Next Stage Theatre Company patrons send messages of support for Raise the Roof!

In the first week of our Raise the Roof! Appeal all four of Next Stage Theatre Company’s Patrons sent in messages of support for the cause.

Next Stage is extremely proud to have attracted the patronage of four such giants in the UK theatre industry, and their support in this crucial campaign to raise £110,000 to replace the degraded and leaking roofs on The Mission Theatre is hugely appreciated.

Only a few hours after the launch of the Raise the Roof! Appeal, Dame Harriet Walter DBE emailed the company:

"I am sending all good wishes and hopes for a successful Raise the Roof! campaign".

Dame Harriet Walter DBE, Next Stage Patron since 2001.

Dame Harriet Walter DBE, Next Stage Patron since 2001.

Harriet has been a Patron of Next Stage since 2001. The support of such a highly-acclaimed and well respected actor is a real boost to Next Stage and, hopefully, Harriet’s endorsement will encourage more generous donations to the Raise the Roof! Appeal.

Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE is Next Stage’s longest-serving Patron. Since 1995, this giant of British theatre has been highly supportive and involved in Next Stage’s work, inviting the company to perform in 2000 and 2001 at the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough when he was the Artistic Director there. In 2014 Sir Alan and Lady Ayckbourn came to Bath to celebrate Next Stage’s 20th birthday and to watch Ayckbourn’s plays - House and Garden - performed by the company at The Mission Theatre.

Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE, Next Stage Patron since 1995.

Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE, Next Stage Patron since 1995.

Alan’s message of support regarding Raise the Roof! to be passed on to supporters was:

“Wonderful news that Next Stage is planning to reopen soon, with that marvellous play “The Memory of Water”. Please be generous and help them to fix their roof and stop the memory from becoming an actuality!”

Sir David Hare, Next Stage Patron since 2000 and a leading playwright in British theatre, has written to the company in support of the Raise the Roof! campaign:

“What a perfect moment to shore up the future of a company which has given so much pleasure in the past, and to make sure it does in the future.”

Sir David Hare, Next Stage Patron since 2000.

Sir David Hare, Next Stage Patron since 2000.

Next Stage is very grateful to David, for his words of encouragement and also for his donation to Raise the Roof!

Leading British actor, Robert Lindsay, Next Stage’s Silver Anniversary Patron since 2018, sent in the following message of support:

Very sad to hear that The Mission Theatre has sprung some leaks. It's a beautiful little Georgian building which showcases so much great theatre and entertainment in one of Britain's most popular heritage cities. I urge the people of Bath to get behind Next Stage's Raise the Roof! Appeal and give as generously as possible. Once the target of £110,000 is reached the roof can be repaired, helping to ensure The Mission Theatre's long-term future as a much-loved performing arts venue in the heart of the community. These are tough times for theatres everywhere, but, looking ahead, the shows MUST go on, and preferably in dry auditoria! Very best wishes for a successful campaign.”

Robert Lindsay, Next Stage’s Silver Anniversary Patron since 2018.

Robert Lindsay, Next Stage’s Silver Anniversary Patron since 2018.


Next Stage Theatre Company would like to thank all of its Patrons for their support and encouragement in this ambitious and crucial fundraising effort to help to ensure the future of The Mission Theatre.

For more information on the appeal, including how you can get involved, please click here.

For more information on Next Stage and their patrons, please click here.

Raise the Roof!

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Water is now leaking through the ceilings into both the Main Auditorium and The Theatre Upstairs.

Next Stage has kicked off the fundraising effort by donating £20,000, as you can see on our fundraising barometer. Now we are asking anyone who can to make a donation, large or small, to Raise the Roof! We desperately need your help to prevent any further water damage and preserve The Mission Theatre as a thriving performing arts venue for years to come.

There are five ways in which you can help us to Raise the Roof!:

1. Sponsor a Slate/s - £30 per slate
2. Become a Friend - £60
3. Make a Donation
4. Organise a Fundraising Event
5. Offer Matched Funding


Please click here to find out more about each of these ways to make a donation. Every penny will be gratefully received and acknowledged in our Heritage Book, to be permanently displayed at The Mission Theatre.

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Announcing the launch of our fundraising appeal.

Next Stage Theatre Company, resident at The Mission Theatre, needs your help to raise £110,000 to replace both the pitched and flat roofs on our beautiful 250 year old Grade II listed ex-chapel.

