The climbing cost of culture
The diva |
Same thing at other prestige NYC venues. There are discount ticket booths and rush tickets, but, if wanting guaranteed seats to a performance we want to see, we are stuck in premium-price stratosphere.
In the last decade, Broadway prices have vaulted beyond inflation; the reason is discussed in an Atlantic article by Derek Thompson, here.
The columnist |
"Ils sont partis où, les bourgeois? Nulle part. Ils se sont branchés sur internet et du coup, ils sont devenus un peu cons. Ils n'apprécient plus les tableaux des grands maîtres, n'écoutent plus de musique savante, ne lisent plus la grande littérature.
Les bourgeois avaient de la culture, les abrutis de consommation qu'ils sont devenus n'ont plus que des opinions, comme s'ils étaient tous devenus chroniqueurs."
Translation: "Where did the bourgeois go? Nowhere. They plugged themselves into the internet, and suddenly, they became rather thick. They no longer appreciate paintings by great masters, no longer listen to classical music, no longer read great literature.
The bourgeois had culture. The consuming morons that they have become have nothing but opinions, as if they had all become columnists."
Though stratospheric ticket prices deter all classes but the wealthy, Foglia takes aim at the relatively prosperous people who used to support the arts: they have instead become what he calls "turbo-consumers", spending their discretionary income on stuff, not performances.
The beer |
And so proceeds the dumbing-down of my cultural life, at least on the most prestigious stages of NYC.
There are options: student recitals, off-off-Broadway shows and local musicians invite surprise and serendipity. I do not care if it's Alec Baldwin or Joe Blow on stage, as long as the performance enthralls. (In fact if it is Baldwin, it's a $150 per person surcharge.)
I am ever more grateful for our local theatre scene. Natty and I especially like Infinitheatre, where the audience sits in a former city bath (the seats are in the tiled pool) to watch bold productions like the stunning Japanese musical "Hanafuda Denki".
This show earned five stars at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival; we saw it for less than $15 each, thanks to their $75 6-pack ticket deal.
I'm not worried about the Met, which had a very profitable 2013. But in Montréal, local dance companies, small theatres and music festivals are feeling the pinch, as people weigh the cost.
Companies who want to keep their older, loyal audience could offer friendlier pricing options. It's difficult for many seniors to make two trips on the day of a performance to secure rush tickets. A seniors' season subscription would sell more guaranteed seats and is much easier on elders. Hear that, National Ballet?
Comments
The comments by M Foglia are elitist and arrogant. The internet can open up new worlds of creativity and exploration...or not, as you choose. Going to the opera or ballet doesn't make him a better person, it's a matter of personal enjoyment. What Good are the Arts by John Carey is a fascinating look at this subject.
LauraH: Foglia writes to provoke, to nudge readers out of complacency, and his criticism, though squirm-inducing, questions what is happening. He's Québec's Christopher Hitchens, acerbic and not afraid to step on toes- arrogant, maybe, but I would not say elitist. Generally, people do not use the internet to partake of high culture.
When I lived in Toronto I found quite a bit of free entertainment or pay what you can theatre, as I do here.
I don't know that theater, museums, opera are the only ways to experience "culture" or that not forking out for those things means we are being "dumbed down." I can't bring myself to spend hundreds of dollars for an evening's entertainment either.
Sometimes we are offered discount tickets to everything from amusement parks to opera through my employer, and that's how I was able to see Baz Luhrmann's production of "La Boheme" at the LA Opera a few years back.
If you have never been to the bar at the Carlisle Hotel (Bemelman's Bar) consider going there for the jazz and a drink. The artist who illustrated the Madeleine children's books painted the murals in the bar and those murals, together with the music makes for a delightful evening.
I will be heading to Boston for a week and will doing the same as you, looking for some affordable experiences. The Museum of Art is definitely on the list, but I am looking to Berklee School of Music for some other inspiration.
One of my opera-loving colleagues got season tickets to the Met (they schedule two operas on weekends): he and his spouse used to fly out! Now they have season tix to the Houston Grand Opera and drive.
Now Pater and I subscribe to the Vancouver Opera (our 7th or 8th year now) and while the tickets, especially bought that way, are nowhere near the Met cost, it's a yearly ouch. Plus having season's tickets means being hit up for a donation annually, which I can never resist. The productions never pay for themselves, even at the high cost of the tix and even though the VOA has been managing to fill most seats through really clever advertising and building community relations. But oh, the number of creative people they employ! What hope this can give to young people who want to believe a career can be built in the arts! I feel good about every dollar spent on the opera and any other cultural event I squeeze my wallet for. Similarly, we buy memberships for several of the local public art galleries, doing really good work on shoestring budgets.
And it's all very well to watch these programs online, digitized, but at some point, unless animation is what you want to see, someone pays to get the show off the ground, right?
Glad to see you raising the issue. It's so important.
Wendy (uk)
I am also aghast at what some people will pay to see a professional sports team play a game, jammed into a massive arena.
Susan: I have indeed visited Bemelmans, so long ago I had fake ID!
Kristine62: Last year we found "Brits off Broadway" and saw a magnificent performance for $35 each. There is great entertainment in NYC at a relative bargain if you search.
One of the best concerts of my life was a student/teacher program at Berklee.
frugal: I'm reasonably able re scouting venues like music schools; my comments in the post are more about the cost for treating yourself to the prestige stages, the cost of which has risen way beyond inflation.
materfamilias: What a remarkable family! Many opera and theatre companies offer very reasonable tickets to children and students- to bring along the younger generations as both patrons and performers.
The look of wonder on my sons' faces as they sat at the Young People's Theatre, or later at other theatres, was well worth the scrimping it sometimes took to buy the tickets.
I miss the days of living in New York, or London, when one could get down to the TKTS booth and see something live.
