Theatre Royal, Nottingham joins National Theatre Nationwide: a new landmark partnership with 12 leading theatres in all nine regions of England dedicated to ensuring parity of access to art and culture, enriching people’s lives – wherever they live.
The network is envisioned as a cornerstone for a more connected, resilient, and accessible National Theatre with a truly national presence. Different facets of the scheme will be developed over time, subject to funding, with a clear ambition to grow the impact of the model.
This announcement, the network’s first initiative, reflects the partners’ shared commitment to strengthening the touring ecology. This includes touring National Theatre productions direct from its London stages with the original cast to venues in all English regions, supported by Arts Council England. In addition, there will be subsidised ticketing and new schools touring productions across the country.
This addresses one of the key challenges to achieving parity of access: the decline in the number of touring productions around the country. Recent research from Arts Council England shows that the number of plays touring England has fallen by 64% since 2019.
The Nationwide partnership proudly brings together the expertise and reach of Theatre Royal, Nottingham alongside eleven other theatres across England: Belgrade Theatre in Coventry, Birmingham Hippodrome, Leeds Heritage Theatres, Curve, Leicester, Lowry in Salford, Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury, Newcastle Theatre Royal, Norwich Theatre, Sheffield Theatres, Southampton Mayflower and Theatre Royal Plymouth.
As part of the partnership, a new Nationwide schools touring programme will deliver original, curriculum-linked productions directly into a range of primary and secondary schools and local venues each year.
In Autumn 2026, writer Nima Taleghani will join with director Hannah Hauer-King to create an adapted version of a main stage production especially for schools, following Bacchae’s debut at the National Theatre as part of Indhu Rubasingham’s inaugural season. This modern retelling of Euripides’ ancient Greek tragedy will be brought to life through rhythm, movement and music.
Bacchae will visit secondary schools and colleges across East Midlands in partnership with Theatre Royal, Nottingham from 9-13 November as part of this nationwide tour.
Kate Varah, Executive Director & Co-Chief Executive of the National Theatre said, “This announcement is rooted in the National Theatre’s overarching commitment to ensure people across the nation can experience and benefit from our work and impact. Fresh analysis, supported by McKinsey, highlights that the National Theatre puts £241m back into the UK economy each year, £87m of which already flows into regional economies. This new Nationwide partnership will deepen and grow that contribution, not only ensuring the long-term resilience of the theatre but crucially, supporting local communities and businesses, schools, teachers and their students, the growth of future audiences, and engendering pride in place.”
Hannah Lake, Director, Touring Transformation, Arts Council England said, “Touring plays a crucial role in our cultural landscape, ensuring people can access the very best art and culture close to where they live. This innovative new partnership bringing work directly from the renowned National Theatre stages to major theatres across every English region, alongside an extensive programme engaging young people in theatre through school productions does just that, which is why we are so pleased to be supporting it.”
Rebecca Morris, Head of Creative Learning and Engagement at the Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall Nottingham, said, “At the Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall, we’re delighted to be part of the National Theatre’s Nationwide Partnership programme and proud to be bringing this work to schools across Nottingham and the wider region. Our recent collaboration on Dear England benefited multiple schools and demonstrated the impact of connecting young people with nationally significant theatre, archives and NT practitioners, enriching curriculum learning and ensuring that young people from across the region encountered nationally significant theatre as part of their education.
“Building on this work, welcoming the Bacchae schools tour to Nottingham feels like an exciting next step in enabling even more students to engage with ambitious, high‑quality theatre where they learn and live, and reflecting our excitement at being part of a place‑rooted National Theatre partnership.”
The National Theatre offers the widest access to high-quality theatre in the world. This year, they will produce 18 plays, following over a thousand shows that have shaped British theatre since 1963. For more information, please visit nationaltheatre.org.uk.
