Tag Archives: theatre closings

another one down: Pasadena Playhouse closes its doors.

i know this is just the human brain’s tendency to find pattern and order where none actually exist, but i find that events tend to balance themselves:

had a CRAPPY-ASS week at work — only had one day off in the past three weeks, working with a bad headcold (which is keeping me from running, making me far more cranky and unfit to deal with work stress). stayed at work till midnight on Thursday running numbers only to get to work early on Friday to discover that the boss wanted other numbers. this after two weeks of staying till midnight during tech. so yeah, kinda hating work (and the way it gobbles up my life) this week, making those flip remarks about “why didn’t I go to law school!?”

then another theatre goes down, and i feel grateful to have a job at a company that isn’t teetering on the verge of financial collapse. fiscal responsibility is EVERYTHING. take note, young not-for-profit theatres. the art will cease to matter if you can’t make payroll.

is this thinning of the herd a good thing, though? will we emerge from economic strife with leaner meaner more economically viable theatres? i want to believe that, that we’ll all learn a lesson about fiscal responsibility*, but i think the tough love approach is too simplistic in this application. when the economy tanks, art suffers.

*it’s spectacular, how long it takes to dig a theatre out of financial ruin vs. how quickly one can sink a theatre into unmanageable debt.

more theatre closings

my old pal Kevin (hi Kevin! how are you? where are you? how many beautiful kids do you have now?) reminded me that i left a major company off the list of regional theatres who have closed their doors in the past year – Buffalo’s Studio Arena. which is silly that i left it off the list, given that i worked there for most of a season. so, yeah: add Studio Arena to the list.

tipping point

About Face Theatre
Magic Theatre
Theatre Jeune Lune
American Music Theatre of San Jose
Seaside Music Theatre
Milwaukee Shakespeare
Shakespeare Santa Cruz
House Theatre

of course, there are many many more theatres than what i listed up there, those are just companies that are large enough to be nationally recognized or else local to my own vital theatre scene in chicago.

i’m just wondering how many times theatres in financial crisis are going to be able to post an appeal to the tune of “give us xx dollars by next tuesday or we’ll be forced to close our doors!” before the american public grows weary of these bailouts. or not weary, but just unwilling, unable, to give enough money. all of the theatres listed above tried that tactic in the past year, some met with success, some closed their doors for good. don’t get me wrong. i’m all about funding the arts. it’s my livelihood, for god’s sake. i’m pro-government, -foundation and -individual sponsorship. there is no functional model where theatre can be produced here in american funded on ticket sales alone*. but i am skeptical that going “holy crap! we can’t make payroll!” isn’t going to meet with the same criticism coming from a not-for-profit arts organization as it is from a major national bank. because my own question is the same, regardless of the company: how did you not see this coming?

the answer is that many arts organizations have limped along with large debts and poor financial management practices for a long time. and in years of The Good Economy, many of those theatres were able to get a free pass. credit was extended and extended again. individuals and foundations were generous without asking hard questions about the company’s bottom line. but the fact that arts organizations don’t function on a dollars earned/dollars spent model doesn’t mean that we are exempt from fiscal responsibility. it makes it about 100 MORE important. i look at companies who were skating along with $1,000,000 in debt that suddenly got their line of credit yoinked and say, “you MUST HAVE KNOW THIS WOULD HAPPEN SOMEDAY!” it drives me bonkers.

it sucks sucks sucks to have to program smaller projects, hire fewer actors, fewer artisans, to rely on lower-quality, cheaper labor, whatever. all of the companies i work for/with are doing that now and in their upcoming seasons. but you have to do the hard thing if you want the organization to survive. lop off the finger to save the hand (god that’s a gross analogy – why did i just bring gangrene into this?). i write this knowing that i’m going to have to face those hard decisions many many times in the coming year – when i take over my new theatre position in July, it’s knowing full well that i may have to make hard decisions about how much employment i can offer to talented professionals, how many resources i can make available to the creative team. i know full well that i’m taking a risk that i could be joining a company that could be a victim of the recession in a year (they tell me their books are solid but…you never know these things until you get there). but for all my bleeding heart liberal ways, i am as practical and proactive at heart as any one human being can be. what i can tell you is that, as much as i am able to control it, we won’t be deficit spending on my watch.

and while i’m not getting all sunshiny about the Great Depression that is bearing down on us, i truly do believe that working against those constraints forces artists to make better, more creative work. does a bolt of $500/yard silk REALLY help us tell the story?

* don’t get me wrong, plenty of small theatre companies function without significant sources of contributed income. but they don’t make it on ticket sales alone, either. they make up for it by not being able to pay their employees. what you can’t pay for in dollars, you can pay for in sweat equity. and this works, but only up to a point. there’s a limit with what you can do when your reason for getting up every day doesn’t pay the rent. there is finite amount of energy and time available to each of us.

doors closed.

RIP, Jeune Lune

it’s all gloom and doom here at slithy tove.

while in Minneapolis this past week i found time to take a little pilgrimage past the shuttered gates of the excellent and now-disbanded Jeune Lune theatre.

now, today milwaukee shakespeare announced they’re closing their doors, effective immediately.

it’s ironic that i spent all of last week in conferences with theatre managers from many of the country’s major regional companies, and still somehow felt insulated from the economic anxiety. then my own serious fears about the future moved in and parked themselves on my chest when i got home. tho, that might have something to do with the fact that i learned on sunday that layoffs are coming down the pipe at my second job (the one with all the blue paint). umm. i need that extra income. that income is more than the amount i put away in savings every month. shit. where am i going to find another part-time job that 1) is flexible around the demands of my full time job, 2) pays me MORE per hour than my full-time gig does, and 3) actually utilizes/challenges/refines my particular skillset as a stage manager?