A surprising twist – the residents of Avenue Q have their leases renewed!

September 13, 2009 • One Comment

 

The Monday after the Tony’s in 2004, the producers of Avenue Q shocked the Broadway and Touring community by announcing that rather than going on the road, the show was taking up residence in Vegas.   Tonight from the stage of the closing night performance on Broadway, the producers again announced an unprecedented course of action. 

 

The Broadway show was moving OFF-BROADWAY???

 

A brilliant move, by a savvy team of producers or a borderline failure like Vegas? 

 

I vote BRILLIANT.  The show (full disclaimer I was General Manager of Vineyard for the original off-Broadway production) has the potential to run for several more years off-Broadway where the financial equation will likely still work perhaps even better.  Maybe Avenue Q is the next Fantastiks!The show will certainly be a boom for New World Stages (although one has to pause just momentarily to ask – why not 37 Arts?). 

 

As usual Kevin, Jeffrey and Robyn also found a way to make the announcement as dramatic as possible. 

 

Ironically, I sent the entire producing team, including Vineyard and New Group Artistic Directors, Doug Aibel and Scott Elliot, emails last night congratulating them on taking big risks that paid off on the show and the group talent young artists on the show Jeff Marx, Bobby Lopez, Jeff Whitty and Jason Moore!

 

So, I now cheer them on for being adventuresome and visionary enough to change the game completely! 

 

Needless to say it’s innovative producing like this that will also keep off-Broadway’s resurgence going strong.

 

Certainly the theme song fits off-Broadway. 

 

Your work real hard
And the pay’s real low
And ev’ry hour
Goes oh, so slow
And at the end of the day
There’s no where to go
But home to Avenue Q!
You live on Avenue Q!

 

From where I am sitting – at home with my Avenue Q blanket on my lap while I type, I have to say Avenue Q ain’t such a bad place to be even if “it’s only for now” after all now just got a bit longer!

 

 

Final reprise:

 

I also have to give the team a second thumbs up on making the announcement such news and for the playful “official release” excerpted below from Broadway World

The musical’s Broadway producers Kevin McCollum, Robyn Goodman and Jeffrey Seller announced that AVENUE Q – the hilarious and enormously popular musical about a group of 20-something people and puppets who live as neighbors in an outerborough of NYC — will be presented at New World Stages as it was on Broadway, with director Jason Moore, creators Robert Lopez, Jeff Marx and Jeff Whitty, as well as the show’s designers, choreographer, musical team and, of course, its cast of colorful, furry, outrageous puppets participating in the transfer. Casting for the Off-Broadway engagement of AVENUE Q is TBA. The musical will be produced at New World Stages by Kevin McCollum, Robyn Goodman, Jeffrey Seller, The Vineyard Theatre and The New Group.

 

Research indicates that this transfer is unprecedented, marking the first time that a Broadway musical has, indeed, moved to an Off-Broadway theatre.

 

About the decision to keep AVENUE Q running in New York, Mr. McCollum says, "AVENUE Q is about all of us, so why should it close? People arrive in New York every day hoping to make their dreams come true, so as long as they’re here, we’re here! It’s just one of the funniest, wittiest and wisest musicals ever written and the more you see it, the more you love it."

 

AVENUE Q beloved puppet character Rod says, "When I got the news that AVENUE Q was re-opening five blocks away, I couldn’t have been more delighted. After all, young people are still searching for meaning in their life — even more than when we opened six years ago! So I’m glad we’re here to help them and people of all ages navigate the turbulent waters of today’s world. My only regret is that my next job was going to be dresser for Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig, but hey, I’ll take stardom any time, baby!"

 

AVENUE Q producer Robyn Goodman notes in an aside that she is also aware that gay puppet Rod is also tickled that he will now be geographically closer, and otherwise, to the male actors in the musical ALTAR BOYZ, running at an adjacent theater at New World Stages.

 

AVENUE Q’s man-hungry puppet Lucy says of the transfer, "I’m a working girl at heart. So the idea of moving Off-Broadway totally turns me on — plus, that means I can call Hooters and tell ‘em to shove that job! And to be at New World Stages is a dream come true. I always wanted to get closer to my audience. Frankly, honey, whether you’re serving 500 people a night or 800, after the first hundred they all sorta blur together."

Interesting theater, arts & nonprofit articles from the last 10 days

August 23, 2009 • No Comments

 

Enjoy!  Here are some things that caught my eye from the major papers.  If you want to check out the hot topics in the blogosphere click HERE.

 

