Vigil by Morris Panych opens off-Broadway tonight but gets an early rave review in Variety

September 30, 2009 • No Comments

 

There are two reasons that I have been a bit too busy to write much the last few weeks.  Here is reason number one: I am producing Vigil by Morris Panych off-Broadway at the DR2 in Union Square.  Opening this evening (but Variety printed the review a day early).  Get your tickets now!

 

From today’s Variety:

VIGIL

 

Kemp – Malcolm Gets
Grace – Helen Stenborg

 

By MARILYN STASIO

Canadian scribe Morris Panych has written a funny play that makes you want to cry. An offbeat two-hander about two of the loneliest people alive, "Vigil" sets up the intriguing situation of a mercenary young man who quits his bank job to keep a deathwatch on a rich aunt he hasn’t seen in 30 years. Under Stephen DiMenna’s shrewd helming, Malcolm Gets and Helen Stenborg turn in sterling performances as this oddly matched pair, trapped in a macabre bond that’s comic on the surface, heartbreaking at the core. With judicious trimming, this little number could have ‘em in stitches crying.

 

 

Read the entire fabulous review here.

100 Great Theater and Arts Articles you should have read in the last few weeks…

September 8, 2009 • One Comment

 

Okay there are only 97. 

 

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.

 

‘Jersey Boys’ Theater Chain Names Vornado’s Roth as President – Bloomberg.com – http://shar.es/1myLc
Jujamcyn Theaters sets new prez – Entertainment News, Business News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/1my23 
Jordon Roth officially in charge of Jujamcyn RT @nytimesarts A New Force on Broadway http://bit.ly/iUK3C  
What Social Media Can Learn From Multicultural Marketing http://bit.ly/19NOM3
Writers’ Theatre and Glencoe ready to take the next step, check out the Trib: http://leisureblogs.chicagotribune.com.
Cheap Seats Central: Dollar-Stretchers for the Fall Arts Season http://bit.ly/273jUn
"Comparing the arts to social services is the wrong comparison and an unfair one." http://bit.ly/9dBoH
GLEE Star Lea Michele Featured In NY Magazine http://bit.ly/mDTMo
The complete ‘Addams Family’ cast has been announced @ http://cli.gs/yj8bh8
Having her say: Emily Mann celebrates 20 years at McCarter. NJ.com http://bit.ly/ClI7g
Rob Ashford looks to make his mark – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/1aiIK
Broadway box office Aug. 23-30 – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/1aiI7
First twitter opera premieres in London…and doesn’t get panned: http://bit.ly/pvIJs
AD Des McAnuff responds (http://bit.ly/9ND5r) to Shakespeare crisis in Stratford story http://bit.ly/qLIxj
Big City – Sharon Wheatley on Juggling Babies and Broadway – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/11SzL
Classicaltv.com launches performing arts on a virtual stage http://bit.ly/BDJ4I
GUESS WHO’S GOING TO BROADWAY? (PRETTY MUCH EVERYONE) – New York Post – http://shar.es/11tDM
WAY WILD – New York Post – http://shar.es/1nLv2
SMART Advertising – A Long Wait Stirs Enthusiasm for Fox Show ‘Glee’ – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/1nNfP
The Footes: Pioneers of Independent Film – Behind the Curtain | Frank Rizzo – http://shar.es/1nMMH
Mel Brooks Sends "Young Frankenstein" On the Road – Speakeasy – WSJ – http://shar.es/1nMTn
Willows Theatre Company asks fans for help – http://shar.es/1nMia
How Cirque du Soleil’s hippy circus took over the world | Stage | guardian.co.uk – http://shar.es/1nMHY
‘VERGE’ OF A SHAKEUP – New York Post – http://shar.es/1nS9t
ArtsBeat: ‘Laramie Project’ Epilogue to Play in Laramie http://bit.ly/38Unn
David Mamet, Neil Simon, Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman Head to Broadway – WSJ.com – http://shar.es/1njFA
Getting younger people for your boards: Young Turks On Board http://bit.ly/eyrym
Jude Law interviewed by Sarah Lyall in the New York Times http://alturl.com/sp4e
Time Out New York: Julia Stiles on Oleanna. http://tinyurl.com/juliaoleanna
A Mixed Outlook for Media Advertising – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/nHZJ
Riedel on Spider-Man – Bono to the rescue? http://tinyurl.com/l7pgrr
ACT adds ‘happy hour’ drinks to shows http://bit.ly/xDFU4
Work to Resume on ‘Spider-Man’ Musical http://bit.ly/J5pN3
Angels in America’ Will Receive Its First New York Revival http://bit.ly/2lKXIz
Ed Ruscha, Robert Redford among 2009 Americans for the Arts honorees http://bit.ly/LrgmY
How parents can fill the void when schools cut arts and music programs http://bit.ly/iwOLZ
Chicago theaters and a Foundation team to offer money-back guarantees to theatre goers http://bit.ly/H32mf
Million Dollar Quartet’ Planned for Broadway http://bit.ly/jZS5P
V.F.’s annual ranking of the top 100 Information Age powers  http://is.gd/2Lh2k 
What to Do with Board Members Who Don’t Do Anything http://is.gd/2L9sD
Theater With a Money-Back Guarantee http://bit.ly/3WhQqD
Arts Challenge total nearly $5 million | Detroit Free Press | Freep.com – http://shar.es/N6mg
Tom Hanks will return to CLE’s Great Lakes Theater Festival http://snipurl.com/rigaa
Disney unlikely to rescue ‘Spider-Man’ – Entertainment News, Film News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/NqFt
Eli Broad discusses education reform and the arts http://tinyurl.com/nfbfml
One in 10 members of Congress has relatives who also served http://ow.ly/nrmF
Which generation has cut spending the most http://bit.ly/Uz0d1
Geffen Playhouse counts — and discounts — on its stars http://bit.ly/o9MyV
Jeff Whitty talks about Avenue Q and Tales of the City http://bit.ly/VpA3i
FOX To Air ‘Tweet-peats’ Of GLEE Pilot And FRINGE Episode With Twitter Commentary http://bit.ly/3ejzIC
Why are artists poor? http://tiny.cc/MNSBLl
Ticket Resellers Step Out of the Shadows – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/MxCo
New NEA chief promotes the arts — in Peoria, too – STLtoday.com – http://shar.es/Mx4Q
Should whites direct black plays, and vice versa? — latimes.com – http://shar.es/Mx47
Seattle’s professional actors feeling squeezed off local stages | Seattle Times Newspaper – http://shar.es/MxhD
Twin Cities theater peeking out of recession? http://bit.ly/D89yD
Used to Be a Major Motion Picture – ‘Catch Me if You Can’ Onstage – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/M0VT
It’s never to last to find your passion, Nora Ephron http://bit.ly/ofwDU
Linda Winer – Newsday – http://shar.es/PSrf
Arts groups raise unexpected $4.8M http://bit.ly/F6yof
Is collaboration key to survival of arts groups? http://bit.ly/14gVGF
Times Square: Broadway unbound – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/PAil
Pair of fests test the fiscal waters – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/PAzT
Kristin Chenoweth lands a guest judge slot on American Idol: http://bit.ly/10mwJe
Riedel: Supposed rift -Sondheim & Roundabout over "iSondheim" http://bit.ly/XWOm
Opera’s Ian Campbell: How to increase audiences http://bit.ly/rfpXj 
Social Networks – Boomers Feel Left Out – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/lF02
‘Catch’ cast lining up gigs – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/PnY8
AEA Gives Statement Regarding Jeremy Piven Arbitration Decision http://bwayworld.com/rd.cfm?i=66682
RT @artsbeat: New Slicing of Arts-Fund Pie Is Working, Budget Office Says http://bit.ly/194Ch1
Casting Announced for ‘Ragtime’ Revival http://bit.ly/jMLAf
NEA Budget ‘Should Double’ Says New NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman http://bwayworld.com/rd.cfm?i=66648
Broadway’s Best & Brightest! See who’s coming to Broadway this year: http://bit.ly/KZExr
Check out ‘The Addams Family’ musical trailer on BroadwayWorld.com @ http://cli.gs/addamstrailer
NEA Chair Rocco Landesman plans to use Chicago as the national model for the arts. http://bit.ly/moeAz
MoMA Says Out With the Old Junior Associates – Speakeasy – WSJ – http://shar.es/V8PJ
Report shows more arts groups get funding – Crain’s New York Business – http://shar.es/V8VC
Who’s Driving Twitter’s Popularity? Not Teenagers – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/lnco
Nonprofit Arts Sector’s 25 Most Powerful & Influential Leaders: http://bit.ly/Hduy1
AEA supports marriage equality… http://tinyurl.com/lbpp3m
Boston Globe on relationship btwn money and happiness – not as simple as you think: http://tr.im/x5GY
Rocco talks to the WaPo. http://bit.ly/3Or1qs
Prospecting: Giving by the Wealthy Drops Sharply in 2009 http://bit.ly/3Nd6i9
Pete Townshend at Work on New Musical, Floss http://bit.ly/14lN3l
Is the Social Sector Capitalism’s R&D Lab? http://bit.ly/166FHu
NYT debate about NP CEO salary for lauded High Line Park Founder http://bit.ly/2BlTWg
Social Marketing: Not as Awful as I Feared http://xrl.us/bfemvw
North Shore Music Theatre in Beverly on the auction block http://bit.ly/NdtYc
Dollar by Dollar, Patrons Find Artists on the Web – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/lety
WSJ Sightings: Terry Teachout on the New-Media Crisis of 1949 – WSJ.com – http://shar.es/TOgR
Fund-Raising Challenge Raises Money for Arts Groups — and Ire http://bit.ly/3O1qJQ
Variety look at last week’s Broadway box office. http://bit.ly/ofasc
Box Office Collaboration http://bit.ly/M06wk
News Among Actors, Jane Lynch Is Leading Lady: http://bit.ly/nccb2
Ben Hur Live coming to London’s O2 Arena – Times Online – http://shar.es/TWxm
Oregon Shakespeare Festival receives an ‘A’ for class participation http://bit.ly/VvnO6

