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Kathleen O'Connell

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Posts posted by Kathleen O'Connell

  1. Unfortunately, ticket service charges have become a major source of revenue for performing arts venues like City Center and SPAC.  By way of example, for the fiscal year ending 6/30/16, 14% or $1.3 million of City Center's $9.3 million in Program Service Revenue — basically, what it earns from its core function as a performing arts venue — came from ticket service charges. Here's the composition of City Center's Program Service Revenue for the year ending 6/30/16:

    Box Office Receipts: $6.02 million

    Ticket Service Charges: $1.3 million

    Theater Rental: $988 thousand

    Stage I & II Theater Rental: $481 thousand

    Tower Rental: $414 thousand

    Other: $173 thousand

    Like all arts organization, City Center relies heavily on contributions and grants to cover its expenses. Just over half of City Center's $20.8 million in expenses came from grants and contributions. Without the ticket service fees, they'd have to raise even more. 

    I'm not saying this is a good thing. One real problem with ticket service fees is that they're akin to a regressive tax on ticket prices. Since they tend to be a flat amount, they're a greater percentage of the total cost of the least expensive seats than they are of the most expensive. The people who can least afford them end up  being hit the hardest. 

    The fact that an online service fee is being charged when the box office is closed for a month is simply unfair. 

  2. You can scroll through at least some of the images contained in the book on the Eakins Press website here:https://www.eakinspress.com/book.cfm?slug=balanchine-teaching. The book itself can be purchased for $25.00, but you can also by a portfolio of 14 archival photographic prints if you happen to have a spare $2000 lying around. 😉

    Be sure to scroll down to the middle third of the website to access the image gallery. At the bottom of the page there are some links to reviews of Lasalle's book, including one by Joan Acocella for The New Yorker.

    ETA: You can download a PDF of Ballet Review's article on the book here: http://www.balletreview.com/images/Ballet_Review_45-2_Balanchine.pdf It contains reproductions of some of the photos as well as Suki Schorer's accompanying text, although the quality of the photos is not very high.

  3. Morgan really does look terrific in those photos, but I'm frankly more heartened to hear that she's had some success in managing her thyroid disease. Hashimoto's is no joke.

    I do hope she can begin to perform regularly again, although her prospects for a renewed NYCB career may be wedged between the rock of a surfeit of ballerina talent and the hard place of interim leadership. 

    She was a indeed a special talent, and I'm forever grateful that I got to see this performance.

  4. 14 hours ago, FPF said:

    The money that SPAC receives from LiveNation for their concerts is supposed to support the classical season, and although I don't know much about this myself, there has been grumbling in the community for years that SPAC gets less than it should.

    Here's a description of SPAC's arrangement with Live Nation, Per SPAC's audited financial statements (which you can download here)

    "SPAC has an agreement with a third party to receive exclusive right and license to book, co-promote, co-produce, and co-present all Touring and Professional (T&P) events at SPAC through September 2019.  In consideration of a guaranteed fee paid to SPAC each year, plus a percentage based on attendance, the third party is entitled to all revenues derived from, relating to, or otherwise generated by the presentation of T&P events presented at SPAC.  In addition, the third party bears all the financial risk associated with the promotion, production, and presentation of each T&P event."

    If I'm looking at the right lines in the financial statements, SPAC earned $1.1 million from this arrangement in 2017 and $1.45 million in 2016. I don't know what services (if any) SPAC provides to Live Nation in connection with the arrangement; I seem to recall that Live Nation is responsible for things like parking and clean-up, but I honestly don't know.

    SPAC's own ticket sales were $2.85 million in 2017 and $3.33 million in 2016. Box Office service fees were $296 thousand in 2017 and $350 thousand in 2016. (This should give you a clue as to why performing arts organizations insist on charging them.)

    SPAC also gets a bit of income from renting out the amphitheater for corporate events ($133 thousand in 2017) and from the Saratoga Jazz Festival ($60 thousand in 2017).

    On a related note: I'm not surprised NYCB hasn't brought Sleeping Beauty to SPAC: its current production relies on some projections that would probably be impossible to pull off in the amphitheater.

