Not the audience of the future: the audience of now

Theatre companies love the sales from student audiences but are often unprepared for an interactive, digitally savvy audience.
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Bell Shakespeare Learning in action at Carclew

Audiences, audience development, and audience retention are recognised as key drivers in theatre companies’ programming, marketing and promotion. But what is the direct relationship between audiences, audience development and education programs? The Australia Council for the Arts, Anticipating Change in the Major Performing Arts report (2008) states that a number of Major Performing Arts companies have developed school programs to ‘build connections with audiences of the future’. Anyone who has sat in a theatre with an audience comprising large groups of students and young people knows that they are not audiences of the future they are audiences of now: digitally savvy complex thinkers, media consumers and art makers. They go to school but school is not their only go-to place.

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Meg Upton and Naomi Edwards
About the Author
Meg Upton is an experienced drama educator, researcher and youth arts worker in both the arts and education sectors. As education manager at the Malthouse Theatre 2000–08 she created a range of programs and projects that connected young people with practising artists in professional arts settings. Naomi Edwards a theatre and opera director and arts educator.She has directing credits with Opera Australia and all our major companies and teaching institutions, working in both the main stage and education contexts.