricing: an issue of cultural democracy

  • Dominic West becomes latest star to criticise soaring West End ticket prices

  • ‘Who can afford them?’: theatregoers react to £395 tickets for Neil Simon play

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