When pay for for archived or streamed programming, they are making a consumer choice, and diverting their cultural dollars to those choices. It's hard for local events to compete- but such is the nature of technology.
While I have enjoyed some streamed concerts, it is not the same as being in the room.
I too have used TKTS and when I looked at the site now, very little appealed to me. (In my youth, would get rush seats, another great way to get in. But Le Duc has hearing impairment and needs to sit close.)
To see Bryan Cranston on stage in "All the Way"? $170 per ticket.
Apologies if I'm responding too many times.
Wendy (uk)
The relevant Hill Strategies (www.hillstrategies.com):
1. Patterns in Performing Arts Spending in Canada in 2008
2. Cultural and Heritage Activities of Canadians in 2005
3. Provincial Profiles of Cultural and Heritage Activities (2005)
The comment by Anon@11:19 describes the root cause: the competition for discretionary time and the vast supply of entertainment material available, especially by new technologies. We can, in our part of the world, get cheap calories; we can get cheap culture too, but those products, the fast food of the arts, does not usually support local cultural institutions and artists.
Anon@ 11:19: Thank you for your thoughtful comment. The big-name/big-house world was always a special treat... and now I find it's totally out of reach. But I, (and I hope all readers( will continue to attend kind of performances of which you speak- including your play!
One of the things we will see the guitarist David Lindley play at the Iridium. While it's not the opera, he is a "revered musician of choice" in the family- so much so that my nephew and his partner are flying up from Dallas to go with us.
In my experience, I hear far more people discussing the latest episode of "Game of Thrones" than discussing the most recent live concert by the Berlin Philharmonic.
I don't know the answer here. The costs (including up keep of a fabulous new venue in the arts district) are very high. Interest in opera is not universal. I enjoy it, but one performance at these prices is plenty for me in a season. What to do.
For my opera dollar, I prefer Santa Fe and their partially open air venue where I can see lightning in the distance on a good not quite stormy night.
All: Those who read in French might enjoy this collection of Pierre Foglia's columns:
http://www.lapresse.ca/debats/chroniques/pierre-foglia/
C.
I see this in myself: do I spend $12 to see a movie, perhaps an 'art film', but still a movie, or at least $85 for the ballet? The movie wins more often than I like to admit. And that means I am losing my impulse to attend, and also my knowledge of such works.
I do have options such as local choirs, theatre and dance, and will go to nearly anything with a moderate ticket price. But I had longed to go to the Met again and it's just not on.
MJ: Thank you, I'll check the calendar for these venues!
Anon@10:22: I just noticed that our excellent local company (Les Grandes Ballets Canadiens) has a Groupon offer for 40% off for any category of ticket. I'm jumping on it, b/c like you, I find usual prices expensive.
SewingLibrarian: I have noticed what you describe, when I visited Le Duc's family in a remote area of Québec and leafed through their scrapbooks from the 20s-40s, full of local or regional recitals and theatre, in which many members of the family performed. If people wanted culture, they had to make it themselves, and attend performances of the occasional touring company. I'm delighted to hear you are taking your children to concerts.
I thought that the Foglia quote was also arrogant and twitty, but he does have a point. I've been on a local chamber music board, and network a lot for my business, and it is HARD to get people to go out and do things all to often. I love the connections and ability to hear and see things that the Internet offers me, but at least I "try" to get out, many don't. The culture of "bowling alone [on Wii]" has taken hold.
That said, there are some classical performances I won't go to anymore - often - either if I know that I'm in for a very stuffy, stiff evening for my $75 ticket. Not all culture is actually enjoyable to take in. I am looking at you, stuffy music ensembles that manage to evoke the worst feeling of Sunday in mandatory church (silent, chair shifting discomfort, eventual tepid applause, someone sleeping in a middle row).
Define bourgeois (M Foglia). When the bougie is economizing for tuition, or to start a new business (my case), $200 tickets are out of reach. For that, a night out equals a month of law office rent or two months of very high end research tools, and just isn't in the picture now. NOT because I just bought a $700 handbag, or gadget.
The definitions of "bourgeois" are available and, in the six or seven I read, quite consistent.
He is a columnist, and former journalist, at a daily in a major city. He obviously isn't poor. He does come from deep poverty; his parents were Italian migrants to France in the postwar period. And he moved on to Montréal.
Fortunately, due to government policy and student struggles, tuition remains more accessible here in Québec than in most of North America.
The aspect I found "twitty" was the Internet as shorthand. Obviously he works on his computer, and Internet (as I do). "Dumbing down" is a reality, but it is rather more complex than that.
Anon@10:33: Good for you! Exceptions aside, it is us we who must introduce children and young adults to the arts. I hope your city, like those I have lived in, have pay-what-you-can performances. Those and family subscription series were our primary way to get them into performances. Museums are wonderful for knowledge and discovery but not so much as venues for live performance.
One of my happiest memories is of the time we dragged (and I mean dragged) our 14 yr old sons to "Amadeus". Much complaining. Before the end of the first act they were enraptured, on the edge of their seats.
I couldn't stop thinking about this silly video clip about spoiled youth from one of the wealthiest districts in Amsterdam: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9lQfuBJ1ag
You don't have to speak Dutch to get it. The Rijksmuseum, several other art museums and the Concert Hall are all located in this area, but I don't think these kids are into those.
Participation is definitely tied to price, and though I love my newly-earned senior's discounts, I often want to go with younger friends.
Marla S.: So true that some "high culture" events are stultifying; Your comment took me back to some chamber music recitals that made time stand still.
Wow, we are so lucky here.
I was not discussing museums in either Montréal or NYC in this post; in both cities, museums provide free evenings, and here, several museums' permanent collections are free at all times, but you pay to see special exhibitions.