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The first, "42nd Street" (on view through July 4), received strong reviews and has become a hot ticket, says Michael P. Price, executive director of Goodspeed Musicals. "While we are doing our usually thing of tinkering with the older musicals, the titles themselves are familiar," Price says. "When you are looking at 25 dancing actors in a 400-seat theater (as in
'42nd Street'), you are delivering a lot of value. And I think that's what people are responding to. "We have been very skillful in marketing and pricing, too," he says. "We used to offer a senior citizen discount. If you click on our Web site where it says
'senior citizen discount,' it takes you to the Super Saver where you can buy all three shows at a discount. So instead of selling one ticket at a discount, we are selling three and we are selling well into the season this way. And it will cut down on our advertising and marketing costs." Yet at other theaters, falling ticket sales and the drying up of corporate and private donations have taken their toll, with some theaters slicing their budgets dramatically, according to Eyring. For example, the Utah Shakespeare Festival cut its fiscal 2009 budget by $800,000, from $6.7 million in 2008 to $5.9 million this year. The drop was not without pain, says R. Scott Phillips, who runs the Utah festival located in Cedar City. Three full-time staffers were laid off. The seasonal company, which includes actors, dancers, electricians, carpenters and more, was reduced by 55. And the remaining full-time staff took a 2 percent pay cut "in order not to have to let more people go," Phillips says. Phillips reduced programming, too, chopping a week off the festival's summer schedule and another seven days from its fall season. Autumn will also see a switch to smaller shows, too. A musical, "Pump Boys and Dinettes," is out, and shows with smaller casts, such as "Tuesdays With Morrie" and "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged" are in. Still, Phillips remains hopeful. "We have a strong company and the visions for the plays are exciting. I think this will be as good if not a better season than we have done in the past," he says of a summer that includes "Henry V," "The Comedy of Errors" and "As You Like It." And Phillips already is planning for a world premiere musical, an adaptation of Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations" in 2010. And at Shakespeare & Company, some $450,000 was cut out of the production budget, although the number of shows jump to 18, more than double the number done last year. "At every turn, we have thought, 'How can we do this for the least amount of money?' What it means is that the sets are really simple," Packer says. "There might be one backdrop and six pieces of furniture on stage that get changed around. We're trying to be really inventive. That means the acting has to be impeccable. And so far, so good." Despite the economic downturn, some theaters forged ahead with monumental projects this year. Canada's Shaw Festival is presenting the entire "Tonight at 8:30," the collective title for all 10 of Noel Coward's rarely seen one-act plays, which he wrote and in which he starred with Gertrude Lawrence. And the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis is honoring Tony Kushner with a two-month celebration of the playwright's work including the world premiere of his latest effort, "The Intelligent Homosexual's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism With a Key to the Scriptures." "It's actually quite rare for a theater to celebrate a living playwright in that way," Eyring says. "It allows the audience to get to know the arc of a playwright's career and see how his work has changed over time. Theaters don't often put it together for you."
[Associated
Press;
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