Contact is where Manchester’s next generation of theatre makers cut their teeth. A young people’s theatre on Oxford Road that takes that brief seriously — the programming is led by and for young people, which means the work tends to be bolder, stranger and more diverse than what you’ll find at bigger houses.
The building reopened after a major renovation and the new spaces are flexible enough to handle anything from intimate spoken word nights to full-scale productions. Two performance spaces plus studio and rehearsal rooms keep the programme dense. You might see a hip-hop theatre piece one night, a verbatim drama the next, a DJ set the weekend after. The range is the point.
Contact has launched careers. Artists who started here have gone on to the National Theatre, Edinburgh Fringe wins, film and television. The theatre’s track record for spotting talent early is genuinely impressive. If you want to see what Manchester theatre will look like in five years, this is where to find out.
Ticket prices are kept deliberately low — many shows are under a tenner, some are pay-what-you-decide. The audience skews young but everyone’s welcome. Oxford Road location means buses and trams are right there. The bar is sociable and stays open after shows. One of the most important cultural venues in the city for what it represents and what it produces.