Variety – Kennedy Center answers nonprofits http://bit.ly/E93gR
After A Steady Rain, Hugh Jackman looks to Shakespeare on stage: http://tinyurl.com/mq8qlc
RT @NewYorkology: New block Othello tix w/John Ortiz and Philip Seymour Hoffman http://bit.ly/d0UBC
Latest installment of Bryce Pinkham’s ORPHANS’ HOME CYCLE Diary, "Off the Page": http://tinyurl.com/muyny6
FORBES World’s 100 Most Powerful Women  http://bit.ly/1mKwi2
Chicago artists and idea factories http://bit.ly/610A0
Variety: Broadway welcomes back Henry Miller’s Theater – http://shar.es/BtBq
City Opera Signs a New Contract With Its Chorus http://bit.ly/3cB4sR
NPR Dave Douglas: ‘A Call To Arts’ http://bit.ly/iUezq
A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC to star Zeta Jones & Lansbury, opening at Walter Kerr in Dec: http://bit.ly/16jzdz
Prospecting: Giving to the Arts: What’s the Motivation? http://bit.ly/19it7S
5 Mistakes Nonprofit Websites Make: http://bit.ly/WJLZB
Backstage peek at American Idiot http://networkedblogs.com/p9207554
Hollywood Insiders Note Twitter’s Increasing Impact at Box Office http://bit.ly/Z9uOp
Rhea Perlman and Daughter Join ‘Love, Loss..’ Off-Broadway http://bit.ly/cTHN4
Letting Go – ArtsBeat Blog – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/FtoB
Perlman and daughter set for ‘Love Loss and What I Wore’ Media – Variety – http://shar.es/F2rr
Sizzling summer on Broadway cools – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/QZox
Playbill News: Next to Normal’s Kitt and Yorkey to Premiere New Song at 92Y Tribeca – http://shar.es/QZbg
Educated audiences ‘let down by theatres and…http://bit.ly/17tNTk
Building New Audiences, One Student at a Time http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_13145284
Will He Play in Peoria? N.E.A. Chairman to Visit Illinois http://bit.ly/BTKZh
Nonprofit Boards Get Scrutinized More Closely (Richmond Times-Dispatch) http://bit.ly/dwBC2
Michael Grandage featured in Crain’s New York Business: http://bit.ly/fv39M
Broadway Bound and Gag: If the stage is the trend, who am I to say no to it? http://bit.ly/ALTAu
The ever blurring line between Opera and musicals http://bit.ly/G4rdO
Broadway Gone Viral, With a Musical Meted Out via Twitter http://bit.ly/3JQLt8
Unlikely Broadway Survivor http://bit.ly/UszuK
Seattle Theater Takes No-Frills Approach to Filling a Top Job http://bit.ly/UJKMQ
Report on Michael Kaiser’s visit to Charlotte. http://tinyurl.com/ncf4pk
Stephen Adly Guirgis: The communion of plays http://bit.ly/hf1EN
Promoting theatre w/o print media http://twurl.nl/uyyln2
Multicultural Stages in a Small Oregon Town http://bit.ly/W1PUQ
Stars add marquee value to Broadway – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/9LhQ
Goodbye Press Release, Hello Social Media Release? http://bit.ly/4jidSK
Spidey says rumors are Web of Deceit. http://tinyurl.com/spideyyes
Actors Equity Issues New Statement On ‘Twittergate’ http://bwayworld.com/rd.cfm?i=64653
Another theatre struggling: Open Stage Theatre in Pittsburgh http://xrl.us/be96ne
Should You Twitter at an Audition? http://bit.ly/2OPDj
A 1945 Code of Ethics for Theatre Workers http://bit.ly/199IJq
Sony, Bono May Suffer From Spidey Broadway Woe: Jeremy Gerard http://bit.ly/1bpOYo
Spider-Man producers "re-confirming plan is to resume production & preview on Feb 25" http://bit.ly/yzHDh
Kennedy Center chief says great art is key to weathering crisis http://bit.ly/35eWF
Can you say audience participation? http://tinyurl.com/ns6gxq
‘SPIDER-MAN’ LOSES THE GIRL – New York Post – http://shar.es/9xtY
Arts organizations stumble into the healthcare debate http://bit.ly/UsD6O
David Cromer to Direct New Play for Lincoln Center Theater http://bit.ly/pZREq
Musical looking like Broadway ‘Catch’ – Entertainment News, The Verdict, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/OloP
How to increase audiences http://bit.ly/1skVil
No return on tickets policy http://bit.ly/M6eco
‘SPIDER-MAN’ A NO-SHOW – New York Post – http://shar.es/Omy1
Behanding’ Will Wave Hello to Broadway in March http://bit.ly/1aFbnE
Broadway’s summer B.O. stays strong – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/DgDc

Audiences gone wild!

August 19, 2009 • No Comments

 

What in the world are people thinking?  That seems to be the hot topic right now.  As in, have audiences gone mad?  Between cell phones ringing, texting, illegal taping, fights, sex in the bathrooms and urinating on stage, today’s audiences are giving new meaning to bad behavior. 

 

Of course there is a school of thought that says cell phones are here to stay get used to it and quit throwing temper tantrums, however I understand how frustrating it is for actors and hearing the ringing night after night I can see where some can lose their cool.  Needless to say it is also disruptive for others for the audience.  Taping a show and posting it on You Tube is really not fair – to all involved.

 

Linda Winer’s recent article Rude behavior plagues New York theater takes a look at the how digital devices and just plain rudeness affect the theater-going experience.  Winer, of course, details the famous Patty Lupone cell phone incident. 

 

The word "etiquette" has such a quaint sound to it. To complain about idiots with their BlackBerries makes the complainer seem destined for little-old-ladyland, or an elitist, or someone who refuses to understand the importance of new audiences to the health of the arts.

 

But rudeness, in my worldview, is not a small crime. When a phone ring rips everyone’s attention from the illusion that has been carefully created in a theater, that’s a kind of violence. When rapt darkness is shattered by the light of one iPhone, I find myself dreaming of mob rule. It is impossible to imagine how jarring this oblivious multi-tasking must be to performers, who, we should remember, see and hear everything in the house. And, while we’re remembering, don’t forget that recording is – another quaint word in these confusing days for intellectual property rights – illegal….

 

The London Times wrote an article two weeks ago (Mind your step, it’s yob’s night at the theatre) detailing some of the same behavior which has gotten so bad that many theatres are hiring security guards:

 

A number of West End theatres are now employing bouncers to cope with intoxicated patrons who fight, fondle one another and even urinate in the auditorium.  The yobbish behaviour has led to theatregoers being ejected during performances and police being called to some of London’s most successful shows….

 

Critics believe the vulgar antics have been fuelled by falling ticket prices designed to attract younger audiences and the ease with which theatregoers can take alcohol into the auditorium….  A combination of factors have been cited for deteriorating standards of behaviour. Some theatre managers have been blamed for creating a climate that deliberately appeals to the Big Brother generation — including offering tickets for as little as £10.

 

Back at Newsday and Rude behavior plagues New York theater, Winer goes on to tell the tales of misbehaving Broadway audiences including the often told David Hyde Pierce story of the family passing a bucket of chicken around.  But then she too delves into stories from the West End:

 

But digital intrusions, food and snoring are so last season compared to the rotten behavior in, of all unlikely places, London‘s West End. According to last Sunday’s London Times, drinking in the auditoriums and young audiences attracted by discount tickets have had some really appalling fallout.

