A New Chapter Begins:
Alphabetti Theatre's Spring 2026 Season
Newcastle's award-winning fringe home announces an ambitious Spring season of theatre, comedy and new writing – and reveals plans for a landmark 2027 relaunch as it deepens its commitment to the artists of the North East.
There is a particular kind of energy that fills a venue on the cusp of transformation. At Alphabetti Theatre on St James Boulevard – Newcastle's intimate, fiercely independent home for fringe performance – that energy is palpable right now. The theatre has just announced its Spring 2026 season: a richly varied programme of new writing, touring productions, comedy, music, work-in-progress showings and community events that runs through to early June. But alongside the listings, Artistic Director Edward Cole has published a Director's Note that signals something bigger: a considered, determined reimagining of what Alphabetti can be – and a full relaunch planned for early 2027.
In 2023, Alphabetti became the first venue outside London to win Fringe Theatre of the Year at The Stage Awards, and was simultaneously named Best Cultural Venue at the North East Culture Awards. That dual recognition underlined what audiences and artists in the region already knew: Betti punches well above its weight. Cole, who joined as Artistic Director 18 months ago following founder Ali Pritchard's departure, has spent that time in what he calls 'thoughtful transition' – and is now ready to show what comes next.
A
WORD FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
Ed
Cole's statement is unusually candid – a mixture of artistic manifesto, honest
reckoning with the difficulties facing the sector, and genuine invitation to
the region's creative community. It is worth quoting at length.
"Since arriving at Alphabetti 18 months ago, I've been
guiding the organisation through a period of thoughtful transition, working
alongside our staff and trustees to consider the best path forward for Betti,
and more importantly, for the artists who rely on us. That transitional period
is now approaching its most exciting phase as we move from imagining the next
chapter for Alphabetti to making it real."
The
centrepiece of that next chapter is a full relaunch in early 2027. Cole is
explicit about what will drive it:
"It has always been my ambition to reimagine and revitalise
what fringe theatre can be, and for Alphabetti that will mean a renewed and
direct focus on opportunities for artists, genuine creative nurturing, and
dedicated idea development."
From
June 2026 onwards, the programming model will shift – fewer incoming tours and
a greater emphasis on development for artists and ideas rooted in the North
East. This will include a regular platform for work-in-progress showings and a
brand-new associate artist programme. Cole is frank about the context that
makes this necessary:
"As we are all very tired of hearing, we sit in an
incredibly challenging moment for theatre. Across the country, productions,
budgets and tours are being scaled back. A persistent lack of opportunity is
leading to widespread disillusionment and the tragedy of unrealised ideas,
unfulfilled potential and artists choosing to leave the industry entirely.
Nowhere is this tragedy more acute than right here in the North East.
Underfunding, broken promises and a lack of opportunity form the foundation of the
region's shared narrative. It never ceases to inspire me when I see the
resilience, commitment and endeavour of the brilliant freelancers in the region
who consistently overcome hurdles to fulfil their creative ambitions."
Cole
also acknowledges a painful organisational decision: in order to refocus for
the relaunch, a number of fixed-term contracts will not be renewed from June.
'This is an incredibly difficult decision and one I do not take lightly,' he
writes. 'I will never be able to thank each of those staff members enough for
the immeasurable contribution they have made to Alphabetti and to the creative
life of this region.'
The
process of reimagining will be a collaborative one. A series of open-house
events, conversations and planning gatherings will invite audiences and artists
to contribute directly. The first of these – called Story Board – takes place
on 15 April. Details are available via Alphabetti's website, mailing list and
social channels. Cole's invitation to the region is straightforward:
"We need you to be part of what comes next, and to lend
your voice to the future of this organisation."
THE SPRING 2026 SEASON
Before all of that begins in earnest,
there is a rich and varied season to enjoy. Here is everything on at Alphabetti
from now through to early June – something for every taste, most of it made or
performed by the region's own.