  5. 42 minutes ago, Olga said:

    There is a range of ballets on a cost continuum between a ballet like Duo Concertant and one like Romeo, and many of them are not chamber ballets. In fact, two, probably three, of the four ballets mentioned by Kathleen fall into that range. Romeo struck me as a particularly costly ballet to bring there, and since I don’t care for the ballet, I find the cost to far outweigh the benefit. But as Kathleen says, we don’t know — how the programs are set or how the fees are structured. I was struck by a photo I saw of the sets being unpacked in Saratoga, and that is probably the genesis of my comment. 

    Although there is certainly some expense entailed in toting a set up to SPAC, setting it up, and breaking it down, I'm going to guess that the dancers, musicians, and attendant personnel are where the bulk of the expenditure lies. That being said, I'm going to guess that Saratoga got three performances of R+J because it wouldn't have been cost effective to do any fewer.

    I heartily agree with Olga that there are worthier productions to haul up to SPAC than Martins' R+J — Coppelia, for example, which the company also performed in NYC recently — but perhaps the people doing the programming thought R+J would have more appeal.   

  6. 2 hours ago, ABT Fan said:

    I agree. Thank you Kathleen for those figures. That was very insightful.

    I happen to like digging around IRS 990s. SPAC is a whole new kind of 501(c)3 animal for me: it's a presenting organization that leases its premises from New York State and generates a portion of its revenue by renting out said premises to for-profit third parties. (Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall do this to some extent as well, but they dwarf SPAC in every respect.)  I haven't wrapped my head around it enough yet to figure out whether it's well-run and ready for whatever the future may hold.

  7. 1 hour ago, Olga said:

    I would think NYCB could reduce its costs, and therefor possibly what SPAC has to pay them, by running ballets that don’t require a lot scenery. Or even, for some evenings at beginning or end of run, that don’t require full orchestras. There are plenty of these in its repertory. Romeo and Juliet is not one of  them.

    I wonder if SPAC and NYCB negotiate the repertory that will be presented as part of the fee agreement. I haven't been keeping track of what NYCB brings to SPAC each year, but it could be that SPAC wants to offer its audiences something on a grander scale than, say, NYCB Moves, and negotiates the fee and the programs accordingly. SPAC may have decided that it would rather offer one week of showcase ballets on a grand scale — i.e., with a full complement of dancers, costumes, an orchestra, etc. — than two weeks of chamber ballets. And, there isn't much in the core Balanchine canon that's of chamber ballet scale, frankly; if SPAC wants to provide its audiences with some of the best that NYCB has to offer — e.g., Midsummer Night's Dream, Serenade, Four Temperaments, Symphony in C — it's going to have to pay a fee sufficient to cover bringing along the orchestra, sets, and costumes. 

    Of course, it might also be the case that NYCB says "It's Symphony in C and R+J it's or nothing" — I honestly don't know. 

  8. 17 hours ago, FPF said:

    For me, due to the repeated targeting of the NYCB season by the SPAC administration (this is the fourth time the season has been cut in the past 15 years--from 3 weeks with the threat of complete cancellation,  to 2 weeks to 1 week, then back to 2 weeks leading into the 50th anniversary, and now back to 1 week), my trust in their commitment to the NYCB residency has really been eroded. The ray of hope comes from the better marketing and substantially larger audiences this year for the evening performances. I hope that If this can be sustained, it will perhaps lead to support for re-expanding the ballet season.

    So, I took a quick tour of SPAC's 990s and audited financial statements to see what information might be there regarding the fees it pays to NYCB and the Philadelphia Orchestra. It turns out that SPAC discloses the fees it pays to each organization in its 900s (Part VII, Section B). In 2016 (the most recent year available) SPAC paid NYCB $1,836,750 for its two week season, or $918,375 per week. It paid the orchestra $1,509,142 for its three week season, or $503,047 per week. In other words, on a fee per week basis, it costs SPAC almost twice as much to present the ballet as it does to present the orchestra. SPAC's net income from the ballet gala ($167,866 in 2016 - see Schedule G) is not enough to cover the difference.

    I'd like nothing better than to see more weeks of ballet at SPAC, but a prudent non-profit can't commit to more than it can afford. SPAC's endowment is tiny (about $7-$8 million) and is heavily restricted, so it doesn't have much cushion against financial adversity. It's had a couple of year of operating solidly in the black, however, and a spike in donations and grants, so let's hope it will be able to commit to longer seasons in the near future.