 

Things are so bad that producers of such pop musicals as "Dirty Dancing," "Grease" and "Thriller" (based on Michael Jackson‘s music) have hired their own private security experts – in other words, bouncers. People are being called to break up fights and theatergoers are being thrown out of performances.

 

Two months ago, a drunk assaulted an usher at "Mamma Mia!" and patrons in the good seats have been seen, as a producer told the paper, "indulging in intimate moments." Broadway has just one show, "Rock of Ages," where drinks are sold in the aisles and consumed at the seats. Given London’s experience, this nostalgic ’80s-hair band musical will probably turn out to be a special case.

 

The show’s publicist says the alcohol hasn’t caused anything too crazy. At one Saturday night preview, the entire mezzanine started the wave and she has never seen so much singing along, but "no one cares."

 

In London, outrageous behavior is not just happening at pop shows. At a recent performance of "A Little Night Music" (Trevor Nunn‘s Broadway-bound revival of the exquisite Stephen Sondheim musical), a drunken member of the audience walked to the side of the stage and urinated during the song, "Every Day a Little Death."

 

Audiences urinating on stage during Sondheim?  What has the world come to?  Well there is some history here, as the London Times points out in Mind your step, it’s yob’s night at the theatre:

 

A history of lechery, jeers and riots

 

Bad behaviour among theatregoers is hardly new. Indeed, audiences have arguably become far more restrained.

 

In Shakespeare’s day it was common for prostitutes and pickpockets to mingle with open-air crowds known for “roistering lechery”. The Bard’s less likeable characters frequently had objects hurled at them and could also expect jeers.  Foreign visitors to London were often appalled by what they saw. Nor did things improve much.

 

In 1685 Robert Gould, a satirical poet, wrote about playhouses containing “the filth of Jakes and stench of ev’ry Stew”. He concluded: “All People now, the Place is grown so ill, Before they see a Play, shou’d make their Will.”

 

In 1805 a group of tailors led a riot at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, central London, in protest at a play called The Tailors: A Tragedy for Warm Weather, which they claimed was an insult to their profession.

 

In 1809 the audience at a production of Macbeth at the newly opened Covent Garden theatre booed and hissed the cast because of a rise in ticket prices. The performance was interrupted by shouts of “old prices, old prices” and 500 Dragoon Guards were called out. The audience refused to leave until 2am. Prices were subsequently reduced.

 

Which raises the question…is bad behavior to be expected and we need to figure out how to adapt?  Or will peer pressure prevail and force folks to start behaving better? 

Is Broadway booming or just making lemons into lemonade?

August 17, 2009 • One Comment

 

Last week Variety debunked the myth that bad times are good times for showbiz.  The article, Showbiz not always recession proof had a great overview of Hollywood and Broadway’s financial performance during major recessions in recent history.  It provides some very intriguing insight about the past, and some interesting and/or scary facts about what is happening currently. 

 

Interesting fact and reality check – despite the great number of wonderful productions this year, profitability is down.  I don’t think many folks will be shocked by this.  Without question the last 12 months have offered a wonderful array of great productions, especially straight plays, but good reviews aren’t turning into full houses.  (Check out my May post Are there too many good shows and not enough audience members).

 

Like many observers, legit lawyer-turned-producer John Breglio calls the 2008-09 season exceptional from an artistic standpoint — "which is what made it different from seasons past," he says. "The high quality of the plays, revivals and new ones, and the high-profile stars is (why) we had a good season."

 

What many now fear is that what the legit gods gaveth —well-reviewed plays — they can taketh away in the new season.

 

And from an economic point of view, Breglio is unenthused about recent tuners: "For musicals, it was not a good season," he says. The only certifiable recouped hit is the low-budget "Hair," capitalized at $5.75 million.

 

"Billy Elliot," which opened more than eight months ago, has yet to return its reported $20 million investment and did not begin to sell out on a regular basis until after the Tony noms were announced. The $16 million "West Side Story" is months away from recoupment. So, while box office may be up a little, profitability is way down, with enormous losses tallied on failed shows, beginning with "A Tale of Two Cities" early in the season.

 

Scary(?) Fact Number One – It’s all about the stars baby!  Look there have always been stars on Broadway.  The relationship between Hollywood and commercial theater has always been important.  But over the last few years we have come to see more and more limited run, star vehicles that have ushered in the era of “event theater”:

 

As for plays, with the exception of the occasional blockbuster like "God of Carnage," which just went on a six-week hiatus, the new paradigm appears to be the star-driven 12-week run where investors "just want to get their money back," says Breglio. "That’s just going to get worse and worse."

 

Stars like Hugh Jackman, Daniel Craig and Jude Law look to turn the incoming "A Steady Rain" and "Hamlet" into immediate hits. It’s only for 12 weeks — "but just when we need them most, in September," says Shubert CEO Philip J. Smith, referring to the worst B.O. month on the legit calendar.

 

This certainly isn’t going to go away anytime soon mostly because it works – more often than not.  And, I have to say, if the casting is done correctly is this such a bad thing?  Of course there are a lot of great stage actors out there who are struggling, but the star vehicles end up making more work happen don’t they?  Without question the star studded 08-09 season raised the profile of Broadway.  I am sure when we see full audience analysis, we will learn that the stars also drew in new audiences.  Isn’t that a good thing?  If someone comes to New York to see their favorite celebrity maybe they will have a great experience and end up checking out their local theater scene.   I know some folks would argue that some of the film stars who hop on the boards really don’t have the chops to do eight live performances a week, but that is why I said the casting has to be correct.  Let’s also not forget there are plenty of actors who aren’t stars who get onto the stage and can’t really hack it either.  Of course it is wonderful to see a show like August Osage County make stars out of an ensemble of fabulous actors, but it doesn’t make God of Carnage any less enjoyable. 

