Copious Notes

The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture

  • Sep
    1

    . . . to tell it what you want from local theater.

    Actors Guild of Lexington has undertaken a set of public meetings to get input from members of the arts  community and the community in general as it moves forward from several crises.

    Kimberly Shaw is the managing director of Actors Guild of Lexington. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.

    Kimberly Shaw is the managing director of Actors Guild of Lexington. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.

    The meetings started Monday and will continue from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday (Sept. 2) in conference room B on the fourth floor of the Central Branch of the Lexington Public Library. The other two meetings are at 6-7:30 p.m. Sept. 8 and 10 at a location yet to be announced.

    Each meeting will be attended by AGL managing director Kimberly Shaw, associate artistic director Eric Seale and board president Jennifer Miller. They are trying to limit the guests to 10 each meeting to give everyone a chance to talk and be heard. That’s probably a good idea as larger gatherings in the wakes of other theater crises the in the past decade or so have resulted in fairly pointless excercises. According to at least one account, the initial meeting on Monday night went well.

    Actors Guild is in the midst of a turbulent time. In June, LexArts announced it would not extend the theater an allocation for general operating funds — a contribution that has been around $70,000 the past several years — and the theater was already struggling with a significant financial crisis. Then, in August, the theater’s artistic director, Richard St. Peter, announced he was leaving to pursue a doctorate in theater.

    So, AGL is trying to dig out of a hole and start the search for a new AD. But, before getting too far down that road, the theater leadership wants to get a handle on how the community is feeling, hear what it wants out of one of Lexington’s leading theaters, and even get some ideas.

    If you want to get in on a chat, contact Miller at jenniferbethmiller@insightbb.com. Miller has also said she and the staff are open to private conversations and meetings.

    Meanwhile, St. Peter has started a blog. The stated purposed of the journal is to discuss the 127 plays he says he needs to read in pursuing his Ph.D. He seems to be a speedy reader and writer already on play 2: David Mamet’s Oleanna.

    In his intro, he briefly discusses his experiences as, “Artistic Director of a small pseudo-professional theatre in a town that didn’t really want or need professional theatre.”

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  • Aug
    12

    Over the weekend we found out that Actors Guild of Lexington artistic director Richard St. Peter will be leaving at the end of this season, at the latest, to pursue a doctorate degree in theater.

    Richard St. Peter rehearsing his 2007 production of Hamlet. Photo by Angela Baldridge | LexGo.com.

    Richard St. Peter rehearsing his 2007 production of Hamlet. Photo by Angela Baldridge | LexGo.com.

    AGL board chair Jennifer Miller said the theater would not be in a rush to name a successor, as the theater has other immediate issues to deal with and initiatives to embark on such as working with a consultant to help right the theater’s financial ship and point it in the right direction.

    But, just like when the Cats make a coaching change, you mention a theater is changing its artistic chief, and interested parties cannot help thinking about who or what type of person that next director may be?

    The last time AGL made a change at the top, the theater took the unprecedented step of conducting a nationwide search, which resulted in St. Peter’s hire. Should it do the same thing this time, or maybe look for a more familiar face to area theater fans and practitioners? Late in the spring, Actors Guild announced plans to expand its offerings and become a more professional theater by signing a small professional theater contact with Actors Equity. Good moves, or maybe over-reaching?

    I want to hear what you think. Actors Guild of Lexington is undeniably a theater at a crossroads. What directions do you think it should steer into?

    Hit the comment button, below, and let’s talk about it.

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  • Aug
    8

    Actors Guild of Lexington artistic director Richard St. Peter and managing director Kimberly Shaw photographed in the theater's new officies in the Distillery District. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.

    Actors Guild of Lexington artistic director Richard St. Peter and managing director Kimberly Shaw photographed in May in the theater's new offices in the Distillery District. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.

    Actors Guild of Lexington Artistic Director Richard St. Peter has told the theater’s board that he will be leaving by the end of the 2009-10 season to pursue a doctorate degree in theater.

    St. Peter declined to say where he will be going to graduate school, as he has not finalized those plans with the school. He did say that his departure is not a reaction to Actors Guild’s recent financial troubles which came to a head in June when LexArts declined to grant the theater an allocation for general operating funds.

    “I want to stress as much as I can that this is not a bad thing, not death or disaster,” St. Peter said Saturday night. “It’s just the next thing.”

    St. Peter said he is not leaving immediately and expects to negotiate a departure time with the theater’s board, when a succession plan is in place.

    Actors Guild board president Jennifer Miller said that St. Peter’s decision was of his own volition. She said she had been aware he was contemplating pursuing a doctorate, but was still surprised when he informed her of his plans this weekend.

    She said the theater’s board has not had a chance to meet and discuss searching for a successor, but she expected it would be a little while before that effort starts.

