Andrew Lloyd Webber: I will reopen theatres on 21 June come hell or high water

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 16: Andrew Lloyd Webber attends the world premiere of
Andrew Lloyd Webber said he will not delay reopening his theatres any longer – even if it means breaking the law. (Getty Images) (Dia Dipasupil via Getty Images)

Andrew Lloyd Webber has declared he will go ahead with plans to reopen theatres in England on 21 June – even if it means being arrested.

The 73-year-old musical composer and producer said he has mortgaged his home and may have to sell his six West End theatres if the government does not lift lockdown restrictions forcing venues to run at reduced capacity to allow for social distancing.

Baron Lloyd-Webber told The Daily Telegraph: “We are going to open, come hell or high water.”

Read more: Andrew Lloyd Webber: 'People who refuse coronavirus vaccine are selfish'

Asked what he will do if the government extends the restrictions beyond 21 June, the theatrical impresario said: “We will say, ‘Come to the theatre and arrest us.’"

Lloyd Webber – who volunteered to be part of an early trial of the AstraZeneca vaccine last August in a bid to help combat the coronavirus pandemic – is due to begin previews of a new musical production of Cinderella at the Gillian Lynne Theatre in London's Covent Garden on 25 June.

 Andrew Lloyd Webber�s Cinderella his latest musical comedy starring Carrie Hope Fletcher which is due to reopen at the Gillian Lynne Theater in London�s west end in April 2021.
The Theater has a sign saying 'Opening Spring 2021... If We're Allowed!' in reference to Theaters being closed at present to the Covid-19 pandemic. (Photo by Dave Rushen / SOPA Images/Sipa USA)
Previews of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Cinderella are due to begin at the Gillian Lynne Theatre in London on 25 June. (PA) (SIPA USA/PA Images)

The Evita composer claimed scientific evidence indicated theatres are “completely safe” and do not cause outbreaks and that he is prepared to sue the government if it does not go ahead with plans to allow them to open.

He said: “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.’"

In response, communities secretary Robert Jenrick said he “completely sympathised” with Lloyd Webber and those in the theatre sector.

“We want to get them open, we are doing pilots, we want to get those theatres open so great new productions like Cinderella can open,” Jenrick told Sky News.

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick arrives at BBC Broadcasting House in London to appear on the Andrew Marr show. Labour has demanded a top-level investigation into Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick, over how Government funding was allocated to his Newark constituency.
Communities secretary Robert Jenrick said even Baron Lloyd-Webber has to abide by the rules. (PA) (PA)

“I know that people are desperate to go to them, tickets are selling fast for all those productions because people have been away too long.

“But you have just got a few more days to wait until the judgment that the prime minister is going to make on the basis of the data.”

When asked if Baron Lloyd-Webber should be arrested if he does open theatres without restrictions relaxing, Jenrick said: “We all have to abide by the rules.

“I’m not going to get into speculation about that but we want to get those theatres back open, obviously as quickly as we can, and to support people like Andrew Lloyd Webber so that we can all enjoy brilliant productions in the West End once again.”

Lloyd Webber has been vocal throughout the pandemic about its effect on the theatre and entertainment industry.

Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber speaks during the unveiling of the Wall of Fame, a new art installation at the London Palladium in London.
Baron Lloyd-Webber was one of the first volunteers in the COVID vaccination trial. (PA) (PA)

His Really Useful Group has said it is losing up to £6m a week in box office sales, while Shakespeare's Globe and the Old Vic warned their financial losses could mean they would be forced to close down permanently.

Read more: Phantom Of The Opera to close permanently in West End after 34 years due to coronavirus

Lloyd Webber has even offered his theatres for trial of a chemical spray called triethylene glycol (TEG) that could be pumped into indoor venues to help sanitise them.

The government has previously named 21 June as the date for England to lift all remaining restrictions put in place to limit the spread of COVID-19.

But with a large rise in numbers testing positive for the Delta variant of the virus in the past week, there is increasing speculation the lifting will be delayed.

Watch: Andrew Lloyd Webber warns theatres may have to close permanently

Advertisement