When Pop Culture Supports The Arts

“Why not sell tickets to rock concerts and use the proceeds to underwrite the classical end of your business? It makes sense on paper, and it’s worked before.” And yet, “regional symphony orchestras and theater companies are increasingly finding themselves squeezed off the stages of performing-arts centers by high-grossing Broadway road shows.”

A Presidential Debate As Theatre

“Her advantage is that [Hillary Clinton] knows her text inside out. She’s like one of those actors — Maggie Smith is reported to be one — who are always studying backstage, underlining and dog-earing their script. [Barack Obama] is the far better Method actor of the two. Which is to say there’s less of a visible gap between the role he’s playing and the self he has freely exposed since he became a marquee draw.”

Still Your Father’s Grammys

“For 50 years, the Grammys have been the most prestigious (and most criticized) of the music awards shows. In many ways, they still are. But they’re still operating as if it’s 1988. Much like the industry they represent, the Grammys have been slow to adjust to the massive technological changes that have made music more accessible than ever.”

Oscar Gets Arty

“Oscar-nominated films are often small, dark and unintended for mass audiences. They’re about art, after all, not commerce. But that’s especially true of this year’s crop, which has little mainstream buzz and among the lowest box-office totals in recent years.”

CanStage Faces Layoffs, Cutbacks

“The Canadian Stage Company, which has a stated aim to create and produce the best in Canadian theatre, will not produce any Canadian work on its mainstage next season… The country’s largest regional theatre [also] laid off up to a dozen people yesterday as part of a major restructuring effort in the face of ongoing financial and artistic problems.”

Phoenix To Get Musical Museum

The CEO of Target Corporation is donating millions of dollars to establish a museum devoted to showcasing musical instruments of all kinds on the outskirts of Phoenix. “The new museum has delighted experts in the history of musical instruments, the poor relation in music academia and the museum world. It also comes at a time when world music is increasingly present on concert stages.”