FEBRUARY
Common Thread with Ilisha Thiru Purcell | Wednesday 18 February, 5.30pm | FREE
The
season opens with Common Thread, a regular free evening of shared stories and
creative writing, led by guest artist Ilisha Thiru Purcell. Now in its second
year, Common Thread is part of Alphabetti's expanding commitment to nurturing
writers at every stage. An invitation to 'scratch creative itches in pursuit of
our own common thread'. Recommended age 16+.
InterAct Festival 2026: Black Teeth and a Brilliant Smile | Wednesday 18 February, 7.30pm | Pay What You
Feel
The
Northern School of Art's InterAct Festival kicks off with the first of three
evenings showcasing students from BA Acting for Stage & Screen performing a
range of exciting, dynamic theatre. Black Teeth and a Brilliant Smile opens the
festival – come and see the stars of the future doing what they do. Recommended
age 14+.
Work in Progress: The Whetherman | Saturday 21 February, 8.00pm | Pay What You
Feel
Rhian
Jade brings a work-in-progress showing of The Whetherman – 'a show about
feeling joy, managing fear and keeping ourselves warm in a cold, stormy world.'
The Whetherman is on a mission to figure out all things queer culture, or
culturally queer depending on your point of view. The WIP strand is a
cornerstone of Alphabetti's offer: stage time, rehearsal space and genuine
artistic support for ideas in development. Recommended age 18+.
We're Not Getting a Dog |
Wednesday 25 February, 7.30pm | Pay What You Feel
Sam
Freeman brings a heartwarming comic story about making a house a home. Cole
singles out this production as one of the season's warmly anticipated pieces.
Recommended age 14+.
Alphabetti Writing Group |
Thursday 26 February, 5.30pm | FREE
A
relaxed, peer-led writing group for any skill level. 'A call to action for
writers seeking cosiness and community.' The group runs monthly throughout the
season and beyond – check the website for all dates. Recommended age 16+.
InterAct Festival 2026: My Mother's Funeral: The Show | Thursday 26 February, 7.30pm | Pay What You
Feel
The
second InterAct Festival evening sees Northern School of Art students tackle My
Mother's Funeral: The Show. Recommended age 14+.
Fixing |
Friday 27 & Saturday 28 February, 7.30pm | £3–£15
Matt
Miller's Fixing returns to the Alphabetti stage as part of a nationwide tour,
having debuted here in 2024. A show about family breakups, learning car
maintenance and choosing the right shade of lipstick to do it in. The British
Theatre Guide called it 'a warm-hearted expression of love… underpinned by a
subtle and sophisticated theatrical and psychological intelligence.'
Recommended age 14+.
Sam Nicoresti: Baby Doomer |
Friday 27 February, 9.00pm | £3–£16.50
Award-winning
comedian Sam Nicoresti opens the season's comedy strand with Baby Doomer –
described as 'a glistening diamond hour of stand-up from “delusional trans
comedian” Sam Nicoresti about love, insanity, and the hunt for the perfect
skirt suit.’ A late-night treat. Recommended age 16+.
MARCH
Spoken Word Workshop with Papi Jeovani | Wednesday 4 March, 5.30pm | Pay What You Feel
/ FREE
Local
poet and spoken word artist Papi Jeovani leads a workshop diving into spoken
word poetry techniques and building skills around poetry rooted in our own
unique voices. Recommended age 16+.
Our Little Hour |
Thursday 5 – Saturday 7 March, 2.30pm & 7.30pm | Pay What You Feel –
£15
One
of the season's major headline productions. Live Wire Theatre, in association
with Show Racism the Red Card, present an exciting new musical telling the
true-life story of Walter Tull – the first Black footballer to play at the
highest level and the first non-white British officer to fight in WW1.
Described as 'powerfully compelling and hauntingly beautiful', this is socially
essential and artistically ambitious work. Multiple performances including a
Saturday matinee. Recommended age 11+.
Common Thread with Ilisha Thiru Purcell | Wednesday 11 March, 5.30pm | FREE
The
monthly evening of shared stories and creative writing continues. Recommended
age 16+.
Geet Northern Show |
Wednesday 11 March, 7.30pm | £3–£10
The
Geet Northern Show welcomes the biggest stars from the North onto its busted
sofa for the comedy sketch show. Recommended age 18+.
