The Physio Behind the Curtain: Keeping Musical Theatre Stars Shining

Musical Therapy clinic Melbourne and Sydney

Ever wondered who keeps the high-kicking dancers, soaring vocalists, and dramatic actors of a major musical theatre production in peak physical condition? Behind the scenes, it’s often a physiotherapist from Performance Medicine, working quietly to ensure the performers go on – so the show can go on.

Musical theatre places extraordinary physical demands on performers. From powerful choreography to repetitive performances, keeping bodies healthy, strong, and resilient is essential.

What Does a Musical Theatre Physio Do?

The role of a physiotherapist in a major musical theatre production is broad and dynamic. It spans injury prevention, acute injury management, rehabilitation, and return-to-performance planning, all tailored to the unique demands of live theatre.

Helping Performers Avoid Injuries

One of the most critical parts of the role is injury prevention, ensuring performers can meet the physical demands of rehearsals and shows.

1. Pre-production assessments

Before rehearsals even begin, physios assess a performer’s strength, mobility, and conditioning. This helps identify potential injury risks early and allows targeted exercise programs to be prescribed to reduce those risks.

2. Warm-up and cool-down guidance

Working closely with dance captains and choreographers, the physio ensures performers follow effective warm-up routines to prepare their bodies for performance, as well as appropriate cool-downs to support recovery between shows.

3. Ergonomic and performance advice

Performance ergonomics go far beyond desk posture. A musical theatre physio advises on the safest way a performer can carry out their role – considering costume fit, footwear, stage surfaces, and prop use.
For example, waving a 15kg flag during a production such as Les Misérables requires a specific technique to protect the shoulders and back from injury.

Musical theatre physio providing hands-on treatment to a performer backstage

Treating Injuries When They Happen

Even with excellent preparation, injuries can still occur. When they do, the physio plays a key role in immediate care and decision-making.

1. On-site assessment and diagnosis

Injuries are often assessed immediately backstage or in rehearsal rooms to determine severity and next steps.

2. First aid and immediate care

Physios can provide first aid and early treatment, and decide whether further medical investigation is required.

3. Liaison with the wider team

Clear communication with medical professionals, performers, and production teams ensures injuries are managed effectively while keeping the show running safely.

Return to Performance After Injury

The goal is always a safe and timely return to the stage.

Tailored rehabilitation programs

Physios design personalised exercise programs focused on restoring strength, flexibility, control, and balance specific to each performer’s role.

Manual therapy

Hands-on techniques such as massage, joint mobilisation, and stretching are used to manage pain and improve movement.

Taping and bracing

Supportive taping or bracing may be used to protect injured areas during rehearsals and performances.

Gradual return to performing

A carefully managed return-to-performance plan helps prevent re-injury. This may involve modified choreography, altered stage positioning, or reduced load until the performer has fully recovered.

The musical theatre physio is an essential part of the live theatre experience – a guardian of performer health who helps bring the magic to life night after night.
Next time you watch a breathtaking production, spare a thought for the physio working behind the curtain, helping every performer shine safely on stage.