New York City Opera Announces Musician Lockout

Orchestra Performers

VERENA DOBNIK   01/ 8/12 11:26 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — A bitter contract dispute has led to a lockout of musicians at the New York City Opera, a possible "death knell" for a company that's nurtured such singers as Renee Fleming, Placido Domingo and Beverly Sills.

On Sunday, hours after talks broke down, the cash-strapped company canceled Monday rehearsals for a Feb. 12 opening production of Verdi's "La Traviata" in Brooklyn.

"This is a very sad day for what once was a spectacular cultural icon and for the people who performed its music," said Alan Gordon, national executive director of the American Guild of Musical Artists representing the chorus, stage directors and principal singers.

Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians represents the orchestra. Both unions have been without a contract since the spring.

Gail Kruvand, chairwoman of the orchestra union's negotiating committee and its assistant principal bass player, said union members "made a good-faith effort to say that, yes, we are willing to sacrifice for the sake of ensuring that the grand tradition of the City Opera lives on."

But she said the company's rejection of union proposals could be "the death knell for one of New York's cultural treasures."

City Opera is now operating on a shoestring, offering orchestra and chorus members minimum fees for an already abbreviated season. City Opera moved out of its longtime home at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts last year, citing financial troubles, and cut back its usual schedule of 12 to 16 operas per season, with a peak of about 130 performances.

In a statement, the company said it had "no choice but to lock out" union members because they rejected the company's economic offer and had threatened to strike when performances began, according to a statement released Sunday. Both labor unions have passed strike-authorization votes.

City Opera General Manager George Steel said his company couldn't enter rehearsals with a musician strike looming for performances scheduled in February at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, one of the various venues around New York booked for 16 shows of four productions.

However, "we have no intention of hiring replacement workers," company spokeswoman Risa Heller said. She didn't know whether that meant the season wouldn't open next month.

The opera and the unions have been in talks with Allison Beck, deputy director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, since mid-December. Those negotiations broke down Saturday night.

The musicians rejected the company's offer, saying the financially diminished company doesn't guarantee work or pay. Steel said the company, facing "economic constraints," can only afford to pay people "for the work that they do."f

Under a contract management proposed in early December, the musicians' average annual income would drop from about $40,000 to as little as $5,000 for two productions. For decades, musicians were guaranteed at least 22 weeks' work.

City Opera's troubles started about a decade ago with multimillion-dollar deficits, followed by the appointment of Belgian director Gerard Mortier as general manager and artistic director, effective as of the 2009-2010 season. Accustomed to staging expensive, cutting-edge extravaganzas in Europe, he insisted that City Opera's theater be renovated, forcing the company to go dark for the 2008-2009 season, with only six unstaged performances elsewhere.

The economy's free-fall was a last straw for the 69-year-old company that former New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia dubbed "the people's opera."

Income from ticket sales during the dark season plunged to about $186,000, down from $12 million. And the company raided its endowment to the tune of tens of millions of dollars.

Mortier resigned from his position about six months before he was officially to start, on grounds that the operating budget had dwindled.

"We're heartbroken, but we cannot save the company," said Kruvand, the bass player.

She said City Opera has been "unable to sell tickets or attract donors" – mostly because Steel abandoned the company's longtime practice of staging surefire operas along with pioneering new works. Recently, the company has presented mostly 20th-century operas that are a box office challenge.

Kruvand noted that the current general manager still makes more than $300,000 after a 10 percent pay cut, while the musicians face about a 90 percent cut in earnings.

"We don't feel George Steel is capable of running an opera company," said Kruvand, adding that when the star soprano Sills became general manager in the 1980s, she led a company "that was a platform for nurturing careers."

Speaking for Steel, Heller said that the unions "have repeatedly vilified George."

But the negotiating process is "not about any one person," she said. "This is about whether the unions will finally recognize that the City Opera needs to make fundamental changes in the way it operates so that it only pays people for work they perform."

Gordon, the union leader, called the latest labor impasse "City Opera's death."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CULTURE

Filed by Mallika Rao  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 82
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
03:54 AM on 01/10/2012
Professional musicans both classical and otherwise are having a *very* hard time in NYC and elsewhere of late. More so those who represented by unions and thus command set wages.

More and more Broadway and other theater shows are using "canned" music or anything else but live musicans due to costs. When they do use them it's as few as possible, again due to costs. It does not help that Broadway is doing less and less of the big musicals which require large orchestras.

On the classical music front things aren't much better. Government and private funding is drying up and performance sales are stagnant. People simply prefer to stay home and listen to classical music if they do at all.

