The Arts Are For Rich People

Fiona Scott
7 min readJul 2, 2021
If you are talented and from a lower income family you will struggle to work in the arts in the UK

There’s a reason why most of the most famous and successful actors in the UK are white and educated at public school — and it’s very simple — money talks.

I suppose it has always been the case that art, in most of its forms, is still in 2021 largely the place where wealthier people can build a successful career. This has been brought home recently to my children in various ways.

If you are from an ordinary family, don’t live near a thriving acting or performing arts club with direct routes to market, and are one of the so-called ‘squeezed middle’ then you will find a career as an artist, musician, actor, even a journalist, very difficult to achieve. Like other sectors, including the world of the barrister, there are several reasons for this — a lack of money, a lack of contacts, a lack of education and the fact that to build experience you often have to work for nothing, or via an internship and many talented people cannot afford to do this. Therefore they don’t bother.

Three of my children have experienced this so far and it makes my blood boil that we live in a society where we are excluded because we don’t tick any of the boxes when it comes to working in the arts. It was hard enough for me back in the late 1980s to get a job as a journalist. I had no contacts, no one I knew was a journalist, and it took me two years to even get an…

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Fiona Scott

Fiona has been a UK journalist for more than 30 years as well as being a freelance tv producer director. She’s also had her own media consultancy since 2008.