The remains of North Shore Music Theatre – what a mess, any one have a few million bucks and want to buy a theatre?

August 25, 2009 • No Comments

 

 

I first wrote about the travesty at North Shore Music Theatre in this post. I called it a disaster waiting to happen and an embarrassment to theatre everywhere.  It a lesson to all theatres out there. 

 

Today the news was pretty much every where that North Shore Music Theatre put on the auction block.  Well it looks like Beverly, MA could have a new mall or apartment complex.  What a waste!

 

The auction will include the main theater building, the former education building and a separate restaurant on 26.5 acres.

 

McLaughlin’s auction listing says the location has “tremendous redevelopment potential.”

 

The property is assessed at $12.1 million by the city for tax purposes.

 

Fellows said in June that the theater’s mortgage is $5 million and that while the land, buildings and other assets were worth $5 million at one time, it isn’t worth that much now.

 

“Our guess is that it’s half of that or maybe less," he had said.

 

In addition to the mortgage, the theater owes an additional $5 million to other creditors, including about $2.5 million in season ticket payments made for the 2009 season from about 4,400 subscribers. Boston Culinary Group, which ran the theater’s food service, also has a $250,000 attachment on the property for unpaid bills.

In London starting Sept 17 – Ben Hur Live with 400 actors, 100 live animals, Gladiators, Chariot Races and more gives new meaning to spectacle in live theatre.

August 24, 2009 • No Comments

 

I have been following updates on Facebook about what seemed like an insane and crazy adventure in theatre – no I am not talking about Spiderman and whether or not it will happen

 

One of my absolute favorite people in the world is the amazing and talented fight director Rick Sordelet.  There are very few people in the theatre industry who can hold a candle to Rick in terms of kindness, generosity, good nature and talent.  For months Rick has been sending out Facebook updates like – worked with the horses today and the gladiators are amazing (not his real updates just my summary of them – his are much more entertaining). 

 

All of this is because Rick is working on what I think has to be the wildest and ambitious shows attempted in modern day theatre, Ben Hur Live.  EVERYONE who reads this post should also go see the website for the show.  The video intro and website are pretty cool (if this translates to the “stage/arena” it could be a rival to Cirque du Soleil in terms of eye candy, precisions, and amazing feats!). 

