Bristol Old Vic to postpone The Meaning of Zong until April 2022

Bristol Old Vic today announced the postponement of The Meaning of Zong, Giles Terera’s debut play which was due to premiere at Bristol Old Vic from 11th September  – 2nd October.

It will now take place from 2nd April – 7th May at the theatre and include a live-broadcast as part of Bristol Old Vic’s ongoing digital theatre offer.

 “We will continue to work on our production of Giles’ brilliant and prophetic play, but the combination of the Government’s failure to manage levels of COVID infection levels, their adherence to the rules of isolation until 16 August and the failure to release the prepared insurance scheme for theatres has made it impossible for us to create the show within its announced dates this September,” said Artistic Director Tom Morris.

“It’s hard to be critical of a government which has been clear about the value of our national creativity and the businesses it sustains, and incisive in the investment of the Cultural Recovery Fund to protect it.  But the management of the opening-up of the economy has been farcical.

The removal of restrictions (which has facilitated a massive summer surge in infections), suggests that the risk from rising COVID numbers is low.  Strict adherence to isolation rules on top of this (ham-stringing businesses across the economy) suggests the risk from rising COVID is high. Government doesn’t appear know its own mind.  The failure to reconcile these contradictions is causing widespread disruption across the economy (not just in theatre), crashing our faith in the Test and Trace system, and causing a frightening rise in infection rates.”

Theatres all over Britain, with the support of the Performance Research Programme, have shown that it is possible to safely entertain the public in UK theatres, and Bristol Old Vic will continue to do just that.  But when it comes to the creative process, however, the combined demands of keeping artists safe, delivering work of the highest quality and controlling costs create a wholly different challenge.

Bristol Old Vic’s Executive Director Charlotte Geeves explained:
“The impact of the “pingdemic” on rehearsal rooms across the country is seismic. At any point, half the company might be instructed to isolate for 10 days, interrupting rehearsals, delaying the show’s completion and increasing costs beyond recovery. With infection rates in Bristol approaching 1 in 100 across the population, the risk of harm to our artists and interruption to our business is very high.

The rest of Bristol Old Vic’s programme for Autumn/Winter remains on sale. The theatre’s promise to keep our audiences safe remains strong with the additional offer of two guaranteed socially distanced performances until Christmas remaining in place.  And our commitment to deliver a stunning production of Giles’ play to live audiences in Bristol and all over the world is stronger than ever.”

Celebrating the power of individual action to drive huge societal change, The Meaning of Zong tells the true story of Olaudah Equiano as he joins forces with anti-slavery campaigner Granville Sharp to publicly condemn the massacre aboard the slave ship Zong, setting in motion events which would go on to galvanise the abolition movement in the UK.

The play was already in development at Bristol Old Vic when the pandemic hit, and the social upheaval of BLM movement, George Floyd’s murder and the toppling of the Colston Statue heightened the play’s urgency – leading to the stage production’s transformation into an audio play for BBC Radio3 in March 2021.

Writer, director and lead actor of The Meaning of Zong Giles Terera said: ‘History tells us that when Olaudah Equiano first tried to tell this story in Britain two hundred years ago he was met with massive resistance, because the establishment knew the power that stories have to encourage people and bring about change in society. But thankfully history also shows us that stories endure while governments do not.  I’m excited to continue building the production and looking forward to sharing it with audiences in the Spring.”