Every hit musical starts somewhere.

But increasingly, we're seeing a gap between where new work starts and where investment shows up.

Investors are chasing transfers, cast announcements, and awards. But the capital that makes the first draft possible, front money, remains the hardest to raise.

And yet, it's the most essential.

Front Money Is Our Version of Seed Funding

In tech, early investment builds a prototype. In theatre, it books a room and gets a script on its feet.

Front money pays for:

It's high risk. It's usually uncredited. And for the right investor, it can offer the highest upside, if you back the right idea early.

Why Does This Matter?

Because without front money, good ideas don't get the chance to prove themselves.

We talk about "finding the next Hamilton, Matilda, or SIX", but we forget how fragile those early steps are.

These shows didn't arrive fully formed. They were backed, believed in, before they had critical buzz, commercial deals, or even a full draft.

Take SIX. It's now a global juggernaut. But its first outing wasn't bankrolled by a commercial producer. It was funded by the Cambridge University Musical Theatre Society, a student drama club. That support paid for a run at the Edinburgh Fringe. It gave the writers time, a deadline, a stage, and a (tiny) budget.

That was front money, just in a different wrapper.

And Hamilton? That didn't fall from the sky either. Lin-Manuel Miranda had a seed of an idea, and it was developed over six years. But he was supported. First by institutions like The Public Theater in New York, who funded early workshops. And crucially, by producers like Jeffrey Seller and Jill Furman, who backed it early, before there was a full score, before there was a set, before it was clear this would change the game.

They put money into development. Into script readings. Into rooms. That was front money.

Without it, Hamilton might still be a concept album in someone's inbox.

And Here's the Kicker

Not long after SIX transferred to Broadway, every American producer's / investor's eye turned squarely to the Edinburgh Fringe.

There was suddenly a belief, possibly wishful, that the next global hit was waiting in a back room of a café in New Town.

And to be fair, there's a lot of talent at the Fringe.

But here's the harsh reality: that "breakout" show is still in early development. It's often staged in a repurposed janitor's closet. With six folding chairs, one IKEA lamp, and a lighting rig operated by someone on a gap year. And the audience? Half reviewers, half friends of the cast.

It needs development. It needs support. It needs investment.

But too often, producers want to skip the hard bit, the front money bit, and pick it up once it's polished and press-ready.

The truth? The polish doesn't happen unless someone backs the mess.

We Do Raise Front Money in the UK

We do what Broadway does:

But it's often private. Informal. Under the radar. And that limits how many shows get made.

Yes, Theatre Tax Relief (TTR) can return up to 45% of qualifying spend. SEIS and EIS offer major income tax and capital gains incentives. They're designed to de-risk early-stage investment. They exist to support exactly the kind of high-risk, high-potential work we're talking about, and still, we underutilise them, especially at the development stage.

What Needs to Change

We don't need to copy Broadway. But we do need to:

Who Loses When We Don't Fund Development?

This isn't just about getting a show on. It's about protecting the pipeline.

Final Thought

Because this isn't abstract for me. I'm developing multiple new musicals right now.

The ideas are strong. The creatives are brilliant and the rooms are waiting.

What we need is belief at the beginning. Everyone wants to be there on opening night. Everyone wants a Tony...

But before a show can win a Tony, someone has to fund the table read.

If we don't value the process, we won't have anything left to polish.

And the next Hamilton, SIX, or Matilda? It won't even get written.

So if you're serious about investing in theatre, invest in the bit no one sees. Because that's where the future is made.