New York City Opera has always been the red headed step child to it's grander big sister across the pavillion, The MET. Both houses are having to deal with dwindling audiences and finding revenue streams whilst operating in one of the most expensive cities in the world.

Forty-Thousand per year is *not* allot of money, especially with the high cost of living and taxes in New York. In the past musicans were able to piece together other gigs such as studio work, weddings, or whatever to bring in money, but as stated above those sources are drying up.
09:14 PM on 01/09/2012
The GM making 300k? What work is he actually doing when so few productions are going on? Typical entitled executive.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
NYC07
Ceci n'est pas un micro-bio
10:12 AM on 01/11/2012
He's bankrupting the company with his demands.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gemini68
04:36 PM on 01/09/2012
Under a contract management proposed in early December, the musicians' average annual income would drop from about $40,000 to as little as $5,000 for two productions. For decades, musicians were guaranteed at least 22 weeks' work.

That's a HUGE pay cut. And one that no reasonable person would agree to. The average person living below the poverty line makes $9,000. And on top of that they are in NYC! You can't live on that.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jose Hill
Predictor...has a good ring to it.
04:02 PM on 01/09/2012
I'm sorry, but $5,000 a year from $40,000 a year to too steep a cut for anyone to take. I can't blame them for striking on that one. And in New York City too. One can't even pay for a piece of sidewalk for that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silverstreet
All you need is love
02:30 PM on 01/09/2012
Most Americans don't even know what live music sounds like anymore. We're poorer for it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Omega2012
02:26 PM on 01/09/2012
Recently, the company has presented mostly 20th-century operas.

There`s your culprit.
02:06 PM on 01/09/2012
Steel's vision for the company is so impoverished that it's hardly worth continuing: donors, many of them loyal because of Sills, left, probably because they weren't even contacted. And then they renamed the NYState Theater after Mr. Koch, another kiss of death.
photo
Dr Marcus
make music not war
01:46 PM on 01/09/2012
This from an amateur musician and classical music lover A live orchestra is vital for opera.Opera is different than the typical Broadway show where there is always some kind of intermission between musical pieces and where music is less elaborate.We also must understand the nature of an orchestra.They perform as individuals and as a group with the utmost precision and unison therefore dependence on one another is paramount.Like a pack wolfs,they will perish or thrive together.As far as financial woes,the Met opera thrives on contributions from rich donors.Why hasn't the "people's opera" asked for support from "people" like myself that has patronizes the City Opera for years?Renaming The New York State Theater.The Koch Theater has something to do with this?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Venmaker1
I am deeply suspicious
01:44 PM on 01/09/2012
It does appear that over the long haul City Opera has made poor choices in its attempt to carve out a sustainable funding model. At this point Steel is not even a relevant issue simply because the core fundamentals of governing an opera company in the current economic environment has eluded the board.

I was attending the meeting where City informed the greater opera world of the Mortier appointment and proceeded to share their strategy. I remember leaning over to someone making a train whistle noise and saying "hear that?" that train that's coming is going to derail and its aftermath will not be pretty.

Opera fundamentals today: most companies are title driven, successful companies, regardless of artistic direction, have deep pocket donors who are driven to give by the institution's place in a community and not its artistic achievements, although that helps; union contracts, venue issues, subscriber interests while all important factors in running a company only become issues when the fundraising side of the equation looses steam. It is this last issue that is plaguing arts organizations and opera companies today.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
02:34 PM on 01/09/2012
I enjoyed reading your post. If management fails to present productions that elicit enthusiasm from ticket-buyers, and sales are down, then 'deep-pocket' funders back off with a hesitant wait & see attitude. This has been the case with NYCO under G. Steel, and smaller donations also dropped accordingly.

