York Theatre Royal nominated for first time for Theatre of the Year in The Stage Awards

Actor-director Gary Oldman and York Theatre Royal chief executive officer Paul Crewes in the auditorium when first planning Krapp’s Last Tape. Picture: Gisele Schmidt

YORK Theatre Royal has been shortlisted for Theatre of the Year in The Stage Awards 2026.

Award winners will be crowned at the Royal Opera House, London, on January 12 2026, when the Theatre Royal will be competing against fellow nominees Almeida Theatre, London, Nottingham Playhouse, Royal Court Theatre, London, Soho Theatre, London, and Watermill Theatre, Newbury.

Chief executive officer Paul Crewes says: “2025 has been such an incredible year for York Theatre Royal and we are so proud to be shortlisted for The Stage’s Theatre of the Year.

“It is the first time for us, and this recognition is a real testament to the remarkable work from the whole York Theatre Royal (YTR) staff team, as well as the talented creative, production and technical teams, performers, stage managers, practitioners, producers, collaborators, partners, funders and volunteers who have worked with us and supported us this year.”

Gary Oldman on stage at York Theatre Royal in Samuel Beckett’s monodrama Krapp’s Last Tape. Picture: Gisele Schmidt

Over the past 18 months, the YTR’s increasing focus has been on building up an ambitious programme of produced work, a strategy spearheaded by Crewes since taking up his CEO role in October 2023.

This year, award-winning actor Gary Oldman worked with York Theatre Royal on Krapp’s Last Tape, directing himself and designing the set for Samuel Beckett’s  melancholic monodrama from April 14 to May 17. He would end the year with a knighthood for outstanding services to drama; producers York Theatre Royal with the award nomination.

They will be in tandem again for Krapp’s Last Tape’s transfer to the Royal Court Theatre, London, from May 8 to 30 2026 as part of the Chelsea theatre’s 70th anniversary celebrations.

Sir Gary started his professional career at York Theatre Royal in 1979-1980 and talked of completing the cycle when he made his return 45 years later. “This was an amazing opportunity for audiences, and York Theatre Royal ensured ticket prices remained accessible,” says Crewes,

Debbie Isitt’s Military Wives – The Musical: Premiered at York Theatre Royal in September. Picture: Danny With A Camera

York Theatre Royal’s revival of The Railway Children with Keighley & Worth Valley Railway for Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture at Oxenhope Station

“The show was a huge success, attracted international press and welcomed people from across the world – 48 per cent of audiences surveyed were coming to the theatre for the first time and every performance sold out. ”

The world premiere of Military Wives – The Musical, written and directed by BAFTA-award winning Debbie Isitt, was another landmark production from September 10 to 27. Isitt’s  musical drama told the story of the first Military Wives choir and the YTR worked closely with choirs across the country to tell their stories through marketing. Feedback found that 93 per cent of those surveyed gave the show five stars. 

Crewes’s ambitious plans to expand the YTR programme of produced work will continue with upcoming spring season productions of a revival of The Secret Garden – The Musicaldirected by Tony award winner and former YTR artistic director John Doyle and the world premiere of The Psychic from Andy Nyman and Jeremy Dyson, the writers of Ghost Stories.  

More widely, the YTR aims to take its work across the UK and the globe, best exemplified by collaborating with Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture to bring director Damien Cruden and York writer Mike Kenny’s Olivier Award-winning stage adaptation of E Nesbit’s The Railway Children  back to the tracks at Oxenhope Station on the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway from July 15 to September 7.

Billy Heathwood, left, and Anthony Jardine (as Seebohm Rowntree) in this summer’s community production, His Last Report. Picture: S R Taylor Photography

Community is at the heart of the YTR too, built around a proactive creative engagement programme that  reaches people from a wide variety of backgrounds and ages, from youth theatre for age five upwards through to adult acting and participation programmes.

At the epicentre this summer was the community co-production of Misha Duncan-Barry and Bridget Foreman’s His Last Report, a premiere staged with York company Riding Lights from July 19 to August 3 that highlighted the life and work of York social reformer Seebohm Rowntree.

This local story with national impact brought together 300 volunteers on and off stage, including  a cast of more than 100. To ensure cost was not a barrier, YTR implemented a pay-what-you-can pricing strategy for opening night that resulted in a sold-out performance.  

In 2025, York Theatre Royal secured funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and Garfield Weston Foundation to expand community outreach activities to reach more people through the Sweet Legacies project, putting on fun, free and inclusive activities connected to the Rowntree family and legacy across the city.  

Enjoying the Sweet Legacies project at York Theatre Royal. Picture: James Drury

Sir Gary Oldman to revive York Theatre Royal solo turn in Krapp’s Last Tape at London’s Royal Court next May

Gary Oldman (now Sir Gary Oldman) in Krapp’s Last Tape at York Theatre Royal this spring. Picture: Gisele Schmidt

SIR Gary Oldman is to revive his York Theatre Royal production of Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape as part of Royal Court Theatre’s 70th anniversary season in London.

