Theatre, cinema, concerts thrive in Madrid despite virus

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MADRID, Jan 23, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – With entertainment venues shuttered
across much of Europe, Spain stands out as a cultural oasis where people
still go to the theatre and cinema or watch concerts despite soaring
infection rates.

“Having the chance to be here with you is a huge blessing and with all my
heart I applaud the great efforts being made in this country to defend
culture,” Mexican tenor Javier Camarena told Madrid’s Theatre Royal last week
after going months without performing on stage.

In the audience were 1,200 people in suits, fur coats and masks, often the
FFP2 type, after having their temperature taken as part of a meticulous
safety protocol.

Following a months-long national lockdown at the start of the pandemic,
Spain’s cultural venues reopened in the summer operating with strict capacity
limitations, well-spaced seating policies and bars and cloakrooms closed.

And since then they have never closed their doors, unlike in other
countries such as France or Germany.

But it has meant a costly investment by the venues.

The Theatre Royal, where Spain’s King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia attended
a performance in September, said it has spent one million euros ($1.2
million), part of which went on an ultraviolet light system for disinfecting
the auditorium, the dressing rooms and even the costumes.

And the performers themselves are not exempt from these new rituals: as
well as respecting the safety distance and protective partitions, the
musicians must undergo regular tests and wear masks, except for the players
of wind instruments.

– ‘Safe space’ –

“We can and we must” put on these performances, Spain’s Culture Minister
Jose Manuel Rodriguez Uribes told AFP, who wants to show that culture “is a
safe space”.

But the pandemic has forced some venues to temporarily shut, such as
Barcelona’s feted Liceu operahouse which closed its doors in November.

Under the combined pressure of nationwide curfews, public anxiety and
economic pressures, many cultural venues are fighting for their survival.

According to Javier Olmedo, director of “Noche en vivo” association which
represents 54 concert halls in the Madrid region, “80 percent have not opened
since March”.

“It’s a time of distress.”

Many initiatives to bring people back to theatres and concert halls have
popped up on social networks, tagged #SafeTheatre or #CultureisSafe,

Marta Rivera de la Cruz, deputy head of cultural affairs in Madrid’s
regional government, readily acknowledges it is “concert halls and live music
venues that are facing the most difficult challenge”, saying they will need
the vaccine to be widely adopted “to get back on their feet”.

Until then, the authorities are looking at rapid virus tests.

In Barcelona, 500 people attended a standing-only concert, grouped very
close together but wearing masks who had been previously tested in the
context of a clinical study carried out in December.

Eight days later, there was no sign of any infection. It’s an idea that
could prove to be “the safest way to reactivate the entertainment sector”,
says infectious diseases specialist Boris Revollo, who led the study.

– ‘No sweat!’ –

At the Renoir cinema in the centre of Madrid, the cashier’s voice crackles
over the intercom: “Screen 3, at the back after the escalators”.

A risky outing? Not for Paloma Arroyo, 38, who has come to see a
retrospective of work by Hong Kong director Wong Kar Wai.

“When you go wearing a mask, you don’t talk. People eating popcorn is a bit
dangerous, I’ve thought about that,” she jokes, saying such outings were
important for protecting her “mental health”.

If public transport is considered safe, the cinemas are even more so, says
Pablo Blasco, another movie-goer.

“I don’t understand why other countries aren’t doing this. It seems strange
to me.”

A few hundred metres (yards) away, old promotional posters outside the Cafe
Berlin, a popular live music venue, give nostalgic echoes of the world before
the pandemic.

Inside, under bluish lights, the music is powerful and intoxicating, but
with dancing banned, the audience can only wiggle in their small velvet
chairs facing the stage where the DJ works his magic.

For Maria Llorens, a 20-year-old student, it’s not ideal but better than
nothing, admitting she misses “that party feeling, with people pressed up
against you, and the sweat!”

The club has since closed until further notice due to the economic
pressures brought on by the increasing restrictions aimed at slowing
infections.