Under Steel's administration, subscribers have been largely ignored (a fatal mistake) resulting in subscriptions now being a small fraction what they were only two years ago. When NYCO was competently run, up to 50% of revenue was from ticket sales. Steel publicly announced that his goal is get a paltry 10% from ticket sales. That is not a workable model, and it has little to do with the national economy, unions, or trends.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Venmaker1
I am deeply suspicious
03:19 PM on 01/09/2012
Thank you. Sadly, this is an area of experience and expertise that I am all too familiar with and in fact i am presently trying to discern whether to continue in the industry.
01:06 PM on 01/09/2012
Bloomberg needs to create a $100 per person tax for all NYC residents to cover this.
12:43 PM on 01/09/2012
Beverly Sills must be weeping in Heaven. She work so hard to put the NYCO in the black. What a shame!!! I used to love going there, it's sad to see it destroyed by poor management and a bad economy.
photo
Dr Marcus
make music not war
01:56 PM on 01/09/2012
F&FPoor management was the primary reason for NYC opera demise.Now we are left with two bad choices .No live opera or pay exorbitant ticket prices at the Met where all involved make big money.There are places in NYC where opera can be staged.Hope someone with experience will make the move
07:25 PM on 01/09/2012
Thank you. I agree, we are left with two poor choices. I like the Met too, but their tickets are so expensive. I also used to enjoy going to the Amato Opera. It was such a NY kind of place. Quirky, but some good singers came out of the place. Unfortunately, Mr. Amato closed it in 2009.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fritziscool
12:38 PM on 01/09/2012
Isn't "musician" among the highest unemployed groups in America. Higher even than "actor".

I hear stories about the Broadway musicians unions. Thet require a certain amount of musician even if they aren't needed. I saw a show a few years ago called "Contact". All the music was pre-recorded rock music. But I heard that musicians had to be hired.

I have seen many shows in Las vegas. When I go into a coffee shop, restaurant, or store I talk to the person working there and many of them tell me that they were in the pit in a show that closed and then had to find other work. Pity the Musician.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
12:35 PM on 01/09/2012
The core problem with NYCO is that the board did not know how to hire a competent director.

It was obvious from the first press release that Mortier would not work out, and sure enough, if came to fiasco. Having passed up the golden opportunity to hire Ms. Zambello, an experienced and highly regarded opera director, the NYCO board settled on George Steel.

A college campus theater executive, Steel has no experience running an opera house (his 12-week stint at Dallas Opera ended with him being shown the door) and has made known his open contempt for 19th century opera, which is the bulk of the repertoire. Steel does not understand, or particularly care, what opera audiences really want, and that alone is the short-cut to failure in the opera world.

The head of the Board, Mr. Wall, a former executive in the cigarette industry, has no clue how opera companies function, and the rest of the board consists of 'high society' appointees who are tuned out entirely. The destruction of NYCO should be taught in arts management courses around the country as a text-book example of how to bring a venerable theater organization to the doorstep of bankruptcy in less than three years.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mozartmaid2
opera singing fighter for truth
11:37 AM on 01/09/2012
"She said City Opera has been "unable to sell tickets or attract donors" – mostly because Steel abandoned the company's longtime practice of staging surefire operas along with pioneering new works."

Every opera company worth its salt knows it has to do a few of the standard rep to keep up sales -- Carmen, La Traviata, La Boheme, to name a few... I think NYC Opera has been slowly slipping downhill since Beverly Sills died. Sad... as a young struggling opera singer, I fear my art is dying... and if companies that used to be the innovative beacons of the art (and who knew how to freshly revamp the old treasures) are falling apart, I worry about opera's future...
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Nelson Montana
Artist, Author, Composer
09:55 AM on 01/09/2012
Having been on both sides of this issue I see both points and also see how they're both wrong.

Personally, I'm amazed that Broadway still uses live musicians. Most audience members don't really care if the music was pre-recorded and would rather pay half as much for a ticket. It isn't like the band is offering anything but the same rendition night after night anyway. I wouldn't be surprised if the NYCO is far behind. I don't like it, but accept that it's a changing world and the role of musicians is changing as well.

As Woody Allen said: If you're a blacksmith in New York City, it doesn't matter if you're the greatest blacksmith in the world -- you work possibilities will be limited."
10:24 AM on 01/09/2012
I see you more as a blacksmith, really.

The sound of the live orchestra is a vital component of the opera. Believe me when I say that opera audiences "care" if the orchestra is actually there. And it isn't the "same rendition" night after night--what kind of musician are you if you've never experience inspiration? That is not necessarily a nightly occurrence.

Take my advice, blacksmithing.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Nelson Montana
Artist, Author, Composer
10:30 AM on 01/09/2012
You don't understand so you try to insult. I get it. It comes from ignorance. It's okay.
photo
Drew2U
Emily is not amused.
11:12 AM on 01/09/2012
Wow. And you're a "composer?" Do you understand what "live theater" means? If you don't think live musicians in the pit are worth every penny, then go to any non-professional production which uses a music track. You'll hear the difference immediately, and when the track falls out of sync with the singers, you'll notice it even more. I've worked on road productions of some of the Broadway shows trying to save money with a music track--in most cases it was a disaster.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Nelson Montana
Artist, Author, Composer
11:41 AM on 01/09/2012
I think you missed my point.