Performing arts careers are often described as either performance or non-performance roles. This can be a helpful starting point, but the reality is usually more flexible. Many people combine performance with teaching, facilitation, writing, producing, technical work, directing, community arts, marketing, administration or other freelance work.
Creative PEC’s 2026 Skills Audit for Performing and Visual Arts describes several broad areas of work across the sector:
- artistic content and performance, including actors, dancers, choreographers, opera singers, circus artists, directors, playwrights and composers
- production and promotion, including lighting designers, technicians, sound engineers, stage managers, set designers, costume designers, wardrobe technicians, prop makers, stagehands, riggers and automation specialists
- background and management roles, including producers, production managers, arts administrators, venue managers, marketing and audience development staff, and fundraising managers
- education and community outreach, including drama instructors, dance teachers, community arts facilitators, education officers and creative workshop leaders
The sector can be exciting, creative and collaborative, but it is also competitive and often project-based. Freelance and project-based work can create low job security, non-linear career paths and a high incidence of portfolio careers, including work outside the sector. This is why students interested in performing arts should think not only about performance, but also about technical, production, business, education, community, digital and freelance skills
Types of roles
There is no single route into the performing arts sector. Roles can be freelance, self-employed, fixed-term, project-based, part-time, portfolio-based or permanent.
The Creative PEC Skills Audit is useful because it shows that the sector is not only looking for performers. Employers also need people in production, technical, management, fundraising, education, marketing, digital and community roles. In future-facing terms, the report identifies expected demand across areas such as theatre technicians, actors, entertainers and presenters, theatre managers, arts officers, producers and directors, business development roles, public relations officers and youth and community workers.
Performance and creative roles
These roles involve performing, creating, interpreting or leading artistic work. They may include:
- actor
- dancer
- musical theatre performer
- singer
- physical theatre performer
- circus performer
- puppeteer
- voice actor
- comedian
- writer-performer
- choreographer
- director
- movement director
- theatre-maker
- deviser
- dramaturg
- fight director
- intimacy coordinator
Performance careers usually require sustained training, practice, feedback and resilience. Evidence of your work is important. Depending on your route, this could include productions, showreels, headshots, voice reels, choreography portfolios, writing samples, reviews, short films, festival work, scratch performances, auditions, workshops or self-generated projects.
For performers, training may be useful or necessary, but it is not the only route. Some people train at drama school, dance school, conservatoire or university. Others build experience through student theatre, community productions, fringe work, amateur companies, short courses, youth theatre, online content, independent productions or professional work in related roles.
Related resources
- Prospects’ actor job profile
- National Careers Service actor profile
- Prospects’ dancer job profile
- Prospects’ choreographer job profile
- Get Into Theatre
- One Dance UK’s careers hub
Production, technical and backstage roles
These roles support the creation and delivery of performances. They may include:
- stage manager
- assistant stage manager
- deputy stage manager
- production manager
- lighting designer or technician
- sound designer or technician
- set designer
- costume designer
- wardrobe assistant
- prop maker
- scenic artist
- automation technician
- video designer
- AV technician
- technician in a theatre, venue or touring production
- company manager
- rehearsal room assistant
Technical and backstage roles often suit people who enjoy problem-solving, organisation, attention to detail, teamwork and working under pressure. Some roles are highly specialist, but there are also entry routes through apprenticeships, short courses, student theatre, local theatres, festival work, venue technician roles and work experience.
Creative PEC’s Skills Audit highlights technical skills shortages linked to operating lighting, sound and audio-visual systems, with growing demand for more advanced digital skills in technical domains.
Related resources
- National Careers Service stage manager profile
- Prospects’ theatre stage manager job profile
- Association of British Theatre Technicians resources
- Association of British Theatre Technicians apprenticeship resources
- Get Into Theatre
- The Stage Jobs
Producing, venues and arts management
There are many performing arts careers that do not involve performing. These roles may include:
- producer
- assistant producer
- theatre manager
- venue manager
- programming assistant
- casting assistant
- talent agent or agent’s assistant
- fundraising or development assistant
- learning and participation officer
- marketing or communications assistant
- press or PR assistant
- box office assistant
- front of house manager
- operations assistant
- touring coordinator
- access officer
- finance, HR or administration roles in arts organisations
These roles can suit students and graduates with strong organisation, communication, research, writing, project management, analysis, problem-solving and people skills. For many of these roles, you do not need to have trained as a performer, but you do need to understand the art form, the organisation and the audiences it serves.
Large arts organisations, theatres, production companies and touring companies often advertise these roles on their own websites, as well as on sector job boards such as Arts Jobs, UK Theatre Jobs and The Stage Jobs.
Related resources
Education, community arts and therapy
Performing arts can also lead into education, outreach, health, community and social impact work. Roles may include:
- drama teacher
- dance teacher
- workshop facilitator
- community arts worker
- youth theatre practitioner
- participation officer
- learning and engagement producer
- dramatherapist
- dance movement psychotherapist
- arts and health practitioner
- theatre-in-education practitioner
Some roles require further qualifications. For example, teaching in schools usually requires a recognised teaching qualification. Dramatherapy requires an approved Masters in Dramatherapy and registration with the Health and Care Professions Council. Dance movement psychotherapy also requires specialist postgraduate training.
Community arts and participation roles often value experience working with different groups, including young people, schools, community organisations, disabled people, older people or people with lived experience of exclusion or disadvantage. Safeguarding, inclusive practice, facilitation skills and reflective practice are particularly important.
Related resources
- Prospects’ community arts worker profile
- Prospects’ dramatherapist profile
- Prospects’ dance movement psychotherapist profile
- National Careers Service job profiles
- Arts Jobs
- Creative Access opportunities
- Oxford Careers’ Teaching page
Freelancing, pay and portfolio careers
Freelancing and portfolio working are common in performing arts. You might combine performing, teaching, facilitating workshops, directing, writing, stage management, front of house work, arts administration, voiceover, producing, choreography or another job outside the sector.
Freelancing is not a side issue in performing arts. It is central to how the sector works. Creative PEC found that self-employment accounts for 67% of the performing and visual arts workforce, compared with 28% across the creative industries and 14% across all industries. It also links the project-based and freelance-heavy model with low job security, non-linear careers and a high incidence of portfolio careers.
A portfolio career can be creative and flexible, but it also requires planning. You may need to think about:
- income streams
- tax and self-employment
- contracts and cancellation terms
- insurance
- pensions and savings
- unpaid preparation time
- travel and accommodation costs
- equipment, headshots, classes or memberships
- late payment
- wellbeing and rest
- how to explain your portfolio career clearly
Pay varies widely across the sector. High-profile salaries exist, but they are not typical. It is more useful to research minimum rates, union guidance and actual advertised salaries. Equity’s rates and agreements provide collective agreements, agreed minimum pay rates and recommended minimum rates across areas including theatre, TV, film, opera, ballet, gaming, audio and commercials. ITC’s rates of pay are also useful for independent theatre.
Before accepting work, check:
- whether it is paid
- how much and when you will be paid
- whether expenses are covered
- whether the contract is clear
- who owns any recorded or creative material
- what happens if rehearsals, filming or performances are cancelled
- whether you need insurance
- whether you are being asked to work for exposure rather than payment
Related resources
- Oxford Careers’ Freelancing and Portfolio Careers page
- Oxford Careers’ Working for Yourself page
- Equity rates and agreements
- ITC rates of pay
- Equity advice and support