 

Of course most folks know the story – if you don’t here is the Wikipedia link.  The show is fifteen years in the making; features over 100 animals, from birds to horses, and over 400 actors from all over Europe; uncountable special effects, and music by Stewart Copeland!  Take that Spidey! 

 

Now whether the story will be swallowed by the spectacle (how can it not be) or what the show will actually end up being as an audience experience is still to be sorted out – it could be a jaw-dropping, totally enveloping experience or something equivalent to a skit at a local carnival fun house, but either way it is the definition of true theater spectacles.  I am hoping for the tingling, out of body, immersive experience myself because this is close insane spectacle that was integral to the early history of theater.  After all this is as close as we will probably come to recreating something as monstrous as an ancient Rome’s Naumachia.  The show will start in London in September and than tour Europe.

 

No matter what the end result of the production’s performance is, I can’t even begin to imagine what opening night will be like or the first full performance!

 

A recent London Times article Ben Hur Live coming to London’s O2 Arena captures just a bit of the insanity of the rehearsal process and the undertaking of such a ambitious project.

 

The voice of the director, slightly weary, booms across the ISS Dome, in Düsseldorf. “A little more wailing, prisoners!” Then another voice translates this into Russian, then another into Czech, then another into Polish, then another into Hungarian. The prisoners wail a little more.

 

It has been a trying morning for the director. The guards have been driving him mad, especially during the riot scene: “I can’t seem to get the Roman guards to be aggressive.”

 

An assistant director runs out into the arena and harangues the guards, who are wearing red T-shirts and carrying wooden spears. “Imagine you’re saying to them, ‘F*** you! F*** you!’” The guards start shouting “F*** you!” at the rioting people and brandishing their spears with intent. “Better,” the director booms, “but I don’t want to hear anybody saying f*** out there. I don’t want to get 3,000 letters from mothers telling me their daughters heard the word f***.”

 

Outside, a man whose head is too large for his body — an effect exaggerated by his bouffant-romantic hair — is raising money on a mobile phone, and horses are standing impassively in a tent, contemplating human folly through semicircular openings in the canvas. “Will not be cheesy,” Alex Reinhard says as he takes me to see the horses. Alex works for the large-headed man, whose name is Franz Abraham. What will not be cheesy, according to Alex, is Ben Hur Live. This show — or “monutainment”, as the press handout calls it, rather cheesily in my view — will have its world premiere on September 17 at the O2 Arena, in southeast London. Abraham has been planning this moment for 15 years. “And so,” he tells me, “we are almost through to London, with all seriosity… This can be the most successful show on earth. It can run for 50 years.” His English is great, utterly original; “seriosity” isn’t a word, but it should be.

 

Certainly the idea of touring such a show comes with it’s dilemma’s the Times digs into but it the sheer will of a single person who has brought this to fruition that amazes me:

 

What, exactly, this all costs is complicated. By one calculation, it will consume £6m by the time it gets to the O2. But Franz has bought, rather than (as is normal in such ventures) leased, all the gear. He’s also had trouble getting venues to take on any of the risk, so he is financing most of the 18-city tour. He has “no investor, no sponsor, no rich guy”. Every day, he’s on to the banks. Financing seems to be via the venerable theatrical method of a MasterCard and mirrors. Tickets have been selling reasonably for the London shows — 30,000 when we spoke, with expectations of 45,000 — and it has been booked to return in January. Yet, as Franz solemnly acknowledges, everything now depends on the buzz generated by that first night.

 

It just goes to show what one man’s passion can accomplish.  And in the days of conservative theater choices and unimaginative productions, you can’t help smiling at Abraham’s accomplishment and energy.  Although is certainly might be inspired madness, I am intrigued and rooting for the show’s success.  He also won over the TIMES writer and broke through his wall of cynicism:

 

Later, sunning myself outside the arena, I watch Abraham having a blazing row with the director, Philip William McKinley. I think he’s losing, but I hope he wins. I like Abraham. He looks like a Napoleonic general painted by Ingres, he speaks English like a comedy German and his show is one of the craziest projects I’ve ever come across. But I think he gets it, this life business. He just goes for it, probably in the name of God.

 

I’d also just seen Pfeifer [Nicki Pfeifer who plays Ben-Hur] driving his chariot, pulled by four magnificent black friesian horses at full speed around the arena. It made me shiver. Was not cheesy.

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

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.

Michael Feingold on the freedom of no longer being a Tony voter and the conundrum of theater criticism in the era of digitalized communication

August 14, 2009 • One Comment

 

In this week’s Village Voice there is a really interesting article Theater Criticism Reconfigured: The Internet (unlike the Tonys) lets everyone have their say—to a point. What would Wilde think? by Michael Feingold which delves into everything from critics being shut out of the Tony’s to criticism in the Web 2.0 era.

 

On the Tony’s, Feingold basically says, you don’t want us fine at least I have more time to see what I want to see rather than imported or overproduced fare:

By the end of this paragraph, the producers of Burn the Floor will be sore at the Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing. When the news broke that these two organizations, which jointly manage Broadway’s annual Tony Awards, had decided to remove the first-night theater press from the ranks of Tony voters, my first action was to e-mail my editor that I wouldn’t be reviewing Burn the Floor, Broadway’s new ballroom-dance compilation, an Australian import that has been trekking around the world for some years. As a Tony voter, I might have felt obliged to go: The nominations are so eccentric that you never know what may or may not end up on the ballot, and the ballot always specifies that you may not vote in a given category unless you’ve seen all the nominees. My new non-voter status has liberated me from events like Burn the Floor. Unluckily for its producers, my editor has no space outside my column for it either, so their show will get no Village Voice review. Let the League and the Wing deal with it.

 

Some of my colleagues on the press list are dismayed by the Tony administrators’ decision; some are downright irate. For me, it’s a blessed release. The League, the Broadway producers’ association, works hard to make the public equate "Broadway" with "the theater," but the two were never identical, and in recent decades, the gap between them has steadily widened. Theater, sometimes very fine theater, does still occur in the large-scale venues that function on Broadway contracts and charge Broadway’s staggering ticket prices, but not so often that theater critics need to spend the bulk of their time there. These days, most of what we call "Broadway," good or not, comes, like Burn the Floor, from elsewhere: London, Off-Broadway, resident theaters across the U.S. The era when "Broadway" meant a specific way of creating theater, with its own attitudes and its own approach, is long gone; its surviving practitioners are mostly older than myself. And I am not young, except at heart.