 

It is commercial theater after all.  Producers need to keep their investors happy, excited and engaged.  Let’s look at Hamlet – lead producer Arielle Tepper Madover also produced Mary Stuart.  You have to imagine that she will have some of the investors on both shows.  I am excited to see Michael Grandage’s take on one of the greatest Shakespeare plays – Jude Law is just the icing on the cake.  And if that is the price you have to pay to get a great piece of theater like Mary Stuart to New York City, I am all for it.  Some of the limited runs have provided the best theater experiences of the last year – The Seagull and Equiss come to mind immediately.

 

So I don’t find think that we have become more event driven as a scary fact but more of a refinement of an old tactic to make things more interesting.  Of course it will be overdone (soon likely) and we will see something ridiculous production with outrageous celebrity stunt casting. 

 

This brings us to Scary(?) Fact Number Two:

But there’s another key factor that has made Broadway this season very different from that of previous recessions: the new premium-price ticketing system.

 

"It really only has a significant effect on four or five shows," Breglio says. Regardless of how many shows actually benefit, the pricey tix have increased the overall Broadway cume "by at least 10%," says Jujamcyn’s producing director, Paul Libin, who also believes they’ve increased attendance. "You used to have to go through a broker. They were harder to acquire. People didn’t know how to do it. Now you just walk up to the box office or make a phone call."

 

Libin also mentions the computerization of ticketing as a major benefit over the old mail-in system, which may have stymied ticket sales in the 1970s and 1980s recessions.

 

According to Smith, premium tix can add as much as "$100,000 a week to the gross, if you’ve got a hot musical. A hot play, could be $50,000. An average musical you could expect $10,000 to $20,000," with an average play benefiting much less.

 

Whatever. It is millions of dollars that used to flow outside the theater and now goes to investors and royalty holders and helps to buoy the overall Broadway tally.

 

"But the economics of the premium seats is a temporary fix," says longtime producer Emanuel Azenberg. "Ultimately the theater will be a luxury, because at some point you hit a ceiling. It’s why you have 38 producers on a show, because you need $20 million to do a musical and $3 million to do a play."

 

Azenberg may be right about the long-feared ticket-price ceiling. The late Beverly Sills maintained she watched the balcony, not the orchestra, to see if an opera was selling well. Her thinking is no longer viable. Just last season, the Met Opera, with its top-priced ticket of $320, felt the need to institute a donor-sponsored rush program to sell some of its orchestra seats at $25 a pop.

 

Breglio says $300 tickets on Broadway or at the Met "aren’t selling like they were three years ago."

 

Now this is a SCARY fact.  No discussion needed to confirm that.  It is scary because as Azenberg stated it is a temporary fix.  It would be nice to think that demand based ticket pricing might make a dent in the situation, but something has to be done to reconcile expenses so ticket prices do not continue to rise.   

 

Scary(?) Fact Number Three:

 

Nonprofit theaters have also worked magic to make the 2009 recession look like no other. As Lincoln Center Theater‘s Bernard Gersten points out, "Three nonprofit theaters (LCT, Roundabout, MTC) now have Broadway-size houses. That’s a huge shift from 25 years ago," when even Lincoln Center’s Vivian Beaumont was dark during the early 1980s recession.

 

Only five new productions were offered by the nonprofit sector in 1982-83, the same number offered in the 1990-91 season. Last season, that number topped 10.

 

"Our grosses are part of that Broadway cume," Gersten says of the nonprofits. "Also, we bring at least half a dozen plays to the list, which helps fill up the (Tony) slots."

 

In the 2009-10 season, the overall B.O. tally should benefit from two nonprofit tuners, the Roundabout’s "Bye Bye Birdie" revival this fall and LCT’s new "Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown" in the spring. Add to that at least eight plays.

 

Those productions will add dollars that have nothing to do with profits, and should push Broadway’s total tally to more than $1 billion for the first time ever — making the ongoing recession look a lot kinder than it really is.

 

Everyone in the business is certainly aware of the growth of the nonprofit theater movement in New York over the last 25 years.  Nonprofits have had a huge impact (some might say have taken over) off-Broadway.  Now, FIVE Broadway houses are populated exclusively by nonprofits – and at any given time you are likely to see one or two more with a Lincoln Center or Roundabout show.  All of those subscribers certainly help add to the grosses.  (As for the impact of nonprofits on commercial theater note that this doesn’t even factor in transfers like Next To Normal, Hair, Avenue Q.) 

 

Is the fact that nonprofits will bring 10+ productions to Broadway this season scary?  Is it a good thing?  I don’t think it is scary, but that doesn’t mean it is a good thing.  It is really difficult to gather perspective without the budget details for the individual theatres.  I don’t know whether M.T.C., Roundabout, or L.C.T. will have deficits this year, but I would imagine they are like most theaters and therefore they will, but from the outside, I don’t think anyone can say whether this is because of the Broadway productions – for all we know the Broadway shows are helping the bottom line.

 

All in all it looks like Broadway is finding a way to cope with the economy, but I think this season’s new reporting of grosses will have more to do with breaking the billion dollar mark than the above.

 

Again check out my May post which also addressed most of the issues in this discussion Are there too many good shows and not enough audience members.

Spiderman’s web spun? How much of the $45M has been wasted and what else could it have been spent on?

August 12, 2009 • One Comment

 

According to Michael Riedel and the rest of the theater community Spiderman will not be spinning any webs on Broadway. 

 

Last week, production crews at both the Hilton Theatre and the scene shop where the show was being built were put on "hiatus" because the producers ran out of money. Assistants in the scene shop "ran to the bank to cash their checks because they weren’t sure they’d clear," a source says.

 

Now comes word that the actors have been released from their contracts, with no incentive (i.e., money) to hang around waiting for the production to get back on track.