  9. 10 hours ago, FPF said:

    I feel like the season barely got started and now it's already over. I only went to 3 performances, my fewest in years. As rkoretzky said, it's disappointing to see how little regard each successive SPAC director seems to have for the NYCB. Although over the past few years I've gone to see some of the other dance companies they've brought in to "replace" part of the NYCB season, I notice that (Bolshoi excepted), their attendance is much lower. When I went to an orchestra concert last year, attendance was also far below that at any of the 8 NYCB performances I saw. Yet, as pointed out by rkoretzky, the orchestra season is never on the chopping block (not that I want it cut, but why should the ballet always bear the brunt?). 

    It could be that the Philadelphia Orchestra's fees to perform at SPAC are lower than NYCB's and that the net cost to SPAC to present the orchestra are therefore lower, even if its performances are less well-attended. I don't know the fee differential, but it might even turn out to be the case that it costs SPAC less to put on the orchestra's twelve performances than it does to put on NYCB's seven performances. (I only saw seven performances listed on the casting sheet.)

    I also note that the orchestra doesn't perform every night, which gives SPAC the opportunity to interleave it with other kinds of acts and thus offer the portion of its audience that is only in town for a week or two greater variety. Someone who's only in town for a short stay might not be up for multiple orchestra (or ballet) performances, but might be willing to take in an orchestra performances and something else. For SPAC, that's a win. 

    I'm going to hazard a guess that it costs NYCB more to perform at SPAC than it does the orchestra.  NYCB has to tote its own orchestra up there as well as sets and costumes. I don't know if it brings its own wardrobe, backstage, and technical personnel as well, but I wouldn't be surprised if it did. (The orchestra doesn't need a complicated lighting plot and its members perform in their own clothes.) NYCB may need to charge a higher fee to make the trip to SPAC worthwhile, and it may legitimately insist on performing every night.  

    SPAC might genuinely want to offer more NYCB, but it simply may not be able to afford to no matter how well-attended the performances are in comparison to its other offerings or how much it's able to raise via the gala.

  10. 2 hours ago, CTballetfan said:

    How lucky I was to have seen her as Juliet in February of this year, bookended by my first viewing of her Juliet in 2007 to Robert Fairchild’s Romeo—that partnership one for the ages. I commented in February how enriched her interpretation has become since 2007. I don’t quite understand why she wants to retire the role when IMO she is one of the great contemporary interpreters of it and she is younger than many ballerinas who still dance it. Is she tired of it? Does she want to take her career in a new direction? Concentrate on more contemporary roles and new choreography? Any clues?

    She's got better things than Martins' R+J to do with her time. 😉

    In all seriousness:

    1) I'm pleased to hear that Hyltin found the role to be a source of artistic growth and fulfillment: she is a splendid performer and both lived up to the challenges and deserved the rewards Martins' Juliet may have brought her. I will say that I think the ballet was luckier to have her than she was to have the ballet; she wrung about as much nuance out of Martins' lather-rinse-and-repeat choreography as it is humanly possible to do, and for this he owes her a debt of gratitude. 

    2) As Hyltins' delightful Aurora and Swanhilda amply demonstrate, she's more than capable of portraying young heroines. That being said, Martins specifically crafted the roles of his Romeo and Juliet to showcase very, very young dancers. It's not wrong for the company to continue to use them as that kind of vehicle and it's not wrong for Hyltin to agree that it's time to move on. 

    ETA: Although I would have never predicted this, Hyltin has grown into one of the company's most versatile dancers. She's as good in Robbins and Ratmansky as she is in Balanchine and Peck. When you've got the big roles in Apollo, Rubies, Symphony in Three Movements, Stravinsky Violin Concerto, Mozartiana, Dances at a Gathering, Namouna, and countless others in your rep, you really can move on from Martins R+J.

  11. On 7/12/2018 at 10:13 AM, mille-feuille said:

    I called specifically because I was worried about this -- being a millennial it was one of the first faxes I had ever sent and I was suspicious of the technology. 😂 They told me that my fax had been received and I have yet to get any sort of confirmation, so I assume they will just send the tickets.

    One of Lee Lorenz' best from the glory days of faxing.