The Reading Room |
Thursday 12 March, 5.00pm | FREE
Brand
new and entirely free: a monthly play reading group co-hosted by Alphabetti and
Live Theatre. Cole explains the motivation: 'All too often new plays arrive in
London or in other great locations around the world, disappearing before anyone
from further afield has had a chance to engage with this new work.' The
inaugural session will discuss Anne Washburn's Mr Burns: A Post-Electric Play.
Recommended age 16+.
Amy Mason: Behold! |
Thursday 12 March, 7.30pm | £3–£16
Described
as 'thrillingly funny' by The Scotsman (★★★★), Amy Mason brings her acclaimed
show to Betti. Recommended age 16+.
Damien McFly |
Thursday 12 March, 9.00pm | £3–£15
Italian
songwriter Damien McFly brings a unique, raw voice and an indie-folk sound to
round off the evening.
Work in Progress: JOHNNY (the thinking man's poet) | Friday 13 & Saturday 14 March, 7.30pm |
Pay What You Feel
Another
WIP showing: JOHNNY examines male social conformity, exploring how pressure to
follow traditional gender performance norms shapes male psychology and how
profoundly shame enforces that conformity. Challenging, necessary work.
InterAct Festival 2026: Joseph K | Wednesday 18 March, 7.30pm | Pay What You
Feel
The
final evening of the Northern School of Art's InterAct Festival sees students
perform Joseph K – closing out a festival that, across three nights, showcases
some genuinely exciting emerging talent. Recommended age 14+.
Jorvik |
Thursday 19 & Friday 20 March, 7.30pm | £3–£10
Charlie
Blanshard's bold new immersive Viking theatre experience uses the Viking sagas
to explore the modern day – and you'll be able to enjoy it with a glass of
mead. Swords, stories and saga: Alphabetti doesn't do things by halves.
Recommended age 18+.
APRIL
Abby Govindan: Pushing 30 |
Thursday 2 April, 7.30pm | £3–£16
Fresh
off a sold-out international tour, Forbes 30 Under 30 international comedy
sensation Abby Govindan returns to the UK with her new hour of jokes about
dating, getting older and breaking generational curses. Recommended age 14+.
That's Not My Name |
Wednesday 8 & Thursday 9 April, 7.30pm | £3–£15
Asylum
Arts and Covered in Jam bring their five-star 'masterpiece of mess' (Broadway
Baby) back to Alphabetti. That's Not My Name is 75 minutes of 'anti-psychiatric
carnage using stand up, sketch and musical comedy to challenge diagnoses and
our mental health system.' The borderline sell-out show is back, and it's not
one to miss. Recommended age 16+.
Story Board – Open House Event | Wednesday 15 April
Not
a performance, but arguably the most important event of the spring. Story Board
is the first in a series of open-house gatherings at which Alphabetti invites
audiences and artists to share their thoughts on the theatre's future: 'where
we've been, where we are and where we should go.' Full details on the
Alphabetti website and mailing list. An essential date for anyone who cares
about the future of fringe theatre in the North East.
Colosseum of Chaos |
Thursday 16 & Friday 17 April, 2.00pm (family) & 7.30pm (18+) |
Pay What You Feel – £10
Andy
Ross and Jack Fielding's hilariously chaotic combat comedy gets two
performances a day: a family-friendly afternoon matinee (age 5+) and an
adults-only evening show. Between contests, expect highly choreographed
slapstick fight sequences, with the audience controlling the soundtrack via
Alexa. 'It's ridiculous, competitive, and entirely in your hands.'
Post Traumatic Slay Disorder |
Wednesday 22 & Thursday 23 April, 7.30pm | £3–£15
Offie-nominated
local performer and writer Lois-Amber Tool brings her acclaimed show to
Alphabetti. Kit has a fresh diagnosis of PTSD and, living in a generation that
navigates mental illness through TikTok, she is THE main character. Gobby Girl
Productions called it 'a brilliant, must-see piece of writing.' Recommended age
14+.