 

Meanwhile, ticket agents are desperately trying to get refunds for deposits from theater parties that booked early previews.

 

Although it is interesting to watch the story grow into a legendary cautionary tale, I have to wonder how much money of the supposed $45M budget has already been spent (read wasted). 

 

First and most unfortunate is the fact that the Hilton Theatre has been gutted for the design installation of the show.  Of course we have to assume the Hilton has insurance and what not so is protected for the costs of rebuilding its interior.  It will of course have to be dark for a while – likely the next six months for both repairs and to find a tenant that has a show that can fill the giant theater (largest on Broadway).   Even if all construction costs and lost licensing income is covered, the theater is certainly getting a reputation for hosting big, expensive shows that aren’t very successful.  I don’t think anyone believes Young Frankenstein came anywhere close to recoupment and without seeing the numbers I would bet they didn’t.  And let’s not forget previous short term tenants Hot Feet and The Pirate Queen.  Sure Chitty Chitty Bang Bang opened the renovated space with an 8 month run but it surely wasn’t as successful as producers hoped and I can’t find any statements about it recouping (although as a side note anything with Raul Esparza is a great show in my book – well almost anything).  As a matter of fact the only folks who probably made any money at the theater were the producers of How the Grinch Store Christmas.  Reputations stick to theaters.  Look at the Little Shubert, most folks I know think the space is cursed, not that they would go on record.  The Hilton is quickly become a great theater to lose a lot of money in.

 

Second, let’s take a moment and think of all of the good that $45M (or whatever portion of it that was spent and I get it was a lot of money) could have done…

 

  • it would have covered one year of operating expenses for Roundabout or MTC.
  • it would have covered one year of operating expenses for New York Theater Workshop, Second Stage, Signature, MCC, Primary Stages, Women’s Project, Classic Stage, Atlantic, Playwright’s Horizon, Vineyard, and New Group with a bit of money to spare that could have covered the Public’s expenses down on Lafayette Street.

 

Don’t want the money to go to nonprofit theatre – fine:

 

  • it would have covered the capitalization of 15 (FIFTEEN) straight plays on Broadway
  • it would have covered the capitalization of about 30-45 straight plays off-Broadway
  • it would have covered the capitalization of 3 musicals of pretty hefty size on Broadway
  • it would have covered buying 1000 full price tickets to other Broadway shows every night for an entire year

 

I guess I made my point that $45M is a lot of money to spend in theater.  So it seems insane that someone could ever waste it all on one show!

 

As Michael Riedel points out:

 

But at $45 million — and with a weekly running cost of almost $900,000 — "Spider-Man" at the 1,700-seat Hilton could never be profitable.

 

The show would have to run five years, selling every single seat in the house, to just break even.

 

"That," says a source who crunched the numbers, "is insane."

 

How in the heck did this even happen?  How did this show ever raise any money in the first place?  Although we won’t know the full story until one of the participants includes it in an autobiography (and even then it won’t be the full truth) Riedel states what most of the industry has been whispering behind closed doors:

 

"Spider-Man" has been in trouble from the beginning, done in by the inexperience of its producers — Sony, Marvel Comics and David Garfinkle, a Chicago lawyer who, sources say, had almost no Broadway experience.

 

"He was in over his head," a source says.

 

Taymor, the director of "The Lion King," conceived of "Spider-Man" as an "installation show," something big and bold and full of special effects. Something, in other words, like Cirque du Soleil.

 

That’s fine if you’re going to put the damn thing up in Las Vegas, where "installation shows" run several times a day and are funded in large part by hotels and casinos.

 

I should note the show hasn’t been scrapped yet as Riedel also “fairly” noted:

 

A desperate attempt was made last week to save "Spider-Man" by bringing in a couple of veteran producers. But they’re too smart to get involved in what’s turning out to be the biggest fiasco in Broadway history.

 

And so, while the official line is "the production will begin previews on Feb. 25, 2010," the betting is that the Hilton Theatre, whose insides have been gutted for this show, is going to be an empty barn this winter.

 

updated 8/12

It is the hot topic of the day, so here are my thoughts on the recent Tony voting changes – and links to other commentary

July 15, 2009 • One Comment

 

If you hadn’t heard – the Tony Awards Management Committee met and decided to cut a 100 voters from the small elite group that decides on “theatre’s biggest awards.”   I don’t know how anyone can think it is a good thing to shrink the voter list to a point where a huge majority have a vested financial interest in their show winning.  There isn’t enough diversity in the voter pool. 

 

If there were or are some upcoming changes about including more artists in the voting pool, I am all for mixing it up (after all the critics don’t vote in the Oscars or Emmys, of course they “sort of” have their own awards with the Golden Globes).  But what I would really love to see is – keep the critics in and add even more artists. 

 

I realize it is difficult on the shows to support the free tickets, but perhaps some of the producers and road show presenters are who needs to go.  I know there was a purging a few years back, but maybe it wasn’t enough.   Or maybe there needs to be an “Academy” equivalent in Theatre, let’s just make sure there are term limits – learn from the mistake of others after all. 

 

For just the facts, check out the New York Times Arts Blog.   For some excellent commentary – check out the below posts and articles:

 

Kevin Daly: It’s a Fiasco

Chris Caggiano: Critics No Longer Tony Voters

Adam Feldman: This Just In: Tony Awards Nix Crix

Patrick Healy: Journalists Will No Longer Be Voting for Tony Awards

Matthew Murray: Reviewing the Tony Situation

Tom O’Neil: Tonys to Press: Drop Dead

Matt Windman: Destroying the Credibility of the Tony Awards: Banning Journalists as Voters

 

 

Also check out How Voting Works on the Tony Awards website.

Interesting articles about theater, nonprofits and arts from the last week or so – for some reason lots of funny ones!

