Berlin Symphony To Go Private

Berlin’s cultural groups are struggling to stay alive. Now, “following the Berlin Senate’s decision this past summer to cut subsidies, the Berliner Symphoniker, the smallest of the city’s eight official orchestras, is looking to start anew — as Germany’s first private orchestra. In doing so, the director is hoping to return to solvency and set an example for Germany’s other struggling cultural institutions.”

Peter Hall Takes On A New Theatre

British theatre legend Peter Hall has a new challenge with a new theatre. “The burly, indefatigable and often outspoken father figure of modern British theatre, who created the Royal Shakespeare Company and then took the National Theatre to its present home on the South Bank and ran it for an often turbulent decade, has found a new berth in Kingston-upon-Thames.”

BBC Makeover Begins

BBC director Mark Thompson shakes up the BBC, cutting thousands of jobs and relocating some staff divisions out of London. “Mr Thompson promised fewer repeats on BBC1, more money for high quality drama, comedy, news and current affairs and children’s programmes, and an increased focus on “distinctive” shows. Two and half thousand middle managers and support staff will be made redundant and a further 400 will go in the factual and learning division, the hardest hit by plans to outsource more programmes to independent producers.”

BBC Cuts Weigh Heavily

Morale at the BBC is at an all-time low. “Breaking the news of 2,900 job cuts, with thousands more to follow, and a 15% budget cut, Mark Thompson said the BBC’s “creative prize” came with a “price tag”. The move, aimed at boosting annual savings to £320m in three years, is being seen as the start of what is likely to be a frenzied period of horse-trading with the government before the renewal of the BBC’s royal charter in 2006.”

Australia Council To Be Rethought

The Australia Council, the federal government’s main arts funding body, is being restructured. “On the chopping block are the council’s new media and community cultural development boards, which give grants respectively to artists working in new media, and with communities such as disadvantaged youth, prison inmates and the homeless. It is believed some of the operations of those boards will be handled elsewhere in the organisation. The restructure is the outcome of a six-month review of the council’s operations.”

Music From Opposite Ends Of The Earth

New instant communications technology links audiences in one part of the world with those in another. At Carnegie Hall “it was a simulcast music exchange in which 450 students in New York and 200 more in New Delhi listened to music together, chatted with one another and danced, with the help of a 22-foot-wide movie screen and some good speakers.”