Beckett’s melancholic monodrama received its British premiere as the aperitif in a double bill with the Irish playwright’s Endgame at the Royal Court, and today’s announcement falls on the 67th anniversary of the opening night on October 28 1958.

Krapp’s Last Tape will run at the London theatre from May 8 to 30 2026, following its sold-out run in York from April 14 to May 17 this spring, when Academy Award, BAFTA, SAG, BIFA and Golden Globe winner Gary Oldman made his return to the York Theatre Royal stage after a 45-year hiatus.

Knighted by Prince William at Windsor Castle in September 2025 for his services to drama, Sir Gary, 67, made his professional debut in the repertory ranks at York Theatre Royal in 1979 after winning a scholarship to Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama, from where he graduated with a BA in acting that year.

That first season took in She Stoops To Conquer, Thark, Privates On Parade and Romeo And Juliet, topped off by  playing the Cat in furry suit, mittens and nylon whiskers in Berwick Kaler’s third York pantomime, Dick Whittington And His Wonderful Cat, that Christmas.

This spring, at the height of the popularity of his Apple TV+ role as unkempt, flatulent, rude, caustic Jackson Lamb in misfit spy thriller Slow Horses, Sir Gary  headed north to show support for regional theatre, directing himself in the 50-minute Krapp’s Last Tape in his first theatre appearance in 38 years, back in York for his “completion of a cycle”.

Gary Oldman (now Sir Gary Oldman) and York Theatre Royal chief executive officer Paul Crewes surveying the Theatre Royal auditorium. Picture: Gisele Schmidt

“After all, it is the where it all began,” he said in his programme note. “York, in a very real sense, for me, is coming home. I met with YTR’s chief executive, Paul Crewes, and the play, the how and the when , were mapped out.”

Welcoming the transfer to London, York Theatre Royal chief executive Paul Crewe says: “Working with Gary on our production of Krapp’s Last Tape was remarkable and we are delighted that even more people will get the opportunity to see his extraordinary performance in this landmark play. It was first performed at the Royal Court 67 years ago and it’s so wonderfully fitting that it makes a return as part of their 70th anniversary celebrations.”

Krapp’s Last Tape will be performed by Sir Gary in the Royal Court’s Jerwood Theatre Downstairs, preceded  every night by Godot’s To-Do List, a new Beckett-inspired short play by Jerwood New Playwright Leo Simpe-Asante, directed by Aneesha Srinivasan.

Winner of the 2025 inaugural Royal Court Young Playwrights Award, this curtain-raising comedy follows seven decades on from Krapp’s Last Tape’s own debut as a curtain-raiser on the Royal Court’s stage.

Quick refresher course, Krapp’s Last Tape is the one where Oldman’s disenchanted Krapp coughs and chomps his way through three bananas on his 69th birthday, as he sits alone in his cluttered attic and listens to the echoes of his younger self, spinning the spools of his reel-to-reel recorder before recording his latest birthday reflection.   

“Perhaps my best years are gone,” bemoans Krapp. “When there was a chance of happiness. But I wouldn’t want them back. Not with the fire in me now.”

Meanwhile, Sir Gary can be seen in the on-going fifth series of Slow Horses, being released – frustratingly! – in weekly episodes on Apple TV+ from September 24.

Arise Sir Gary Oldman

Sir Gary Oldman. Picture: Gisele Schmidt

CONGRATULATIONS to Sir Gary Oldman, knighted in the King’s Honours List for services to drama.

Services that began in the repertory ranks of York Theatre Royal in 1979-1980 in a season of nine shows that took in She Stoops To Conquer, Thark, Privates On Parade and Romeo And Juliet, topped off by Oldman playing the Cat in furry suit, mittens and nylon whiskers in Berwick Kaler’s third York pantomime, Dick Whittington And His Wonderful Cat, that Christmas.

Announced on June 13, Sir Gary’s knighthood comes less than a month after he completed his banana-munching April 14 to May 17 residency in Samuel Beckett’s melancholic monodrama Krapp’s Last Tape on his return to York Theatre Royal after more than 45 years.

Gary Oldman, third from the left, in hat and glasses, in Privates On Parade at York Theatre Royal in 1979, one of his first professional performances after graduating that year with a BA in Acting from Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama, in Sidcup, Kent. Picture: York Theatre Royal

“To be included in the long lineage of extraordinary actors, artists and others who hold this title fills me with indescribable humility and pride,” pronounced Sir Gary in his official statement. “It is emotional, humbling and flattering all at the same time to be recognised amongst them.”

Theatre Royal chief executive Paul Crewes, who oversaw Sir Gary’s York return, says: “Congratulations to Sir Gary on this very well-deserved knighthood. We were so honoured to welcome him back to the York Theatre Royal stage this year and the whole team are delighted by this news.”

Sir Gary, 67, can be seen next in the fifth series of Slow Horses, in the lead role of grouchy Slough House spy Jackson Lamb, on Apple TV+ from September 24.

Gary Oldman in his York Theatre Royal residency in Krapp’s Last Tape from April 14 to May 17 2025. Picture: Gisele Schmidt