The Unique La Mama Model
At the heart of our identity is an Artist-First Model. By offering minimum 80% box office returns, free venue access, and comprehensive support across technical, front of house, marketing, ticketing, and producing, we remove barriers so artists can focus on their craft and take creative risks.
La Mama’s unique model continues to be an attractive proposition to artists at all stages of their career and is in increasing demand.
In addition, access to rehearsal and meeting space, administrative, marketing and technical support and ticketing means for artists, lack of money and infrastructure is no barrier. This ensures making art is a viable prospect for all – regardless of circumstance.
La Mama seeks to identify projects, productions and programming opportunities which give a forum to a diversity of theatrical forms; play with, question and extend contemporary performance practice and aesthetics; redress social inequity by promoting social and cultural diversity; challenge, enlighten and empower audiences.
La Mama is committed to the development and presentation of Australian works, created by theatre makers from all backgrounds.
La Mama facilitates the development of people by providing opportunities, pathways and creative empowerment on an incomparable scale. Emerging artists see La Mama as an entry point to the industry, established artists return to La Mama for the unparalleled freedom and artists and audiences from around Australia and the world come to be part of the iconic institution.
Applications will open in October 2025 for 2026.
"La Mama is a good place to understand creativity in more concrete ways. Perhaps the first thing to note is the number of people who have worked there…
For [Andrew] Bovell, one of Australia’s most renowned playwrights and screenwriters, it was a decade-long creative experiment from Whiskey to Lantana in which La Mama played a crucial role…
This is how value in theatre actually accrues. It is embodied and enacted through relationships, and these relationships are enabled by the institutional structures that support them. The relationships exist only as a potential until a company like La Mama gives them a concrete place in the world. When considering La Mama’s value proposition, or the value proposition of any theatre company, we should resist the temptation to ignore history and context and focus on just numerical outputs. Numbers are only an indication that something is going on, an invitation to investigate further. And when we do investigate, what emerges are stories of imagination-in-action, in La Mama’s case, literally thousands of stories. Bundled together they create a meta-narrative that is exciting, unstable, incalculable and rewarding – in short, creative."
- Julian Meryick, The Conversation, 2017