In 1983, White decided to return to London and to continue to operate the Joan White English Theatre School out of her flat in Chelsea. But she also embarked on an entirely new venture. Recent drama school graduates are faced with the problem of how to start a career in an over-crowded profession. In addition to sending out résumés and attending auditions, they need a way of practising their craft, working with audiences and providing means for agents and producers to see them. She discussed the problem with Alan Sleath, chairman of the Associates of RADA, and other prominent graduates, and it was decided set up a new venture that would tackle the problem head on. The Next Stage Company was born with the support of RADA. It presented three plays a year on shoe-string budgets in church halls, churches, community theatres and on one occasion a West End theatre. The first production was Christopher Fry's
The Boy with a Cart, the start of a long fruitful relationship with Fry. Other playwrights included
Mike Leigh, Alan Ayckbourn, James Bridie,
Noël Coward,
Sean O'Casey,
Neil Simon,
Lillian Hellman,
Chekhov,
Vanbrugh,
Shaw and Shakespeare. There was one musical:
Godspell. Eminent members of the profession joined in to direct and act in the shows. 's
The Good Doctor, Next Stage Company, 1988 A notable coup for Next Stage was the premiere production in Chelsea Old Church of Christopher Fry's play
One Thing More, about
Caedmon, the Northumbrian shepherd turned monk who is known as the father of English sacred song. The company took the play to
Whitby Abbey and presented it again in London in 1993. While running the Next Stage Company, White started to wind down the Joan White English Theatre School and continued to pursue her own work. In 1986, she had a cameo role in
Denis Potter's
The Singing Detective on BBC TV. In 1988, she appeared at the National Theatre in
Jim Cartwright's play
Bed. She also had to row a boat playing the mother of the botanist
David Bellamy in a TV commercial for baked beans. In 1993,
Beryl Bainbridge was reminiscing in an article in the
Independent about her years as a young actress. She made an uncomplimentary remark about Joan White, with whom she had appeared in
The Beaver Coat at Dundee Repertory Theatre in 1952, adding that White was "dead now". The
Independent had to publish a grovelling apology, pointing out that White was busy directing a new play for the Chelsea festival. On television she appeared on
The Ruth Rendell Mysteries,
Jeeves and Wooster, and
Kinsey. Her last work was in 1994 on
The Wimbledon Poisoner. In 1995, the Next Stage Company presented its last show, a revival of
Housemaster, and White moved to Denville Hall, the actors retirement home in Northwood. In July 1996, she gave an address at the memorial service for
Greer Garson, her friend from London years. White died on 8 June 1999. On 9 September, a memorial service was held at the Actor's Church in Covent Garden. Among the readers were Paul Scofield and
Rosemarie Dunham. ==Personal life==