Ohio: the bitter ...Times are tough for Cleveland area arts and cultural organizations. Dance Cleveland, the area's preeminent pre·em·i·nent or pre-em·i·nent adj. Superior to or notable above all others; outstanding. See Synonyms at dominant, noted. [Middle English, from Latin prae modern dance presenting organization, has all but eliminated its 2003-04 season due to budget shortfalls. Similarly, Great Lakes Theater festival The Great Lakes Theater Festival is the second oldest regional theater company in Greater Cleveland, and is "Shakespeare's Great Company," specializing in large-cast classic plays including regular performances of the works of Shakespeare. , also located in Cleveland, laid off its entire marketing staff at the close of last season. Dance and theater producer/ presenter Cleveland Public Theatre cut programming and announced temporary layoffs, and Ohio Ballet in Akron continues to fight a three-year downturn that has reduced the size of the company by nearly half. Tom Schorgl, president of Cleveland's Community" Partnership for Arts and Culture--a research and planning organization devoted to advancing north eastern Ohio's arts-and-culture scene-sees the decline of the area's economy that began shortly before the events of 9/11 as one of the significant causes of the decrease in contributed and earned income Sources of money derived from the labor, professional service, or entrepreneurship of an individual taxpayer as opposed to funds generated by investments, dividends, and interest. . "I think what has transpired in the area, with Cleveland being at the center, is no different than what is going on all over the country. No arts and cultural organizations, no matter their size, have been immune to the effects of the economy," said Schorgl. "Private-sector support is down, tinned income from ticket sales is down, state support has been reduced to 22 percent of what it was providing three years ago, and federal support isn't at the intensity it used to be." For many area organizations, this downturn in funding has meant they have had to reline reline /re·line/ (re-lin´) to resurface the tissue side of a denture with new base material in order to achieve a more accurate fit. and retool re·tool v. re·tooled, re·tool·ing, re·tools v.tr. 1. To fit out (a factory, for example) with a new set of machinery and tools for making a different product. 2. plans and projects they had projected for themselves. Out of these recent setbacks has come long-term hope, as a movement within the dance, music, and theater communities has brought organizations together to look at ways to combine offstage operations, such as administrative, accounting, and marketing functions, to help reduce overall costs and maintain programming. Earlier this year, the Cleveland-area dance community came together for several meetings, including a summit with representatives of Dance/USA and the National Dance Project. The purpose, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Hernando Cortez, artistic director of Cleveland Repertory REPERTORY. This word is nearly synonymous with inventory, and is so called because its contents are arranged in such order as to be easily found. Clef des Lois Rom. h.t.; Merl. Repertoire, h.t. 2. Project, was to identify and address several needs, including fund-raising, public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most , and the creation of a clearinghouse similar to that of New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of City's Dance Theather Workshop. Another obstacle is the lack of local public-sector support. "Unlike many other communities its size, Cleveland has no municipal or county grant-making money for the arts." said Schorgl. "I think this exacerbates the current situation many Cleveland arts and cultural organizations find themselves in." He also holed that progress has been made recently with the advancement of a public ballot issue that would address the need for such support. "This may have been the first time in the forty-seven-year history of Dance Cleveland that ,at have had to cancel a program," said Executive Director Pare Young. New fiscal realities have forced northeastern Ohio arts and cultural organizations to reevaluate their situations. For those who continue to plan for their futures, the battle for survival has just begun. |
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