We know that these are difficult and uncertain times for everyone, but these repairs are now a matter of urgency since the roofs have deteriorated with age, and over the last year this degradation has accelerated due to the theatre’s forced closure and lack of heating.

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We will be sharing updates on our website, as well as over social media, and through the Raise the Roof! Barometer, and we would love for you to be a part of it.

Thank you so much in advance, from all of us at The Mission Theatre, for your generosity.

Please click here to go through to our Raise the Roof! webpage, or, if you wish to discuss any aspects of fundraising email us at nextstagebath@aol.com or call 01225 428 600.

Second National Lockdown Impact

A statement from our Artistic Director, Ann Ellison BEM, following the second national lockdown in England:

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On Thursday 5th November England went into a month-long lockdown. I am sure many of you will have realised the implications this has for theatres, and you will therefore not be surprised to learn that Next Stage's attempt to re-open The Mission Theatre with a late-Autumn mini-season starting on Monday November 9th has had to be aborted. It is with great reluctance that I have had to take the decision to reschedule all of the planned productions. We will of course let you know as soon as we are able to confirm new performance dates and there will also be updates on our websites.

I am particularly sad that my cast members in The Memory of Water have once again been faced with a disappointing cancellation. Due to the first lockdown in March the actors lost their show a week before opening night, now they are faced with exactly the same situation. We had been working since September on the re-blocking and refreshing of this play ready to open on the 9th November, but to no avail.

I was, however, incredibly buoyed up after meeting with my cast and crew. Their dedication and commitment to Shelagh Stephenson's compelling play is remarkable and, although this is another sad setback for all of us, everyone is determined that the show WILL go on! We are waiting to see what will happen in December, but if there’s any chance at all of being able to safely produce The Memory of Water this year we will do so.

Another casualty of this second lockdown is Next Stage's planned production of The Hothouse, scheduled for Nov 30th - 5th December. In consultation with director Bob Constantine, I have taken the hard decision that this play will now move to Spring 2021. Bob and his cast have been rehearsing for two months and the play's in great shape with a stellar cast. However with no hopes of opening the theatre before Dec 2nd, and hence no time for tech and dress rehearsals, it seems only fair to ask you all to wait a little longer before seeing this Pinter classic.

I'm so sorry not to be able to welcome you all back to The Mission Theatre as soon as we had hoped, but rest assured, Next Stage Theatre Company will be here waiting to deliver top-quality entertainment to you as soon as we're given the green light to do so.

I look forward to seeing you all as soon as possible. Meanwhile stay safe and well.

Best wishes,

Ann Ellison BEM
Artistic Director
The Mission Theatre and Next Stage Theatre Company

Our Grant from the Government’s Culture Recovery Fund

We are absolutely delighted to announce that Next Stage Theatre Company has been successful in its bid to the Government's Culture Recovery Fund!

The award of over £50k has thrown a vital lifeline to the company as well as The Mission Theatre. The money will enable Next Stage to forge ahead with its planned re-opening of the theatre for late-Autumn and Spring seasons.

First up November 9-14th will be Next Stage’s production of The Memory of Water which was about to be performed in March by the company but was unable to go ahead because of the national lockdown. Following The Memory of Water Next Stage Theatre Company will be performing Harold Pinter's The Hothouse November 30th - December 5th, with plans in the Spring for two Next Stage Youth productions and a further adult stage show in late March. Dates and details of our forthcoming Next Stage shows are available HERE and details for all of the shows in our late-Autumn season are available on The Mission Theatre’s website HERE.

This grant will pay for the wide range of PPE equipment around The Mission Theatre that we have put in place to protect, as far as possible, audience members, cast and crew. This includes custom-made Perspex screens both front of house and backstage – made by a skilled and generous member of Next Stage, automatic hand sanitiser dispensers at key locations around the theatre, health and safety signage, and state-of-the-art santitiser fogging machines that allow us to fully disinfect auditorium chairs between performances. We have also invested hundreds of pounds in Condencide - an evaporator and condenser cleaner which treats the ventilation, A/C and heating systems in The Mission Theatre to kill 99% of germs, and can be reapplied every few weeks to make sure the air flow in the Main Auditorium is kept as Covid and bug free as possible.

