Estonian theatre system
Formally, the Estonian theatre system is made up of national, local government, private and amateur theatres.
Based on 2023 data, 94 performing arts institutions participate in theatre statistics, 28 of them received budget funding through the Ministry of Culture. The majority of the subsidies are allocated to institutional theatres with their own theatre buildings, permanent staff and year-round stable performance activities.
8 theatres operate as foundations established by the state or with participation of the state, and 1 (Estonian National Opera) as an institution of public law, compared to earlier when they were state institutions governed by the Ministry of Culture. 2 theatres operate as local government institutions (Tallinn City Theatre and Paide Theatre participate in theatre statistics, however there is no data about Viljandi Puppet Theatre). In 2023, 70 non-profit private theatres and 3 performing arts centres also operated in the field.
Theatre institutions are regulated by the Performing Arts Institutions Act (RT I 2003, 51, 353) and the National Opera Act (RT I 1997, 93, 1558). The Performing Arts Institutions Act provides the definition of a performing arts institution, the funding and organisation of activities of a performing arts institution, and the basis for reporting. The content of the National Opera Act’s provisions is identical to the Performing Arts Institutions Act.
The state supports theatre activities regardless of theatres’ ownership, with the goal to maintain the total attendance level at a minimum of 800 000 visits a year and the average ticket price not above 1% of the average salary. On average, 4600 performances are given each year on account of the funds allocated from the ministry’s budget, 160 new productions are completed, more than 1700 people are employed and close to 900 000 visitors served.
Not only the performing arts institutions receiving state subsidies provide annual overviews of their activities through the Estonian theatre statistics database, but also all other institutions and organisations active in the field of theatre.
The deadline for repertoire data is February 15th every year and April 1st for economic data.
Every September, the Estonian theatre festival Draama provides a overview of the latest trends in the Estonian performing arts. International theatre festivals Tallinn Treff, Baltoscandal, SAAL Biennaal, and EPICIRQ are organised biennially, whereas the Estonian contemporary performing arts showcase, Birgitta Festival, Saaremaa Opera Festival and festival NAKS by the Estonian Centre of ASSITEJ are held annually. In 2023, 27 performing arts festivals took place in Estonia.