    “We don’t want to make rapid decisions, we want to make the right decisions,” Miller said.

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  • Jul
    8

    UPDATED 6:30 P.M.

    LexArts’ executive committee has voted unanimously to deny Actors Guild of Lexington’s request for an appeal of LexArts’ decision to cut the theater’s funding from the 2009 Campaign for the Arts.

    The vote Tuesday afternoon by the 10-person committee leaves Actors Guild with no more avenues through LexArts by which it can recover the lost funding. Actors Guild had requested $70,900, which is in line with its recent years’ allocations from the united arts fund.

    For an appeal to be granted, LexArts’ acting committee chair Bill Barr said the committee would have had to determine the allocations committee’s decision was not made “in conformity with the written policies, guidelines and bylaws of LexArts in effect at the time the allocations decision was made.”

    Actors Guild’s board president, Jennifer Miller, who just took the office at the beginning of this month, said she was working to set up a meeting this week between leaders of the theater and LexArts.

    “We need to all be working off the same facts,” Miller said, reiterating the theater’s contention that misunderstandings and mistrust led to the defunding. “We can clear the air. Everybody actually cares about the arts and developing arts organizations and individual artists in Lexington.

    “I think this is going to turn out well for everybody in the end, but there are a lot of uncertainties until all the facts are known.”

    She said her communications with LexArts on Wednesday, were “cordial and productive.”

    In early June, the LexArts allocations committee voted to deny funding for Actors Guild for the 2010 fiscal year.In recent years, LexArts’ allocation accounted for about 15 percent of the budget for Actors Guild, the only semi-professional theater that programs works for adults in Central Kentucky.

    In denying the funding request, LexArts expressed concerns about the financial health and management of Actors Guild.

    Actors Guild responded with a six-page letter requesting the appeal. The letter said Actors Guild leaders believed that misunderstandings between the groups led to the decision to cut funds and outlined ways the organization thought it had complied with LexArts’ efforts to deal with the theater’s financial problems.

    The theater has been on a fiscal roller coaster the past decade, recovering from a 1998 financial crisis and management house cleaning, but again hitting financial shortfalls in the middle of this decade. Late last year, Actors Guild’s artistic director, Richard St. Peter, told the Herald-Leader he was worried the theater might not survive the economic downturn. Two of its winter shows were modified to cut costs.

    “We are open about AGL’s past problems and regret that LexArts has not acknowledged the responsible and productive corrective actions that we have taken,” said the appeal letter, signed by the theater’s directors and board leaders.

    Miller said Actors Guild finished the 2009 fiscal year $4,000 to $5,000 in the black.

    Tuesday afternoon, after the executive committee meeting, LexArts President and CEO Jim Clark said, “This is a four-year process. … There have been years they ended in the black, but then it’s gone the opposite direction the following year.”

    Part of the privilege of being a partner organization, Clark and Barr said, is receiving the allocations, which are unrestricted general operating funds. Other grants made by LexArts are given for specific programs or initiatives.

    “The allocations committee and the full board’s job and duty is to be good stewards of that money that’s donated by donors to the arts,” Barr said. “Stewardship requires responsibility and sometimes hard actions.
    “This decision shouldn’t be looked at as the end of the road for the relationship between these organizations.”

    Clark said that cutting Actors Guild out of the allocations does not preclude the group from applying for allocations in the future or applying for other grants or organizational support from LexArts.

    Miller said she hopes to discuss those options with LexArts as the group tries to deal with the lost allocation.

    “There are a lot of things in a very detailed budget that our finance committee put together that have asterisks beside them that are contingent on certain levels of revenue,” Miller said. “So there are things we will cut if revenue has not reached certain benchmarks.”

    Neither Clark nor Miller could say how the de-funding will affect Actors Guild’s use of the theater in the Downtown Arts Center, which is managed by LexArts.

    Actors Guild is exploring presenting a second stage series in the Distillery District, where it had moved its offices from the DAC before being defunded. It is also exploring presenting a cabaret series in Central Kentucky restaurants. But the theater has a main stage series scheduled for the 2009-10 season, its 26th, in the Downtown Arts Center.

    Regardless of how that situation plays out, Clark said, LexArts is committed to supporting theater for adult audiences in Lexington.

    “We are not being nonchalant about what this means for theater in Lexington,” Clark said. “We will work with any group and any artist that has an idea how to invigorate live theater here.”

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About Rich Copley & Copious Notes

Raised by opera-loving parents in a rock ’n’ roll world, Rich Copley has parlayed his broad interests into his career writing about arts and entertainment. Since 1998, he has covered performing arts, film and faith-based popular culture for the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper in Lexington, Ky. MORE | E-mail Rich


 

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