THE SHOW MUST GO ON

Andrew Lloyd Webber vows West End show will open ‘come hell or high water’ on July 14 despite Freedom day delay fears

ANDREW Lloyd Webber has vowed that his new West End show will open “come hell or high water” despite fears that Freedom day may be delayed.

The famous composer’s £6million musical Cinderella is due to hold its world premiere on July 14 at the Gillian Lynne Theatre in London.

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Andrew Lloyd Webber has said that he is determined to open his theatres on June 21

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Theatres can only hold a 50 percent capacity with current Government restrictions

However, the musical’s reopening is subject to the Government’s “roadmap” and whether social distancing measures will be lifted.

If those measures are still in place, Webber will be forced to postpone the musical’s premiere again.

The June 21 “freedom day” is in doubt due to concerns over the impact of Covid-19 variants.

Asked by the what happens if the Government forces Webber to delay the premiere of his show, he replied: “We will say: come to the theatre and arrest us.”

Cinderella was originally due to open in August 2020 but was diverted because of the pandemic.

The show, with an ensemble of 34 actors, could not afford to run the show at just 50 per cent capacity.

Will lockdown end on June 21?

The surge in Indian variant cases in the UK has triggered demands for the June 21 unlocking to be delayed.

Britain’s long-awaited “Freedom Day” is now in doubt, with scientists and Boris Johnson‘s former adviser Dominic Cummings among those calling for it to be postponed.

The PM said he is ruling “nothing out”, as he vowed to combat the spread of the infectious mutation.

On Thursday, May 13, he said there was “nothing that dissuades me” from easing England’s lockdown on Monday, May 17, or the further steps towards normality on June 21.

But he added “there may be things we have to do locally and we will not hesitate to do them if that is the advice we get”.

There is no current evidence that vaccines do not work against the Indian variant, which is thought to be at least as transmissible as the Kent variant of the virus.

The pandemic has had a catastrophic financial impact on the theatre industry and many have remained closed despite the ease in Covid-19 restrictions as it is not financially viable for them to open with reduced capacities.

“I’ve seen the science from the tests don’t ask me how. They all prove that theatres are completely safe, the virus is not carried there,” Webber told the Telegraph.

“If the Government ignore their own science, we have the mother of all legal cases against them.

“If Cinderella couldn’t open, we’d go, ‘Look, either we go to law about it or you’ll have to compensate us.’”

The impresario went on to say that he may have to sell his six West End venues if the Government does not relax its restrictions.

He also revealed he has already remortgaged his London home.

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This is not the first time Lord Lloyd-Webber, 73, has criticised those calling for a delay in reopening.

Last week he told the he may take legal action if his theatres are not allowed to welcome back crowds at full capacity.

He said it would be the “final death blow” if restrictions weren’t eased.

Susanna Reid admits she auditioned and was rejected by Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber
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