 

The roster of Tony voters includes Broadway producers, presenters of touring attractions, artists with Broadway credentials, and officials of the theatrical unions. By removing the first-night press, the one sizeable voting bloc not directly involved in producing Broadway shows, the Tony management reaffirmed what the award is: a trade association prize, given by members to the work they hold most valuable—which, in practice, often means most commercially valuable.

 

I have to say Feingold’s attitude is probably more incendiary than any letters or articles I have seen more far.  The who cares, I have better things to do with my time and the space in my column is a delightful “who cares and F-you” rolled into one.  It will be interesting to see if he skips other fare.

 

But it is Feingold’s thoughts on “our new era of digitalized communication that are most intriguing.”   First he set some historical context and where we are now:

 

Newspapers and magazines, once the great repositories of arts criticism, are embattled phenomena themselves today, phasing out, as they downsize, not only their staff critics but most of their arts coverage. Springing up to replace it is the babble of voices flooding the Internet, some qualified to speak and others not, some striving for honesty while others pontificate from questionable assumptions and even more questionable motives.

 

Like most human phenomena, this one has precedents. A century ago, when New York had two dozen or more daily newspapers, representing every income level and every shade of political opinion, they all carried theater reviews, which—no surprise—mostly reflected those papers’ overall outlook. Mid-18th-century London, where the practice of publishing regular theater criticism began, offers an even more Internet-like picture, with fly-by-night news-sheets and scurrilous pamphlets popping up everywhere, mingling blind-item theatrical gossip with detailed analysis, often willfully and malevolently inaccurate, of plays and performances. Picture Datalounge and Educational Theatre Journal as the same website.

 

The Internet’s speed makes today different. Reviews by news sites’ designated critics get posted the minute a show opens. Even these are being supplanted, for enthusiasts, by the instant reactions texted or tweeted, to chat boards and networking sites by those privileged to catch the workshop, the invited dress, or the first 15 minutes of the first preview. The multiplicity of opinions online can be refreshing, like a spring rain, but their instant, unremitting inundation of all discourse seems more like the Johnstown Flood: The sane person instinctively retreats to higher ground.

 

Finding such ground is no longer easy. Newspapers, fighting to stay afloat in the Internet torrents, can hardly promote it. The weeklies that still cover theater now strive to post reviews simultaneous with the dailies’; the space their later deadlines used to offer for reflection and reconsideration has mostly vanished. Though many bloggers and chatters have shown that they can supply an intelligent perspective, they’re vastly outnumbered in a medium where even those who purport to love theater seem mainly concerned with which TV stars will appear onstage, or which stage stars on TV….

 

I guess by writing this blog, I am part of part of the dilemma of the era – although I don’t write reviews.  The funny thing is, I completely see Feingold’s point and I do think it is a bit of a problem.  I am still old school enough to think that previews are sacred time to work on the show – rehearsals with an audience is what one of my favorite actresses used to call them.  I get angry when I see a blogger break that tradition and print a outright review before opening.  After all this is when a show can be tightened and it is often the only way for a show to reach that point where the work simply transcends all interferences from the outside work so that it can take the audience on a fantastic journey each night. 

 

But, on the other hand I am seasoned enough to know that the majority of shows that have major flaws or issues will likely not solve them in previews, and I have seen plenty of clunkers in previews that got the poor critical reception I thought they would. 

 

And, let’s not forget that many of the “critics” and “journalists” have adopted standards that match that of the lowest common denominator in blogging.  Frankly are there that many real theater critics out there?

 

Aren’t we all “backseat drivers” or “Monday morning quarterbacks” when we are tweeting and blogging.  It was only yesterday that I excerpted Michael Riedel’s column declaring Spiderman dead (premature or not?) while discussing whether the show was a colossal waste of money or not.  Although I am very careful about what I tweet when seeing shows during previews is it really fair to censor an entire audience.  I don’t think so.  Also, it would be completely off-putting to say “Hey everyone, we’re in previews so no status updates or tweets about the show until after opening.”   After all we as producers are delighted when actors in a show tweet and set up Twitter accounts for the show itself.  We want an audience so we can use these tools but once the audience arrives they can’t?  Doesn’t really make sense does it.  Of course we also only care if someone says something not so nice about the show.  Praise is more than welcome we re-tweet it!  So the only other option would be to censor the audiences?  NO.  Unacceptable.  So we must adapt or embrace the era.

 

But back to Mr. Feingold and his grand finale—the conundrum of how we move forward or do we?

 

Our time is an exceptionally rough one for criticism. With the dizzying changes in the way we communicate altering the whole fabric of our social life, we are going through a double revolution, and revolutions are never optimal moments for integrity and clarity of thought. The critic—whether viewed by the theater as an enemy, a necessary gadfly, a creative partner, or a poor relation to be tolerated—was never more than a small part of the picture. The theater that leans on critics as a crutch, deriving its own estimate of its worth from its reviews, is probably in as unhealthy a state as the theater with no critical guidance or intellectual perspective at all. Somewhere between those two conditions, the new world that the Internet has caused will probably find a healthier middle way for the astute critical sensibility to function as part of the theater. We can’t guess yet what that will be, because we can’t predict what the theater will become. Today’s world has abolished business as usual.

 

One clue for criticism’s future may lie in the aspect of its essence most overlooked in the current upheavals. The instant thumbs-up or thumbs-down so beloved by the Internet is only the smallest part of a critic’s job. The rest involves writing—exploring, simultaneously, the work under review and the critic’s response to it. Oscar Wilde’s definition of criticism applies: "the record of a soul." The habit of reading critics of the past has ebbed in recent decades. But many cultural habits have ebbed and been revived over the centuries. Phenomena like Kindle and GoogleBooks may yet bring this one back, too. The pleasures that lie in wait for readers who love theater may be ending only to begin all over again.

 

So readers…what do you think?  Is theatre criticism a dying art or just in at the low part of the cycle waiting to come around the bend?

Rocco’s first interview

August 11, 2009 • 3 Comments

I always dislike when I start writing a post and I already know it will anger folks who I respect and often agree with, but heck I have been out of town for a week, so why not start off with a bang – WAY TO GO ROCCO LANDESMAN.

