ATP and symphony compromise on auditorium scheduling
Two local performance arts groups have
found a way to share stage time at the coveted Whitefish Middle
School auditorium. Both the Alpine Theatre Project and the Glacier
Symphony and Chorale say they will have the space and time slots
they need in the auditorium for their 2012 summer seasons.
A scheduling issue came to a head last
year when the symphony requested to use the auditorium for two
nights in early August for orchestra concerts and Festival Amadeus
rehearsals. ATP, however, has a contract with the middle school for
full use of the auditorium during summer. They had planned to be
setting up for their production of “No Way To Treat A Lady” during
the symphony’s requested dates.
ATP’s contract, negotiated in 2005 and
approved by the center's advisory committee, gives the nonprofit
theater group use of the auditorium from the third Sunday in June
to the third Sunday in August at $100 a day. The contract is good
for 10 years and can be renewed twice for five years each time.
ATP executive director Luke Walrath and
artistic director Betsi Morrison say they knew it was important to
sit down with the symphony group almost as soon as last year’s
conflict arose to begin planning for joint use of the facility in
2012. Staff, board members and lawyers from both the ATP and
symphony came together this January to work out a scheduling
agreement that was finalized last month.
Alpine Theatre Project will close out
their production of “Little Shop of Horrors” on July 22, and
immediately begin pulling the set down so that the Glacier Symphony
can have its first Festival Amadeus rehearsal two days later on
July 24.
“There will be a lot to move out in a
hurry,” Walrath said. “But we want to work with the GSC.”
Alan Satterlee, executive director for
the Glacier Symphony and Chorale, said his group is altering its
traditional way of doing things as well, moving Festival Amadeus up
from the first week in August to the week of July 22-28.
“We prefer a longer gap between big
events, as this is only two weeks after the traditional Summer
Symphonic Pops concert at Rebecca Farm, but we can live with the
change,” he said. “We have many volunteer musicians who have other
commitments in the summer and big concerts are a challenge for the
musicians and music director John Zoltek.”
The plan covers only this summer, but
both groups hope a long-term solution can be worked out so the
mediation process is not required every year.
One rumor Satterlee would like to clear
up is that tension between the organizations over the summer
scheduling was what led to an end of the joint ONSTAGE production
last winter. The two groups had collaborated on productions of
“West Side Story,” “South Pacific,” “The Sound of Music” and “The
Music Man,” featuring singing and acting talent from Alpine Theatre
Project and the musicians of the Glacier Symphony.
“When we did joint planning for the
January 2011 possible collaboration, it was hard to find agreement
or enthusiasm for a particular show and Luke, Betsi, John and I
just decided to take a break,” Satterlee said.