    I can't figure out how to embed the image, so alas, you'll have to click through.

  12. Just now, NinaFan said:

      As far as Prodigal Son, Apollo, Mozartiana etc, I would much prefer to watch NYCB where Balanchine is performed with the solid integrity it deserves.

    Well, when it comes to Mozartiana I vastly prefer Shevchenko to Mearns. The role's particular requirements — not the least among them wit — are simply not in Mearns' gift, as riveting as she can be in other (especially non-Balanchine) roles. 

     

  13. 6 hours ago, CharlieH said:

    You must have missed his Harlequin. Whiteside was magnificent in that. Actually, I’ve seen only fine performances by him...wonderful in Tchai pdd with Boylston last year, great Symphony in C opposite Hee Seo in DC a few years ago, etc.

    I never expect to like Whiteside, but somehow I always end up liking him just fine. Heck, I even liked his Prince Désiré. The last time I saw Symphonic Variations, I thought he and Betsy McBride were the only two dancers on stage who looked genuinely at peace with the choreography. 

  14. NYCB performed Liebeslieder during the Winter 2016 season, which was the season after Somogyi retired.

    There are more than a few dancers on the current roster who have performed it, and it's still on the Winter 19 calendar, so not having the bandwidth to rehearse new dancers wouldn't seem to be an issue, but who knows.

  15. My thoughts exactly. 

    Jackson's dance style was a crafty amalgam of everything from Fred Astaire, to James Brown, to Bob Fosse, to any number of vernacular styles that he somehow managed to make his own. I'm worried that all we'll get from Wheeldon is a Jackson pastiche, especially given that the show as described sounds like a juke-box musical.

    If they had to go for a white guy, they might have given Doug Elkins a call. 

  16. 25 minutes ago, Kathleen O'Connell said:

    She is. From Gray Davis' bio on the  Georgia Academy of Dance & the Performing Arts Artistic Staff page:

    "Gray Davis, a Georgia Dance Theatre alumnus,  began his training at the Georgia Academy of Dance & the Performing Arts under the directorship of his mother, Sherri Davis."

    For some clarification: per Gray Davis' ABT Bio, Sherri Davis is his stepmother: 

    "Gray Davis started his training at the Georgia Academy in Peachtree City, Georgia under his stepmother Sherri Davis." 

     

  17. 54 minutes ago, chicagoballetomane said:

    Why presumably head to Georgia? Is his wife leaving the company too?

    This may have been mentioned upthread, but Gray Davis' mother, Sherri Davis, founded The Georgia Academy of Dance and the Performing Arts in 1990.

    I'd be surprised if Trenary left ABT at this point in her career. It's a prestigious company and she's clearly on the track to principal (as well she should be, IMO).

  18. 1 hour ago, Ettore said:

    Program 2

    Starts with Wheeldon's There Where She Loved and then to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Ashton's passing the program will include Monotones I & II and four Ashton diverts/extracts (La Chatte Métamorphosée en Femme; the pas de trois from Les Patineurs; Méditation from Thaïs; and the final pas de deux from The Two Pigeons, performed by Victoria Hulland and guest artist Marcelo Gomes).

     

    Ettore - Thank you for posting this update! The Joyce website is now correct ... and while I was there I bought a ticket to Program 2. 😁

    There's never enough Ashton.

  19. What an interesting interview! Thanks for the link.

    The Center for Ballet and the Arts is not far from my apartment; occasionally, someone will pull up the shades on the street-level studio's big windows and you can see what's going on in there. I report with some disappointment that I witnessed neither Spock ears nor prosthetic breasts the last time I happened by and stopped to gawk.

  20. I liked Pain Quotidien just fine until they started to show the calorie count for their yummy desserts 😉

    It really is a fine stop for a no-fuss bite. We used to grab a quick dinner at the one near Carnegie Hall, then go across the street to Petrossian and have a glass of champagne at its super-swanky, deco, feels-like-a-1930's-luxury -liner bar*. Alas, it appears that Petrossian's main restaurant has closed. 

    * Here's the website's description: "Designed by Ion Oroveanu, the restaurant features Lalique crystal wall sconces, bronze sculptures from the 1930's, etched Erte mirrors, Limoges china, Lanvin chandelier and pink Finnish granite."

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