British actor Toby Jones has warned that the United Kingdom’s once-envied drama industry is sliding into an “existential crisis,” blaming runaway costs, shrinking commissions and disruptive new technologies in remarks published by Deadline on 30 June.
Speaking at a London producers’ forum, Jones said medium-budget scripted shows are becoming “homeless” as cash-strapped broadcasters cut back and global streamers chase only tent-pole hits, while artificial-intelligence tools threaten to hollow out creative jobs. He urged lawmakers to “value the BBC before it’s too late,” calling the public broadcaster the single most important training ground for writers and crews.
Jones’s warning coincides with a cross-party House of Commons committee proposal for a 5 % levy on Netflix, Amazon and other platforms to replenish domestic drama funds, the MPs arguing that uniquely British stories risk vanishing without intervention. Netflix responded that such a charge would “penalise audiences” and curb investment in the U.K. market.
Evidence of strain is growing. BBC Radio 3 will scrap its 90-minute drama slot next spring after six decades, a move more than 200 writers and actors say will gut experimental audio storytelling. Arts leaders meanwhile continue to plead for a broader “rescue package” as inflation, pandemic after-effects and a decade of public-funding cuts push theatres and indies to the brink.
Jones argued that properly financed drama still shapes national debate, citing ITV’s Mr Bates vs The Post Office, where his portrayal of campaigner Alan Bates helped spur legislation to compensate hundreds of wrongfully prosecuted sub-postmasters. Commercial appetite remains strong: the 2015 BBC miniseries Capital, also starring Jones, shot into Netflix’s top-ten list within days of its re-release last autumn, underscoring global demand for British storytelling when it can be funded and marketed effectively.
The 58-year-old actor’s own résumé—spanning BAFTA-winning comedies such as Detectorists and co-creating the BBC Two road dramedy Don’t Forget the Driver—illustrates how public broadcasters have long incubated talent that later travels worldwide. For Jones, safeguarding that pipeline is essential if the next generation of creators is to avoid the crisis he fears is already under way.