We will also use part of the grant to address the safety of technical crew for Next Stage shows operating in the tech box at the theatre. This small, enclosed area will now benefit from updated kit enabling lights and sound to be operated by state-of-the-art equipment which necessitates only one or - at the maximum - two people being in the tech cupboard at any one time.

Looking ahead, the funding will also help to pay some of the utility bills, rent and outgoings that are part of The Mission Theatre’s monthly obligations but which have been crippling since March when the theatre had to close and had no way of generating income. Even the planned late-Autumn and Spring seasons will not fully cover outgoings as The Mission Theatre’s auditorium will be configured to allow for social distancing which slightly reduces its audience capacity.

In an industry that has, since March, often seemed to be invisible and overlooked by the Government in favour of more obvious businesses, it is with the greatest relief and gratitude that this financial lifeline from the Government has been provided for theatres and cultural venues not only in Bath but around the country. There is no question that performers and audiences alike wish to see the return of live entertainment as soon as possible in our theatres and this generous gifting of sizeable amounts of money will go some way to helping realise this dream.

Everyone in Next Stage Theatre Company would like to express our immense gratitude to Arts Council England and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) for awarding us this grant, and hope that anyone reading this will join with us in celebrating our good news and, hopefully, come back to see us as soon as we re-open.

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Next Stage Youth to Restart for Autumn Term

We are very pleased to announce that Next Stage Youth will be restarting in the 2020 Autumn term, with enrolment on Sunday September 20th 4.30-6pm at The Mission Theatre. As always sessions will be led by the company's Artistic Director - Ann Ellison - and her team of tutors.

We have surveyed all of our current NSY members and are delighted that almost every Youther is happy to return in September to continue developing their acting skills and confidence, as well as meeting up with like-minded friends for some much-needed fun in these troubled times. We will of course be following social distancing guidelines and will take every precaution to make sure our Youthers remain safe.

We should like to encourage any potential new members to come along to the enrolment day on Sunday September 20th. If you are aged 11-18 and would like to develop your theatrical skills and interests, Next Stage Youth is the place for you. The prestigious Youth company has been providing first-class training to Bath youngsters for over 25 years. There are no auditions, everyone is welcome and there’s lots of fun and friendship to be had, as well as the chance to perform in full scale productions every year. For more information, visit our Next Stage Youth page.

Membership is £120 for each 10 week term with sessions of one and a half hours every Sunday in term time.

For further information please call Ann Ellison on 01225 428600 or email nextstagebath@aol.com

Scenes from the 2019 Next Stage Youth production of Tom’s Midnight Garden.

Tina’s Trophy for Excellence in Theatre

The award was created on May 18th 2019, Next Stage’s 25th birthday, to celebrate Excellence in Theatre. The beautiful crystal vase is awarded annually to a member of Next Stage who has excelled within the company either onstage, backstage, around the theatre, or all three.  Given by Next Stage’s Artistic Director Ann Ellison it was named Tina’s Trophy in memory of Ann’s mother. The first recipient was Brian Howe, who has now handed over the trophy to the May 2020 winner: Caroline Groom.

Caroline has been a Next Stager since 1995. An extremely talented actor, Caroline soon became an invaluable member of the company, liked and admired by all. It’s impossible to list all of Caroline’s outstanding onstage performances with Next Stage however we thought we would highlight a few:

In 2000 Caroline gave an informed and sensitive performance as Kyra in Skylight, the show that first took Next Stage to the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough which was run, at that time, by our patron - Sir Alan Ayckbourn. In 2003 Caroline gave a memorably powerful portrayal of Merteuil, the calculating and manipulative protagonist in Les Liaisons Dangereuse. In total contrast, Caroline played the  youthful and vengeful Murganah in The Champion of Paribanou in 2005; and many remember with great fondness Caroline’s portrayal of the mercurial Jean Brodie in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (2011). All three of these shows toured to the Minack in Cornwall, one of Caroline’s favourite venues and where her acting talents have regularly been appreciated in this 700-seater outdoor arena. In 2005 Caroline lead the company as Jacie Triplethree in Comic Potential - the show with which Next Stage opened The Mission Theatre. More recently, in December 2019, continuing a long line of her outstanding Ayckbourn roles, Caroline was seen at The Mission playing Susan in Woman in Mind - an unforgettable performance in which she never left the stage. 