 

 

Time Out’s Adam Feldman on the Nixing of press as Tony Awards Voters http://tinyurl.com/m8p7oj
WSJ’s Wealth blog: Wealthy women are nearly twice as generous as their male counterparts http://bit.ly/17Z9Aa
Report Identifies Characteristics of Sustainable Nonprofits http://bit.ly/IeAOb
Brantley on London musicals: "Dress ’em to the teeth, or strip ’em down to their skivvies." http://tinyurl.com/mtq2zg
Broadway stages hit operatic heights – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/CYx3
After six successful seasons, Darko Tresnjak steps down-Adrian Noble to lead Shakes Festival http://bit.ly/1apEPv
Equity wants cats to return to West End – to combat the rats and mice! |The Stage #theatre http://ff.im/-524vr
Hot off the press: "The Economy Issue:" http://bit.ly/s6Ffj
London’s Daily Telegraph discusses HAMLET http://bit.ly/RpQGj
Time Out NY suggests Palin attempt a Broadway career now that she’s no longer governor. http://bit.ly/EJZRR
Time Out NY suggests Palin attempt a Broadway career now that she’s no longer governor. http://bit.ly/EJZRR
New at Women & Hollywood: Women Matter at the Box Office http://tinyurl.com/kqdrud
Why the arts are essential to helping youth understand the world’s complexities. http://bit.ly/E9DyD
Commence Swooning: Daniel Craig, Hugh Jackman Team Up for Broadway http://bit.ly/SW034
National Endowment for the Arts Distributes $29.8 Million in Stimulus Funds http://bit.ly/1DXYHA
Shakespeare Theatre Company to Furlough Employees Because of Economic Woes http://bit.ly/eNKnk
Foundations Trim Staffs After Assets Slide Lower http://bit.ly/1VCn6c
WSJ to beef up arts/culture coverage with a NY-centric slant. Battle with the NYT is on: http://is.gd/1qzbE
WSJ to beef up arts/culture coverage with a NY-centric slant: http://is.gd/1qzbE
California, Michigan and South Carolina hardest hit by economy, says AP – http://bit.ly/3TJ7NZ
James Gandolfini removed audacious audience member from the stage at "God of Carnage" http://tinyurl.com/ry6oem
NYTimes on philanthropy and kids – http://ow.ly/gvZi 
Tweetraising: The Potential For Charities On Twitter – http://is.gd/1oKGb
Recession adds to challenges for suburban arts – http://shar.es/GFgg
Give & Take: Are Tax-Exemption Challenges Heating Up? http://tinyurl.com/pxcamp

This week’s interesting articles and blog posts!

July 5, 2009 • No Comments

 

 

    From the papers and websites:

     

  • Now, Sarah’s Folly – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/Gj5o

  • Female playwrights find it’s still a man’s world — Newsday.com – http://shar.es/GvPV

  • ‘Girls Night,’ Bachelorettes plays – WSJ.com – http://shar.es/G7al

  • Summer tourism to NYC down sharply. Tourists forgoing Broadway for less pricey atttractions. http://tinyurl.com/n6zegy

  • Mayor Michael Bloomberg – A public insurance plan will help heal a broken health care system – http://shar.es/cj5u

  • How Not to be Hated on Facebook – TIME – http://shar.es/cjaT #fb

  • BackStage on the amazing Bernie Telsey http://bit.ly/EkA1b w/actors Telsey tales-note 1st one http://bit.ly/tQGlP

  • City’s Funds For Film and Television Tax Credits Run Out http://bit.ly/DeLkn

  • Critic Peter Marks says that the power of the critic "theater, like most politics, is local," http://is.gd/1lpVZ

  • Bravo, Sarah Jessica Parker launching art-themed reality series http://bit.ly/ayTQZ

  • Playbill profile of MCC Artistic Director Bernard Telsey’s double life as a casting director – http://bit.ly/11dlAF

  • Kaiser on Arts in Crisis http://bit.ly/hQfwE H

  • Nonprofits Employ Tougher Measures as Downturn Deepens http://bit.ly/18ud9h

  • Twitter Revamps Following and Followers Pages – http://bit.ly/LFlWJ

  • Male Nonprofit Executives Earn 27% More Than Female Leaders, Study Finds http://twurl.nl/hfkofm

  • Kennedy Center to Spread the Knowledge http://bit.ly/1gwGiq

  • Productive but Neurotic New York – Crain’s New York Business – http://shar.es/5W13

  • Charles Isherwood of the NYT on the NT Live Phedre http://bit.ly/lbi00

  • It’s official: T.R. Knight is headed to Broadway http://tinyurl.com/nqz2vz

  • Guthrie Theater Wraps Up Highly Successful Kushner Celebration http://tinyurl.com/mdxv5f

  • Recession Taking a Toll on Nonprofits, Bridgespan Survey Finds http://bit.ly/LMxYt

  • Facebook Could Create a Revolution, Do Good, and Make Billions – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/fYGc

  • Variety – interesting business/creative model for the musical "Ella": http://bit.ly/OpU1z

  • Bard Stars Esparza, White Help Raise $1.3 Million for Public – Bloomberg.com – http://shar.es/74rL

  •  

     

      From the Blogs (For a daily update check What’s being talked about on the Blogroll regularly.  It is updated several times throughout the day.  Follow me on Twitter to receive a tweet whenever it is updated.)  If there is a blog I am not following and I should please let me know.  You can see the blog roll by category here.:

       

       

      • *’Bums on Seats’ * "PR folk are always asking how… from Hannah Nicklin – Blog

      • The Huffington Post says The Skylight is following… from Artsy Schmartsy

      • Be careful what you say from The Mission Paradox Blog

      • Acceptance Video for the ITBA’s Citation for Excellence from Flux Theatre Ensemble

      • On Theatre Etiquette from Theatre Bay Area Chatterbox

      • July 1, 2009 – Can we practice empathy together? from SEE Blog

      • Paneled on July 8th! from Parabasis

      • What? A Panel About Theatre Blogging? from The Playgoer

      • Ohio Theatre Update from The Playgoer

      • Here’s how to solve the arts funding crisis  from Stage: Theatre blog | guardian.co.uk

      • Have we seen the last of the looooong running musical? from PRODUCER’S PERSPECTIVE

      • Women Actors Make Way Less Money Than Men from Women & Hollywood

      • Valuing Cultural Diplomacy and Engagement for the arts from ARTSBLOG

      • Creative risk pays off for the Guthrie from Carolyn Jack

      • Gender Bias Gets Confusing! (But Poetic) from Parabasis

      • My last e-mail to Emily from The Hub Review

      • Microphilanthropy from Createquity.