Landesman was confirmed late last week and his first interview with the New York Times (New Endowment Chairman sees Arts as Economic Engine) set off a firestorm of responses.  Not one to be shy, in one interview he took the bull by the horns about the arts being sidelined to the “kids table” or written off as frivolous.

Mr. Landesman, 62, made clear that he has little patience for the disdain with which some politicians still seem to view the endowment, more than a decade after the culture wars that nearly destroyed it.

He was particularly angered, he said, by parts of the debate over whether to include $50 million for the agency in the federal stimulus bill, citing the comment by Mitt Romney, former governor of Massachusetts, on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” in February, that arts money did not belong in the bill. That kind of thinking suggests that “artists don’t have kids to send to college,” Mr. Landesman said, “or food to put on the table, or medical bills to pay.”

In American politics generally, he added: “The arts are a little bit of a target. The subtext is that it is elitist, left wing, maybe even a little gay.”

He has drawn some criticism for what has been called everything from snarky to elitist by stating that quality would play more into granting decisions than geography.

“I don’t know if there’s a theater in Peoria, but I would bet that it’s not as good as Steppenwolf or the Goodman,” he said, referring to two of Chicago’s most prominent theater companies. “There is going to be some push-back from me about democratizing arts grants to the point where you really have to answer some questions about artistic merit.”

“And frankly,” he added, “there are some institutions on the precipice that should go over it. We might be overbuilt in some cases.”

Mr. Landesman does believe that the agency should be “perceived as being everywhere,” he said. “But I don’t know that we have to be everywhere if the only reason for supporting an institution is its geography.”

I know I will probably anger some folks here, but I don’t think the NEA needs to fund by geography, it shouldn’t be dismissed but it shouldn’t be a key factor.  I certainly hope that all grants are based on the merit of the project and the organization’s mission/community impact.  The idea that every congressional district should get funding seems like a ridiculous quota.  That type of policy seems the equivalent to begging for legislatures attention )or buying it) and diminishes all of the grants as a whole.

For the record I don’t believe in funding by size either- either of the organization or of the area that the organization is located.  I do agree that there are some circumstances in which institutions should ‘go over the precipice’ and close – there are plenty that have built beyond their means or have been irresponsible or borderline irresponsible in their management.  These Landesman comments, unsurprisingly have drawn the most response from the blogosphere (see below).  Certainly there are multiple interpretations of the comments as well.

No matter what folks in Peoria probably don’t appreciate being picked on.  For the record a quick google search brought up the 91-year old Peoria Players Theatre and the Corn Stalk Theatre.  (I especially feel for the Peoria Players who have a plea on their website stating they are in a financial crisis.  Maybe this will rally folks to send in some extra donations.)

But back to the interview – Landesman notes he is in support of grants for individual artists (which can’t be reinstated without an act of Congress, which I am sure is not the first battle he will choose to fight) and that he plans to fight for a larger budget calling the current appropriation “pathetic and “embarrassing.”

It’s no shock considering who he is and his backgroud that he plans to make the argument that the arts are an economic driver, but in an interesting twist he is building a platform on the old “artists for community revitalization” idea.  He plans to pursue private sector relationships to fund the program he describes below.

I for one applaud this idea.  Many if not most government agencies use strong multi-sector relationships to get things done, why not the NEA?  Certainly this is a project that H.U.D. could also be a part of.  To me this is the kind of thinking that we were all hoping for when he was tapped for the job (interesting note, from the interview we now know he wasn’t really tapped, he asked for the job which I see as a very good thing in that he is more than up for the challenge, he wants it).  If he can make the case well, he may finally be speaking a language that D.C. bureaucrats and politicians can understand.

“We need to have a seat at the big table with the grown-ups. Art should be part of the plans to come out of this recession.”

“If we’re going to have any traction at all,” he added, “there has to be a place for us in domestic policy.”

He was less clear about the details of this ambitious agenda, though he talked about starting a program that he called “Our Town,” which would provide home equity loans and rent subsidies for living and working spaces to encourage artists to move to downtown areas.

“When you bring artists into a town, it changes the character, attracts economic development, makes it more attractive to live in and renews the economics of that town,” he said. “There are ways to draw artists into the center of things that will attract other people.”

The program would also help finance public art projects and performances and promote architectural preservation in downtown areas, Mr. Landesman added. “Every town has a public square or landmark buildings or places that have a special emotional significance,” he said. “The extent that art can address that pride will be great.”

Given the agency’s “almost invisible” budget, he said, goals like these would require public-private partnerships that enlist developers, corporations and individual investors — largely by getting them “to understand the critical role of art in urban revitalization.”

Such arrangements — which he said will be a “signature part” of his chairmanship — will play “right into the president’s wheelhouse,” Mr. Landesman added, speaking of Mr. Obama’s concerns about cities and economic development.

The new chairman said he already has a new slogan for his agency: “Art Works.” It’s “something muscular that says, ‘We matter.’ ” The words are meant to highlight both art’s role as an economic driver and the fact that people who work in the arts are themselves a critical part of the economy.

“Someone who works in the arts is every bit as gainfully employed as someone who works in an auto plant or a steel mill,” Mr. Landesman said. “We’re going to make the point till people are tired of hearing it.”

Interestingly enough, since I was out of town, I am behind on my reading and had to catch up a bit (although still plenty to go), and I stumbled along this great article from New Music Box (the web magazine for the American Music Center).  In Guess Who’s Invited to the White House, Jean Cook and Casey Rae-Hunter make the case that we are at a unique point where we can get the government to actually work for the arts, if we change some of our tactics.  Cook and Rae-Hunter propose the following:

To be sure, the frequent presence of artists in the White House provides us with reason to be hopeful that the new administration will be a good partner for the arts community. But taking advantage of this opportunity will require a dramatic rethinking of the way we engage with policymakers. The previous eight years were spent playing political defense against an administration with little interest in investing in the arts. Now, we’re faced the no less important challenge of transitioning from an oppositional movement to one that’s more proactive. A movement grounded in big-picture thinking, with a vision for how innovation and creativity can rebuild our nation. A movement that understands the role arts will play in shaping a new social agenda.