Nadav Tabak |
Friday 24 April, 7.30pm | £3–£10
Nadav
Tabak creates a powerful solo show blending live guitar, percussion, looping
and electronic textures into what has been described as 'a tribal-cinematic
trance experience that feels part concert, part ritual, part dancefloor
celebration.'
APRIL–MAY
Hold the Line |
Wednesday 29 April – Saturday 2 May, 7.30pm (+ 2.00pm Saturday matinee)
| Pay What You Feel – £15
The
season's second major headline production. Heaton's own Sam Macgregor follows
up his debut hit Truly, Madly, Baldy with an original new play set in an NHS
111 call centre. A comedy-drama about a health adviser facing the shift from
hell when a patient unexpectedly dies during a routine assessment over the
phone – untangling the story on both sides of the line. Cole is 'over the moon'
to be hosting it, and with good reason: Macgregor is one of the region's most
exciting emerging theatrical voices. Recommended age 12+. Four performances
including a Saturday matinee.
MAY
Gavin Fairhall Lever |
Wednesday 6 May, 8.15pm | £3–£10
A
stunning explosion of colourful contemporary folk, combining 'the joyful tumble
of Celtic trad, melodic warmth, vibrant rhythmic invention and the subtle
expressivity of jazz harmony.'
Ayoade Bamgboye: Swings and Roundabouts | Friday 22 May, 7.30pm | £3–£16
The
season's comedy bookend. Winner of Best Newcomer at the Edinburgh Comedy Awards
2025, Ayoade Bamgboye brings his critically acclaimed debut show about
suffering (and smiling) to Betti. An essential date for comedy fans.
Recommended age 16+.
YEAR-ROUND:
COMMUNITY AND CREATIVE DEVELOPMENT
Alongside
the productions, Alphabetti's community and creative development programme runs
throughout the season and beyond – and is being significantly expanded as part
of the relaunch plans.
The
Alphabetti Writing Group meets every two to three weeks (roughly fortnightly)
on Thursday evenings at 5.30pm and is entirely free. It is described as 'a
relaxed peer-led group for any skill level' – a cosiness-and-community offer
for anyone who writes or wants to. Sessions run through February, March, April,
May and June, with dates continuing into the summer.
Common
Thread, led by guest artist Ilisha Thiru Purcell, meets monthly on Wednesday
evenings at 5.30pm (18 February, 11 March, 22 April) for an evening of sharing
stories and creative writing. Also free.
The
Reading Room, in partnership with Live Theatre, is a brand-new monthly play
reading group launching on Thursday 12 March at 5.00pm with Anne Washburn's Mr
Burns: A Post-Electric Play. It will meet monthly thereafter. Free and open to
all play lovers.
Regular
playwriting masterclasses with industry leaders are also being introduced as
part of the expanded writer development offer.
LOOKING
AHEAD: JUNE 2026 AND THE ROAD TO 2027
From
June onwards, as Cole explains, the shape of the programme will change. The
theatre will be stepping back from incoming tours to create space for a deeper
focus on artists and ideas from the region. The associate artist programme will
launch, WIP opportunities will increase, and the open-house events – beginning
with Story Board on 15 April – will gather voices and perspectives to inform
the 2027 relaunch.
Cole's
closing words in his Director's Note are worth holding onto:
"Every second we work at Alphabetti is spent with the
region's artists in mind. That is what inspires all of us here as we turn the
page on an exciting new chapter in the story of this theatre and of creativity
in the North East. I hope that you can join us down at Betti and contribute to
that story."
There is also one event already in the
diary for December 2026: Eliot Smith: Return, an evening celebrating 15 years
of Eliot Smith Dance, on Thursday 3 December at 7.30pm (£26–£30). A reminder
that even in its transitional year, Alphabetti is still thinking about the
work.
Tickets:
Address: St
James Boulevard, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 4HP
Phone: 0191 261 9125
Box Office & Full Listings: www.alphabettitheatre.co.uk/whats-on
Opening Hours: Wed–Fri
11am–10pm; Sat 6pm–10pm
Many events offer Pay What You Feel pricing. Alphabetti is
committed to making theatre accessible to audiences and creatives regardless of
financial background.

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