      • Thinking Bigger with your Vision, your Board and your funding from For Impact Daily Nuggets

      • Are Nonprofits Good At Social Media? from The Agitator

      • Is Michael Kaiser a Demigod or Merely Superhuman? from Clyde Fitch Report

      • As Mayoral Control of Schools Lapses, Will Arts Education be affected from Clyde Fitch Report

      • On Quality, Value and Criticism from Flux Theatre Ensemble

      • Goodbye and Thanks from AmericanTheaterWeb

      • First Rehearsal to the Third Power from Steppenwolf Theatre Company Blog

      • Free, Says Gladwell: Such a Little Word… from Clyde Fitch Report

      • How is Tony Voter turnout? from PRODUCER’S PERSPECTIVE

      • Gentle Persistence from A Small Change- Fundraising Blog

      • Gender Bias in Theatre — Digging a Little Deeper from Women & Hollywood

      • The “Turn-A-Round King goes National from off-stage right

      • The 500th Post: 16 Nonprofit Marketing (and Life)… from Katya’s Non-Profit Marketing Blog

      • Truth, beauty, trust from The Artful Manager

      • Around the horn: Thriller edition from Createquity.

      • Are Audiences Lemmings or Thinking Lemmings? from Clyde Fitch Report

      • Today’s Must Read from Parabasis

      • O, malignant and ill-boding audience! from Struts and Frets: Kris Joseph

      • I’m lost, but I don’t think I am the only one from off-stage right

      • A Balancing Act from The Halcyon Blog

      • Broadway (officially) lends T.R. Knight ‘Tenor’ role from Entertainment Weekly’s Ausiello Files

      • Why Every Nonprofit Is Accountable For A Vision from SPURspectives

      • And then it’s gone… from Theatre Aficionado at Large

      • How convenient are we? from One Producer in the City

      • Women Directors Breaking Through in Theatre from Women & Hollywood

      • Is the Curtain Closing on Live Theater in America? from Culturebot

      • Jerry Lewis, Marvin Hamlisch taking ‘Nutty Professor’… from Culture Monster

      • A ‘West Side Story’ for the Twitter set from Culture Monster

      • Saving Arts Programs? There’s an .App for That. from ARTSBLOG

      • What You Do Isn’t Worth Paying For: The Message Google… from Technology in the Arts

      • What You Do IS Worth Paying For, We Just Can’t: Non-Profit… from Technology in the Arts

      • New York Arts Fund Offers Cheap Rent to Charities from Give and Take

      • Femme Fight from Blank New World

      • Rock and a Hard Place 3: What Actors Want from a poor player

      • Theatre as Case Study? from Parabasis

      • Fisking Emily Glassberg Sands from The Hub Review

      • The Impact of Giving Circles from Nonprofit Law Blog

      • Politics Of Online Ad Targeting from The Agitator

      • Considering the Creative Ecology from The Artful Manager

      • Keeping The Passion Alive While I am Away from Butts In The Seats

      • Question For My Inside The Arts Family from Butts In The Seats

      • Rehearsing opposites from Struts and Frets: Kris Joseph

      • Breaking the ’5th Wall’… from NEA New Play Development Program hosted by Arena

      • Engaging Dissent from NEA New Play Development Program hosted by Arena

      • I Want To Make Something Really Clear from Parabasis

      • A Good Post From David Dower from Parabasis

      •  An Open Letter to Roundabout from Theatre Aficionado at Large

      • Box? What Box? from Entrepreneur The Arts Blog

      • The Norman Conquests – Table Manners from Everything I Know I Learned from Musicals

      • TWITTER’S TIME HAS COME from Jane Fonda

      • Twitter Guide Book… from Mashable!

      • Theatre is about more than comfy seats | Matt Trueman from Stage: Theatre blog | guardian.co.uk

      • How to Lose Your Audience in One Easy Step from Theatre Bay Area Chatterbox

      • How Broadway Talks to its Audiences Using Social Media from Mashable!

      • The New York Times continues the discussion on parity for Women in Theater

        June 28, 2009 • No Comments

        Today’s New York Times takes a look at shows directed by women in New York in Who’s in Charge of This Show? She Is by Patricia Cohen. Links at the end of the post for more of the discussion on Women in Theater.  But interesting points to be made from the New York Times article:

        This has been something of a banner year for female directors in New York, a development that wouldn’t be worth noting if it weren’t so rare. In July alone three new Off Broadway shows directed by women (including Ms.[Judith] Ivey [Vanities]) are beginning previews. On Broadway eight shows last season — a record — had a woman in charge, with most of them garnering outsize praise for their work. “Hair,” directed by Diane Paulus, won the Tony for best musical revival this month, for example, while Phyllida Lloyd is one of the few directors — male or female — to have two shows running simultaneously (“Mamma Mia!,” which has raked in a fortune over the last eight years, and the new entrant, “Mary Stuart,” which earned Ms. Lloyd a Tony nomination).

        “It’s getting better and better,” said Ms. Ivey, 57, during a break between rehearsals. The fourth-floor studio is air-conditioned to ice-cream store temperatures, so she wears a lime-green scarf wrapped around her neck. On her feet are colorful tapestry slippers. How often, she asked, do middle-aged women without an Olympic-type record get a crack at directing a show? “I feel that’s what Second Stage is doing for me,” Ms. Ivey said. She has directed a few plays in recent years but no musicals before this new version of Jack Heifner’s 1976 show. “They are giving me a chance.”

