It also affects the so-called "Liberation Day" tariffs announced on 2 April, including the universal 10% baseline tariff on all imports to the US.
The Covid pandemic was a tough time for arts venues.They had to deal with closures, adapting to virtual performances and keeping on top of costs.
For places like Unicorn Theatre in Abingdon and the Kenton Theatre in Henley-on-Thames, this was made far harder by the high running costs of their old buildings."We had to pretty much shut down for over a year, and you've got to pay all the costs of running the building," said Greg Bensberg, chair of Abingdon Abbey Buildings Trust, which houses the Unicorn."We staggered on through there but Covid was really bad."
Lottie Pheasant, theatre manager at the Kenton, said the pandemic had nearly brought the venue to its knees."Two years ago, we were close to having to close," she said. "That year, we filed a nearly £190,000 loss."
The Kenton was saved by a £100,000 loan from Henley Town Council.
"It gave us the breathing space to reset things," Miss Pheasant said.He added: "I remember being moved to tears quite a number of times by fans saying how Ianto's relationship with Jack has helped them.
"Sci-fi, certainly for me when I was younger, was always about escaping to a better place, a better world where technology is evolved, politics is evolved, people are evolved."I think if accepting people's identities, who they are, is part of that better world, then that could be quite powerful."
A museum store room may have been lost to a fire had its alarm not been working, a fire service said.Suffolk Fire and Rescue was called to an automatic fire alarm within a building belonging to Ipswich Museum on Charles Street on Saturday night.