Because of an uncoordinated government infrastructure, the arts community has, over the years, come to view public policy as highly agency-specific. We’re good friends with the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities, but have until recently been strangers at places like the White House, the Federal Communications Commission, and the Copyright Office. And, though the NEA has long been the most visible symbol of our government’s commitment to art and culture (or in some cases, lack of), its miniscule budget means that its actual impact is largely symbolic and generally limited to touring, presentation, and participation in the traditional and classical disciplines. Yet the entire field continues to grow, necessitating a broader view of policy and public funding for the arts.

In its first six months, the new administration has modeled a more holistic approach to policymaking that prizes innovation and seeks ways to improve conditions for all Americans. There’s a renewed focus on inter-agency collaboration and a sharing of ideas and resources to find creative solutions to our many problems as the nation struggles to repair itself in the wake of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

Of course, Cook and Rae-Hunter note that we will need to address “how we make our case.”  And this is where I think the appointment of Landesman is important.  The articles authors make no mention of Landesman and the article wasn’t about the N.E.A. but when Cook and Rae-Hunter cry-out  “We need a fresh kind of thinking to recognize new opportunities,” I can’t help but think Landesman is the guy to bring those new ideas to the table.

Now being out of town gave me an advantage that lots of folks had commented on Rocco’s first interview with the New York Times, thoughts and links below:

Laura Collins-Hughes over at Critical Difference brings up some great points about the arts being dismissed in The Arts Are “a Little Gay”

Good for NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman for calling out the homophobia that undergirds opposition to federal funding for the arts. “The arts are a little bit of a target. The subtext is that it is elitist, left wing, maybe even a little gay,” he tells Robin Pogrebin in today’s New York Times….

The idea that the arts are gay, and therefore dismissable, is closely related to another notion about the arts: that they are inherently girly….

The arts are widely viewed as a milieu best suited to women, and to men with an affinity for beauty, delicacy and taste and an aversion to muscular exertion (read: gay — and, no, I am not endorsing the stereotype, merely articulating it).

As a nation, we tend not to scrape together public funding if we believe it would benefit people like that. Unless, maybe, we can be convinced that it’s in our economic interest to do so.

Not a new idea but something important to think about when we craft the case for the arts getting a seat at the “big table.”  Collins- Hughes also tackles the Peoria comment:

The straight-shooting Landesman won’t earn many points for diplomacy in that interview, particularly with the ill-considered slap, “I don’t know if there’s a theater in Peoria, but I would bet that it’s not as good as Steppenwolf or the Goodman.” That remark is bound to alienate whole flocks of legislators as well as artists outside major cities. Nonetheless, the point he’s trying to make about democratizing arts grants — “I don’t know that we have to be everywhere if the only reason for supporting an institution is its geography” — is perfectly valid, and his new NEA slogan, “Art Works,” is beautifully attuned to the zeitgeist….

Gioia might have made some lasting progress for the agency, whose natural opponents have been forced to concede, at least to a degree, that there is value to the arts. If Landesman, a Broadway producer, uses creative-class theory to hang a dollar sign on that value and explain the dividends investment in the arts would pay, he may be speaking lawmakers’ language.

What’s interesting is, I am not so sure that the comment will “alienate whole flocks of legislators.”  Outside of the Peoria delegation, I wonder if it will even register with folks.  I think Collins-Hughes is right that Landesman “may be speaking lawmaker’s language,” and if he is he is leaps and bounds ahead of any of his predecessors.  His plan to stay on the offensive and not apologize for the arts is vital stance that will be necessary if the N.E.A. is going to become a useful and important agent for change and innovation for the arts.

Over at Gratuitous Violins in Rocco, this won’t play in Peoria calls the Peoria comment “snarky.”

Rocco, was it wise in your very first interview to pick a fight with Peoria? Which, as a native Midwesterner yourself, you must know is in Illinois, home state of the president who nominated you to head the NEA.

I don’t know whether there’s a theater there or not. And if there is, maybe it’s not as good as Steppenwolf or the Goodman. But that’s not the point. The point is introducing more people to the arts. And not everyone can get to Chicago or New York.

The point is, good theatre, music, dance and other art is being made all over this country in communities large and small. As NEA chairman, you should be celebrating that fact and building it up, not tearing it down with a snarky comment.

I have to say,  I think Landesman knew exactly what state he was using examples from.  Readers can see the results of my quick google search above there are theaters in Peoria.  Unfortunately, I couldn’t find easily if there were any N.E.A. grant recipients in Peoria – but via the Illinois Arts Council they would likely benefit from federal funds. I have to say again merit and quality do mean more to me than geography.  I don’t think the comment was ruling out geographic diversity, just quotas and I fully agree with that.

I also don’t think the “point” of the N.E.A. is to “introduce people to the arts.”  It is a government agency that should be a helluva a lot more than what it is – a “Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval,” but it isn’t an advocacy or social service agency.  Let’s not kid ourselves, the N.E.A. has never had a big enough budget to make any kind of sweeping national impact.  The capacity is just not there, and I don’t really care to focus on what frankly can not be achieved and probably shouldn’t be.

If Landesman achieves the increased budget he is looking for I would be happy if it didn’t end up in the grant program budgets, if it was used to create new models and partnerships within the arts industries.  I don’t think it is about more “funding” the status quo or for organizations to keep on being dysfunctional (see Funding Models/Saving Theaters).  The regional theater model never was functional and it is time to admit it.  It is outrageous that so many theaters, orchestras, etc. have structural deficits year after year without making any changes to how they are run and how they produce their work.

Now I am a big fan of Scott Walters and an even bigger fan of his <100K Project.  It is nothing short of amazing. It is actually an innovative new collaborative model.  I got my start as a Outreach Director in North Carolina, and I am VERY familiar with the types of communities and arts that Scott is advocating for.  In Time to Blast Rocco Landesman, Scott is starting an outright campaign in response to Landesman’s geographic comments.

Now we have this interview, a clear indication that he is the Ny-centric, high art (or rather, high budget — despite his talk of quality, what he is really talking about is big budget, high prestige institutions) proponent I thought he was. I call on all readers of this blog to communicate your outrage to Landesman. He can be emailed at chairman@arts.gov, called at 202-682-5414, or sent a letter at 1100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20506.