        That chance, however, is something that does not come as easily or as frequently for female directors as it does for their male counterparts, many people in the theater contend.

        Leigh Silverman, 35, who directed “Well” on Broadway in 2006 and the musical version of Neil Gaiman’s children’s tale “Coraline,” which is running Off Broadway, is optimistic about the uptick in directing jobs for women. “I think it is really exciting,” she said. “There were multiple women nominated for Tonys this year. In the short range it’s incredibly encouraging.” Still, she maintains: “It’s not a level playing field. There is no parity.”

        Pretty much everyone in the business is quick to acknowledge that with so much money at stake, it’s understandable that producers want to work with people they know, and with people who have already had box-office success. Such established directors are generally men.

        One certainly can’t deny there is no parity.  We should all be applauding the face that more women have been on Broadway in the last year which hopefully won’t be an anomaly but the new norm.   I have often said to friends that I think female directors have it more difficult than ANY other group in theater – and let’s not even discuss female directors of color!

        But I have to take a moment and note that although I applaud the New York Times for writing an article on this disparity, would the reporter have described what say Michael Grief or Joe Mantello was wearing in the rehearsal studio?  Seems a bit stereotypical to me.

        The last paragraph is also a bit disturbing, and perhaps a good explanation why in so many seasons we feel like we are seeing the same old thing again.  This past year included a season of more highly acclaimed shows than most seasons of the last decade.   (I have gone so far as to hypothesize that we are entering a new arts renaissance).  I have to imagine that some of the success of the last season is some new folks (or “second-timers”) mixing it up on Broadway with some amazing veterans.

        What really gives women in Britain a leg up over those in New York, Ms. Lloyd said, is the nationally subsidized theater. Because of the government money, theaters — including the eminent National Theater and Royal Shakespeare Company — have been more likely to hire female directors, giving them the crucial experience of running a large production, she said.

        Maria Aitken, nominated for a Tony in 2008 for her direction of another British import, “Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps,” has a similar view. “You don’t have a structure where young female directors can come and get training,” she said.

        The sheer size of the United States also makes a difference. In Britain it’s not hard to lure producers and artistic directors to spend a couple of hours on a train to see a production, she said, while attending a show far from New York most likely requires a flight and an overnight stay.

        Ms. Aitken, 63, who is directing Simon Gray’s play “Quartermaine’s Terms” at the Williamstown Theater Festival in Massachusetts this summer, said she wonders whether New York’s “money men” will make the journey to see it. For directors not as well known or experienced as Ms. Aitken, the web of personal relationships is even more important. Just as producers prefer to work with people they know, so do playwrights. “Everybody wants to work with their friends,” said Pam MacKinnon, 41, who is directing the premiere of Cusi Cram’s “Lifetime Burning,” for Primary Stages this summer.

        Luck — a frequent character in these stories — helped Ms. MacKinnon get established. Her agent also represented Edward Albee, and he suggested that the two meet. They got together for lunch and hit it off. She has subsequently directed eight productions of Mr. Albee’s work, including the official premieres of “Peter and Jerry” and “Occupant.” She mentioned that the director Anna D. Shapiro, who won a Tony in 2008 for “August: Osage County,” has also had a longtime relationship with the playwright Tracy Letts from their collaboration at the Steppenwolf Theater Company in Chicago. (“August” is closing on Sunday, but it earned back its investment and took home an armful of Tonys last year.)

        During her acceptance speech Ms. Shapiro referred to Steppenwolf and Mr. Letts, saying, “I’m pretty sure that the only way that you get to have a life in the theater is if somewhere in your life you come upon a group of people who, although they don’t need to, make room for you.”

        Look we all know this business is more “about who you know” in many cases than “who is best for the job.”  A lot of these women are well-known names in the theatre industry, with good reputations about working with others, and I have to believe the producers are at a point where they can’t deny knowing about them – thanks to many of the great nonprofit theaters that have been much better at creating opportunities for female directors.  So, the network is expanding.  Perhaps a good question is how to make it expand quicker – especially at a time when there seem to be more and more female producers running shows.

        But I don’t want to dismiss some important points made about the British system.  I think overall the road for young directors, male or female, is a difficult one.  The informal system in place now usually requires being an assistant for little or no pay.  Anyone who can’t support themselves from some source (other than working another job because more or less the assistant is needed endless hours a day) is excluded by time requirements.  There are a few great programs out there that could be models (ever major market in the U.S. could benefit from say a Drama League directing program), but there need to be more.  The current season will hopefully inspire some younger females to stick it out, but I couldn’t fault them if they chose a different path.  After all of the top of my head I can think of at least a dozen wonderful female directors who have never been on Broadway but have great credits for wonderful productions in New York, Chicago, Seattle, etc. but sadly it seems like most seasons only have one slot for such a director to leap to the Broadway arena.

        As for Ms. Aitken, she is sick and tired of the whole subject. When she first started directing after acting for many years, she said, “I sometimes felt like a performing bear who could walk and chew gum at the same time.”

        It is much better today, but, “it annoys me and upsets me even now that we have to be considered a special case,” she said. “I want to stop being an oddity.”

        I couldn’t agree more!

        More on the discussion of Women in Theater:

        Continuing the discussion on Gender Disparity in theater:  Emily Sands – notes and impressions from June 22 Presentation

        Women in Theater: Are all things equal?

        Emily Sand’s OPENING THE CURTAIN ON PLAYWRIGHT GENDER full thesis

        Emily Sand’s OPENING THE CURTAIN ON PLAYWRIGHT GENDER presentation from June 22

        You should have already seen Norman Conquests but go again or see it NOW!

        June 25, 2009 • No Comments

        You know that I loved Norman Conquests, but now you can get a discount to the best revival around!  Check out the below!

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