Theatre school launches course amid funding issues

Jasmine Ketibuah-Foleyand
Audrey Dias,Bristol
News imageCraig Fuller A male actor is wearing Victorian nightgown performing as a character on stage with another male actor in a Victorian teacher's costume and a cane in his hand standing by a chalk board.Craig Fuller
The Bristol Old Vic Theatre School has launched a new foundation course

A renowned theatre school that suspended its undergraduate course due to funding challenges has launched a new short course.

Bristol Old Vic made the decision to close the degree a year ago amid wider funding issues in the arts and higher education.

Students who want to see the institution's legacy in the sector continue hope the new foundation course will breathe "new life" into the school after concerns over its future.

Principal Stuart Harvey said financial pressures remained but the theatre school was excited to launch the new course. "Internally we have a positivity in our ambition that maybe we weren't seeing last year," he added.

Harvey said: "We're in a unique position of being a vocational training establishment where the contact hours are incredibly high. The nuanced and personal approach we take with our students mean our costs rise.

"We realise that we can't offer those on the shorter Foundation courses, the same level and intensity of training students get on a three year course, but we want to give them an introduction to the drama school experience through these new shorter 2-term and 3-term courses."

News imageA group of students taking part in a class. They are sat in a circle of chairs with scripts in their laps. Two people are standing in the middle facing each other.
Full-time and part-time places on the foundation course will be available

The new short foundation course will offer a £5,000 bursary to 50 percent of new students.

This includes £20,000 gifted by the Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation which will be allocated to up to four students.

A date for when undergraduate applications will reopen is yet to be released.

News imageTamzin is wearing a khaki long-sleeved top and has long brown hair. She is also wearing two necklaces and is smiling at the camera as she stands in a room with other students who are taking part in a lesson behind her.
Graduate Tamzin Khan grew up in Bristol

Second year student Hari Johnson said last year was "devastating" but explained how excited he was for the the prospect of "new life in the school".

"A lot of people were worried," he said.

"It was representative of a wider problem with funding in the arts. But the school did a good job of reassuring us."

Tamzin Khan, a 2025 graduate who grew up in the city, said it is important to get that extra support to "go for your dreams".

"Especially for people like myself who are from a working class background," she added.

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