The arts must be for everyone, not just people who live in the big cities in this nation.  If you really want to see the NEA budget slashed because legislators don’t see any of the money coming to their home districts, just keep trumpeting this elitist nonsense. Landesman needs to read Grassroots Theatre by Robert Gard and learn about the long tradition in this country of democratic, widespread creativity. Theatre historians during the past 35 years or so have virtually ignored this, despite the fact that some of the most important art of the first half of the century came from it (Provincetown Players, for instance, was part of the Little Theatre movement, for crying loud; the Pulitzer Prize winning Paul Green wrote regional based plays in North Carolina).

Now Scott has always taken issue with what he calls the ‘”Myth of Broadway.”  I am at a disadvantage because I grew up without any Broadway influence in my life and actually never imagined myself in New York, as a matter of fact I even through graduate school I said over and over again I was never even going to visit New York.

Of course after a dozen years living in New York and the immediate area, I am grateful for all that New York has to offer.  However, it has never occurred to me to think of theater in other cities or regions as less valid or less important because know the value of the arts as community-building and engines for personal growth firsthand.  I have also been lucky enough to live in 6 different states in 4 different regions of the country in my lifetime.  I know folks tend to be myopic about New York and other major cities, but Landesman’s comment doesn’t bother me as much as others including Scott although I certainly see why what they read into it irks them.  I also just don’t see the comment as being about “big budget, high prestige institutions.”

My thinking is a bit more in-line with Isaac Butler over at Parabasis who responds to Scott’s post at <100K Project – Cue Scott Waters Outrage.  I think there is a place for geography but not at the top:

…while I’m sympathetic to the point about making “merit” a primary guiding value of who gets money, and while I’m certainly happy to hear Rocco say that there are some larger institutions that should be allowed to fail (that sounds harsh, but I think the system needs some shaking up), it seems to me that it’s a myopic strategy to not spread arts money around geographically, or to use geography as part of the calculus. Maybe not as much as merit, but up there.

First off, if we truly believe that the arts are a good economic engine, then certainly Peoria deserves that engine as much as Chicago.

Second, if you’re trying to build widespread support for the arts, spreading the federal pork around a bit is not a bad strategy. During the fight over the $50 million in the stimulus (this is if memory serves, so i could be wrong here) one Republican who tried to demogogue the bill by saying that the arts created no jobs in his district was met very quickly with a list of how many arts jobs there actually were in the area he represents.

Third, the NEA should probably be addressing some of the calcified structural advantages that certain geographic areas have.  Our system of farming actors out from New York creates a structural advantage in New York– it’s filled with very cheap, abundantly talented labor, because people work for less money in New York and make up the difference in TV, Film and Regional gigs, which tend to pay better (this is particularly and shockingly true for directors once you are working at large LORTs). There is, however, some evidence that this isn’t good for the system of theatre as a whole in America, and if someone is going to have their eyes on the broader interests of theatre in America, there’s a far better chance that that person is going to be Chair of the NEA as opposed to, say, chair of the board of MTC.  Or, to put it another way, there is no (immediately obvious) reason why Lynne Meadow should give a shit about the health of theatre in another part of the country. And many artistic directors act accordingly. The ultimate goal of an institution is its own perpetuation. The NEA has a better vantage point to try enact positive change in the industry.

Now call my cynical, but I don’t think spreading the $50M around is going to get us anywhere.  When it comes to the arts I think that getting money into their congressional districts is of smaller concern and weight than with other industries and initiatives.  First, it isn’t much money – yes, of course something is better than nothing, but more importantly it is just that the arts aren’t that important or valued by some (most) politicians.  This circles back to the idea of how we make an case for the arts.

More commentary on merit and/or geography can be found at Createquity Landeman Confirmed as NEA Chair:

I have to admit that I kind of love the idea of a tough-talking NEA Chair, and feel that it will be a helpful weapon in the culture wars that the right seems itching to start up again. The fact that Landesman both has artists’ priorities at heart and is willing to fight for them is very promising indeed. The one quote out of the above that worries me a bit is his attitude toward arts in regional areas — sometimes it’s not all about artistic merit, and there’s certainly something to be said for developing local talent rather than continually losing it all to New York or LA…. On the other hand, Landesman does recognize the arts’ importance to downtown urban economies–presumably, whether they’re in Peoria or anywhere else–and says that he wants to make this focus a “signature” element of his tenure. Landesman promises to be an entertaining figure at the helm if nothing else, and hopefully will end up accomplishing far more than that.

Moss is absolutely right about Landesman’s tenure will certainly be entertaining, but I think and hope he will much, much more than that.   And another perspective on the Peoria comments over at Real Clear Arts Landesman’s Big Risk: Cocky Remarks May Come Back to Haunt Him

Much of the arts community is euphoric about what Rocco Landesman told The New York Times the other day: It was straight talk; he said many things that needed saying; with a few remarks, he extracted the cultural world from the defensive crouch arts organizations always seem to be in. Artists do need to be considered in economic policy matters, though Landesman shouldn’t ignore the fact that investing in arts generally doesn’t have as large an economic multiplier effect asinvesting in manufacturing….

His remark about Peoria, even if true, will come back to haunt him surer than the “wise Latina” remark messed up Sonia Sotomayor. It’s going to make budget requests and hearings much more difficult.

So while Landesman is right to try to alter the national debate about the arts, I hope his cocky first interview doesn’t hurt the cause, rather than help it.

Judith H. Dobrzynski from Real Clear Arts continued commentary in her Forbes Magazine column:

Some of this is refreshing. It’s meant to alter the terms of the debate, to give the arts their due–which does include consideration of their role in the economy. The arts should not be an afterthought, or no thought at all.

In some ways, Landesman is living up to a standard for appointees that many Obama voters expected when they pulled the Democratic lever last fall–only to be disappointed by the president’s mostly conventional picks (some of which encouraged those who didn’t vote for him, but that’s another story). Landesman wants to dispense with business-as-usual at the NEA, and that’s a good thing.

But plenty of other people have gone to Washington with similar forthrightness only to be felled by their hard-charging methods. It would be a shame if Landesman unnecessarily reignited the vicious culture wars of the 1990s. He is taking a big risk, in a town that all but requires compromise and coalition-building, even when the majority is as large as it is today. Let’s hope he doesn’t make matters worse for the arts.