Whether playing tragedy or comedy, Caroline is a consummate actor and one who is neither afraid, nor reluctant to take a supporting role if asked, or to help backstage when required. She is a member of the Next Stage Working Party and is frequently to be seen undertaking Front of House duties at The Mission. Caroline’s insightful and supportive manner with other company members, plus her on stage generosity and skills, mean she is respected and loved by Next Stagers. We trust that Tina’s Trophy will be a constant reminder of that fact in the year ahead. 

Congratulations and thank you Caroline for all that you have given to the company.

Grant from Arts Council England

We are delighted to announce that Next Stage Theatre Company has been awarded a grant from Arts Council England, through their Emergency Response Fund. As The Mission Theatre has been closed and so cannot generate income  this grant is a real lifeline, allowing us to pay the day to day running costs of rent, servicing of equipment, insurance, professional fees and building maintenance that we will incur between now and October.

We would like to say a big thank you to Arts Council England and to The National Lottery for supporting us, and we look forward to welcoming audiences back as soon as it is safe for us to do so. 

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STOP PRESS

It is with a heavy heart that, following government guidelines, we have closed The Mission Theatre and cancelled upcoming productions in the near future, starting with The Memory of Water which was due to be performed by Next Stage Theatre Company, March 24th-28th.

We will re-open as soon as we are advised it is safe to do so, and we will be rescheduling as many of the cancelled productions as possible.

If you have a ticket for The Memory of Water and you would like to be refunded, please email us with your account details. Alternatively, we can keep your ticket order and you will have first refusal for seats when we can confirm the play’s rescheduling.

Thank you for your support and understanding. We will keep you updated on this website and via our social media, and we look forward to welcoming you back to the theatre as soon as we can.

Next Stage Youth Shine at Mid-Somerset Drama Festival 2020

Next Stage Youth Company and their tutors

Next Stage Youth Company and their tutors

Next Stage Youth entered four classes in the 2020 Mid-Somerset Drama Festival. Two groups were entered in the Year 9 and Under class, and two in the 19 years and Under class. All groups received constructive and positive feedback on their performances, which won the Youth Company: one first place, two second places and a third place. Well done NSYouthers!

19 Years and Under
Group A - Henry Skinner as Jake, Keira Barry as Polly and Rosie Kelly as Natasha - performed an extract from the opening of Sparkleshark by Philip Ridley. This is a powerful play in which the cut and thrust of teenage moods and conflicts is captured in vivid and compelling dialogue. The actors were praised for demonstrating good relationships between characters, and for giving an excellent contrast of moods. The constant change of emotions were a challenge, but this group didn’t fail in performing an excellent piece which was commended and awarded first place with the Crisp Cowley trophy.

Group B - Georges Boutin as Martin Dysart, Harry Lewis as Alan Strang, Catherine Jones as Hester and Eve Howard as The Nurse - performed an extract from the opening of Equus by Peter Shaffer. A disturbing play, the young actors performed the opening 10 minutes with total conviction. Harry as Alan Strang, a young boy who has been arrested for blinding six horses, gave a particularly powerful portrayal of the disturbed teenager, with Georges convincing as Dysart. Equus is a difficult play to perform, however this group worked hard and produced a tight ensemble piece. They came second and received a commended certificate.

Year 9 and under

Group A - Nia Dauncey as Boy, Alicia Corripio-Dieppe as Grandmama, Joshua Frere as Bruno, Lily Pollard as The Grand High Witch, Sophia Punt as Mrs Jenkins and Isabella Wood as The Doorman - performed scenes from The Witches by Roald Dahl. A number in this group were new to NSY and all of the tutors were impressed by the strength of their performances. The adjudicator commented on a “well shaped and well-rehearsed” piece and awarded the group 3rd place and a commended certificate.

Group B - William Heaton as Will, Max Leming as Zach, Georgia Grobler as Carrie, Tom Pegler as Vic and Lily Chapman as Miss Thorne and Mrs Beech - performed Good Night Mister Tom by Michelle Magorian. The 10 minute extract took the audience to the end of Act I, where the happy mood of the evacuees mixing with friends in a village during World War II suddenly takes a dark turn when one of them is told he must return to London. The adjudicator commented on the group’s ‘vocal range, strong grouping and effective atmosphere with a very strong ending’. The group were proud to be awarded Next Stage Youth’s only Distinction this year.

Congratulations to all our young competitors on a good rehearsal process since January and mature, convincing performances.