Auditorium scheduling raises concerns
Supporters of the Glacier Symphony and
Chorale are expressing concerns that for the second year in a row,
no concerts are scheduled to take place in the Whitefish Middle
School auditorium during this summer’s Festival Amadeus.
Instead, other than an outdoor concert
in Depot Park, all Festival Amadeus events from July 31 through
Aug. 6 will take place in the O’Shaughnessy Cultural Arts Center,
which many agree is a fine theater, but too small for a full
symphony.
The Whitefish Middle School auditorium,
also called the Whitefish Performing Art Center, offers 454 seats,
compared to about 300 at the O’Shaughnessy, which has been
characterized as a theater in the round, or a black box
theater.
Some symphony supporters are pointing
their finger at the Alpine Theatre Project, which holds a contract
giving them exclusive use of the auditorium in summer, but the
theater group’s president says ATP did not flatly turn down
GSC.
Whitefish attorney Sean Frampton, who
became ATP board president last September, said a school board
member accidentally approved GSC’s request to use the auditorium
for two nights in early August. The dates, however, conflicted with
ATP’s production schedule.
When the ATP board found out, Frampton
said, they offered GSC five different date options for use of the
auditorium — including the one they originally requested — but GSC
turned them down. According to ATP’s offer, GSC had to be willing
to either perform with stage sets for the next ATP production in
place, or pay to have them removed.
Frampton said ATP estimated it would
cost $8,000 to pay union wages for actors, musicians and sound and
light technicians for one week if an ATP show was delayed for a
week. Many of these professionals travel to Whitefish from New
York, he explained.
ATP is a nonprofit theater group,
Frampton explained. About 40 percent of its money comes from ticket
sales, and the rest comes from donations. The ATP board passed a
resolution about three months ago saying it will share space in the
auditorium with other groups so long as it doesn’t lose money.
Contract talks
ATP’s contract with the school district
was negotiated in 2005, more than two years before the auditorium
renovation project was completed. School superintendent Jerry House
explained that the school district’s goal was to make the
auditorium available first for school activities, secondly for
major users such as ATP, GSC and the Whitefish Theatre Company, and
lastly for other groups.
Frampton’s law partner at the time,
Frank Morrison, represented ATP in the negotiations. The former
Montana Supreme Court justice is the father of ATP founding member,
artistic director and star of many ATP shows, Betsi Morrison. In
addition to lining up dates for ATP, Morrison negotiated a contract
for “The Institute at Whitefish,” a group that would bring national
leaders here for seminars and meetings but never materialized.
House noted that the Whitefish Theatre
Company, which manages the O’Shaughnessy, wasn’t interested in a
long-term contract with the school district. He also pointed out
that the school district is not in the entertainment business, and
the school district wanted a long-term contract so money could be
set aside to repair or replace things like carpets, seats and sound
and light equipment.
The contract signed by House and
Morrison and approved by the Whitefish school board gives ATP
exclusive use of the auditorium from the third Sunday in June to
the third Sunday in August at $100 a day. The contract and an
addendum negotiated by Whitefish resident Marshall Friedman is good
for 10 years and can be renewed twice for five years each time,
potentially giving ATP exclusive use of the auditorium in summer
time until 2025.
The contract is silent on subleasing,
but House says the school district is looking at how ATP allows
other groups to use the auditorium in summer time — like the
Western Governors Association last year. The school district is
also interested in having ATP tack on a $1 surcharge to each ticket
to help pay for long-term repair and replacement costs. ATP has
already tacked on a $1 surcharge to help pay for the auditorium
renovation. Fundraisers for the renovation project said they
received about $8,000 from ATP from last year’s ticket sales.
The Whitefish school board discussed
some of these ideas during their Jan. 25 meeting. House and a
committee of school board trustees will meet with Frampton and
other ATP board members sometime in mid-February.
Fundraising
An important consideration in
negotiating ATP’s contract, House said, was Morrison’s offer to
donate $500,000 to the auditorium renovation project. No comparable
offer was made by GSC, House pointed out, adding that GSC is not a
local organization. Morrison, however, died in January 2006, and
the project never received the $500,000 pledge.
The middle school auditorium, which has
held performances since it was built in 1938, was completely
renovated when Central School was torn down and rebuilt into the
current middle school. Renovating the auditorium cost about $5.2
million — all raised by community donations.
Project leaders explained that building
a new auditorium facility could have cost up to $10 million, and
restoring the old building showed support for the city’s cultural
past. The fundraising goal, however, hit the roof in August 2006
after the construction bid came in 76 percent higher.
John Kramer and Richard and Carol
Atkinson led the fundraising effort — mortgaging their homes to
back the effort. By July 2007, donations had come in from more than
800 families, ranging from $1 to $600,000.
“Students sold shaved ice in the cold
weather at 50 cents each and raised $244,” Carol Atkinson reported
that summer. “The kids have been really active in fundraising. It’s
their school.”
By the time the auditorium opened to
the public in October 2007, fundraisers were still more than $1.1
million in the hole. A big push, including Richard Atkinson’s
famous Old Man Walking fundraising effort, helped organizers pass
the $5 million mark by October 2010. By then, more than 900
families had donated to the renovation.
Whitefish resident Dick Solberg is one
person who believes publicly-funded facilities like the middle
school auditorium should be made available to various community
groups, such as Glacier Symphony and Chorale. During last year’s
Festival Amadeus, the two orchestral events were held in the
Christian Center, in Kalispell, instead of Whitefish. GSC reported
a significant drop in attendance at those two events.
“I think the community members who have
built, raised monies and now support this state-of-the-art venue
would like to see its doors flung open to welcome the Festival
Amadeus this summer,” he said in a recent letter to the editor.
The auditorium project is not the only
civic project funded by donations from the Whitefish community.
Other examples include the O’Shaughnessy, Whitefish Community
Library, The Wave, Stumptown Ice Den, David Olseth Memorial Skate
Park, and Hugh Rogers Wag Park.