I don’t think Landesman will make things worse, and I hope he doesn’t tip-toe too much.  Risk tends to pay off in the arts – Landesman certainly should understand building alliances and should be able to navigate Washington waters based on his life experiences.  Of course there could have been a less biting way to make the point about geography, but I don’t think it is as big a deal as it is being made out to be, but hey I could be wrong.  But, I am still looking forward to Landesman shaking things up a bit and enacting some real change.  I am going to remain more than upbeat about his appointment, I am downright hopeful.

Last week’s interesting news articles!

August 10, 2009 • No Comments

 

Just in case you missed them, here are interesting articles from last week’s newspapers and periodicals!  For the day’s best in blog discussions check out this page and if you missed any of the blog discussions they are archived here.

 

Arena Stage gets $1.1 Million grant to support new works development program. http://bit.ly/v77IO
Huffington Post: The Obamas: An Opening in the Arts http://is.gd/2aDYl
Chicago theater productions are lighting up NY’s stages: http://bit.ly/Z4XJr
Growing trend to train artists as entrepreneurs – http://bit.ly/8XH27
Cheap Seats: Theater Discounts Without Standing in Line http://bit.ly/P052b
Obama gets that arts & culture play a role. But more needs to be done http://bit.ly/12WV53
Bill Maher: New Rule: Smart President ≠ Smart Country http://bit.ly/18x3Bs
Toying with engaging in a new lifestyle, career, artistic endeavor or life burn your boats http://tinyurl.com/mz5jhc
It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia on the Road – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/8doq
Arts Programs in Academia Are Forced to Nip Here, Adjust There. http://bit.ly/oezAF
Broadway Spidey Hits a Bump http://bit.ly/5B7WJ
A report on what factors influence Broadway runs http://bit.ly/8EzgW
Prospecting: Americans’ Spending Unlikely to Rebound Anytime Soon, Survey Finds http://bit.ly/4cy8Ox
NYT Spoon-Fed Cinema quantity of tickets purchased [not] the quality of the experience http://bit.ly/XufW1
Malcolm Gets Joins Off-Broadway ‘Vigil’: Malcolm Gets will star in Vigil http://bit.ly/4E1JXV
NEA chair Rocco Landesman kicks butt, plans to muscle up the agency: http://bit.ly/3WCKJ0
As Classrooms Go Digital, Textbooks May Become History – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/jsUN
Provoking Arts Politician blog Dizzying Steps of Dance Education Patronage & Advocacy http://tiny.cc/051p4
Linda Winer on bad audience behavior: http://bit.ly/19RY21
Variety: Longevity key to Off-Broadway success http://bit.ly/12WBI5
The Tides Foundation funniest, edgiest marketing from a community foundation: http://bit.ly/UfYSR
Ben Cameron’s keynote to the IAA http://tiny.cc/Tj567
Variety: "Theater is nothing but 2nd acts for creatives looking to jumpstart careers" – http://bit.ly/BXa0b
Blogging American Theatre Critics Association’s response to Tonys cutting out critics. http://is.gd/26Zla
Senate confirms Rocco Landesman as NEA head http://bit.ly/97mlT
Broadway’s Hair Recoups Investment http://bit.ly/zeiBG
Variety – Spider Man musical halted? Producers insist show will go on http://bit.ly/TOFCU
Embattled Skylight Opera Managing Dir Eric Dillner Resigns. http://bit.ly/RMpJz
CNET article about saturation in social media space http://bit.ly/3wEIPR
Investing in the arts is "not only good business, it is good for business." http://bit.ly/11wWZd
Justice? What do you think? RT @CBCArts: Livent founders sentenced to prison http://bit.ly/zmLzu
Financial Straits for Arts Companies in Ottawa and Minnesota http://bit.ly/3mXrmS
Does The United States Have Its Priorities Wrong? http://bit.ly/Mimzl
Tony Awards Management & Administration Committees. http://bit.ly/17tSX4
A free social media guide for NPOs; of interest to even the experienced. http://bit.ly/18T7bl
Charitable donations are down – it’s not (just) the economy http://bit.ly/3OBuYr
LA Times article on how A list directors and actors are making way less money now http://tinyurl.com/ku4ex9
Toronto’s real life Bialystock/Bloom show ends with tomorrow’s sentencing. http://bit.ly/8Sr5D
The turnaround king for struggling arts orgs, Kaiser of Kennedy Cntr on BBC. http://bit.ly/XYCBe
Kresge Commits $600,000 to Promote Arts, Cultural Projects in Economically Challenged Cities http://bit.ly/b6wRX
Pittsburgh production of ‘History Boys’ to stream online: http://tinyurl.com/myysbe
Michael Moore planning to star in a one-man show on Broadway in the next 24 mos: http://bit.ly/hYo62
Milwaukee Theater Has Drama of Its Own http://bit.ly/137Wn7
Big Opening for Epilogue to The Laramie Project http://bit.ly/mAbkV
Economy Pushes Fund Raisers’ Confidence to New Lows http://twurl.nl/v2xw40
For Companies, a Tweet in Time Can Avert PR Mess – WSJ.com http://bit.ly/wFvu6
Charities Use Movie Trailers to Draw Money and Attention to Their Causes http://bit.ly/ZMdBa
"Stagecraft," magazine of Heinz Endowments Pittsburgh arts orgs in survival mode http://bit.ly/3Nagkp
"American Idiot" cast announced! X the digits this moves as planned to Broadway! http://bit.ly/zMLK1
Producer ‘thrilled’ w/New Orleans premiere of ‘White Noise’ http://bit.ly/8B7Nw
Finally, a Way to Hide Your Gmail Addiction – Bits Blog – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/iT7M
Now on YouTube – Local News – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/iH7L
A number of West End theatres are now employing bouncers… http://tinyurl.com/lkv5dj
"On the Real: Fatebook and Whit MacLaughlin | London Theatre Blog" http://ff.im/-62vqV
Karen Brooks Hopkins: Respect for the Arts–Please New NEA Chair – http://shar.es/zbsJ
B’way-bound billing has pros, cons – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/zHHe

If you are toying with engaging in a new lifestyle, career, artistic endeavor or life opportunity…burn your boats.

If you are facing change – read this fabulous post by Jim Hart over at Entrepreneur the Arts Blog.