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Broadway's Future: Conference Looks 20 Years Ahead

Broadway

By MARK KENNEDY   01/20/12 06:15 AM ET  AP

NEW YORK -- What will Broadway be like in 20 years?

Will people still come to see shows in 2032? Will actors still be performing live? Will Times Square still be the crossroads of the world? Will "The Phantom of the Opera" still be open?

Those and many other questions will likely be mulled over Monday at the inaugural TEDxBroadway, a one-day conference bringing together producers, marketers, entrepreneurs, economists and artists. All will try to imagine what Broadway will be like in two decades.

"Everything is changing fast but there's not a larger conversation right now that's happening in the industry about the next five or 10 years," says Damian Bazadona, one of the organizers and the founder of Situation Interactive, an online marketing firm. "We're leapfrogging 20. Where's the vision for the industry?"

The conference speakers include Jujamcyn Theaters president Jordan Roth, "Sleep No More" producer Randy Weiner, former Lincoln Center Director Gregory Mosher, Tony-winning choreographer Bill T. Jones, Citibank's social media strategy head Frank Eliason and author Juan Enriquez.

TEDx events are independently organized but inspired by the nonprofit group TED – standing for Technology, Entertainment, Design – that started in 1984 as a conference dedicated to "ideas worth spreading."

Organizers of TEDxBroadway, which will be held at off-Broadway's New World Stages, hope it will be the first of many annual conclaves. Tickets are $100 and several hundred people have already signed up to attend. Video of the event is likely to be made available later.

Jim McCarthy, a co-organizer and the CEO of ticket discounter Goldstar, says the conference is an attempt to gather all the various parts of Broadway and ask stakeholders to sprint ahead a couple decades and envision the future Broadway. He sees these next few years as a pivotal time.

"Who buys what and where and how people consume stuff and where they go and how they think it is up for grabs for the first time probably since World War II. It's a jump ball," he says. "It's a moment where the Boomers are moving off the stage as the drivers of the culture and Generation Y and the Millennials are moving on the stage as the drivers of the culture."

The dozen or so speakers are expected to discuss how data will be collected in the future, how marketing and customer service will change, the role of cultural institutions, audience demographics and how technology will alter live events. A principal at a public school from an impoverished section of the city will talk about the importance of arts funding.

"I feel like we have a good cross-section of folks," says Bazadona, who will also talk about entrepreneurship. "We think this is about extending the discussion and stretching the imagination. I'm excited to see how it all stitches together."

The first speaker will be Ken Davenport, a writer, director, producer and industry pioneer who is also a co-organizer of the event. He moved to New York 20 years ago and will talk about the changes he's seen.

"Before you think about where you're going, you have to know about where you've been," Davenport says, recalling the enormous changes to Time Square since he moved from Massachusetts. "I remember riding my bike through 42nd Street and seeing a crack addict lying on the ground."

Now, of course, the streets are safe and clean, digital billboards have replaced hand-painted signs and Broadway generated a staggering $1 billion last season. "When you think of where it was 20 years ago, then you have to think that major things could happen over the next 20 years," says Davenport.

When the three organizers peer into the future, virtually nothing is a given. Forecasting five or 10 years is one thing, but 20 is much harder. So much depends on New York's economic strength, technology and the quality of the work on stage.

Broadway in 2032 could be as grim as the Broadway of 1992 if the city endures another terror attack or the economy falls of a cliff. New technology – or an anti-advertising backlash – might force the billboards to come down. Times Square might even become so pedestrian friendly that nature might return.

"I'm convinced that in 20 years we will see some grass somehow," Davenport says.

Even whether there will still be live theater or not is up for grabs. These days, Broadway shows are captured on high definition cameras and beamed to movie theaters far from Times Square or made into DVDs. In 20 years, bandwidth improvements may allow producers to project a 3-D image of a play or musical anywhere in the world.

"It's such a fascinating question: What is live? What is considered live?" asks Bazadona. For McCarthy, seeing a Broadway show in the future may mean attending it in New York or watching a broadcast elsewhere – a movie theater, a TV, a computer or a cellphone – with gradually lower prices as the experience degrades.

Davenport sees Broadway following the live concert industry, which made the seemingly risky move years ago to broadcast concerts. That just stoked more interest in the artist, not less. Davenport thinks more Broadway will be available on cable and pay channels but live performance will still be important.

"I do not think we'll eliminate it altogether because as more and more forms of two-dimensional entertainment pop up, the three-dimensional real-live-actor-in-your-face version actually becomes more rare and therefore more valuable."

One of the most critical factors about Broadway's health will be what's on the stages. Attracting new audiences with fresh work – such as "The Book of Mormon" and "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" – will keep the industry thriving.

"This is an idea factory in the middle of the most vital city in the whole world," says McCarthy, who warns that Broadway will lose its relevance if it sticks with well-mannered works from predictable source material.

"If the content is right, the influence of it will extend past the physical space, rather than Broadway being a national park where people go to theaters because it's there, like visiting Ford's Theatre when you're in D.C."

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NEW YORK -- What will Broadway be like in 20 years? Will people still come to see shows in 2032? Will actors still be performing live? Will Times Square still be the crossroads of the world? Will "Th...
NEW YORK -- What will Broadway be like in 20 years? Will people still come to see shows in 2032? Will actors still be performing live? Will Times Square still be the crossroads of the world? Will "Th...
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02:49 PM on 01/22/2012
I don't think it's fair to make comments about an entire generation as if you can speak for all of them. I'm 24 and have grown up on theatre and in the theatre, and am passionate about finding a way to bring it to my contemporaries. Technology will obviously play a more important role, as we interact through the internet more than we did before. Broadcasting and livestreaming seem to be the direction we're going in. At least, that's what my company is doing. But I think the assumption that it has no appeal to the younger generation is false. I have a bunch of teenagers waiting with baited breath for my production of Hamlet because it looks cool, and they feel it's something they can relate to or want to be a part of. Broadway needs to move in the direction of interacting with its audience and taking their opinions into account. Their biggest hurdle is that people will no longer accept what's handed to them, they want to have a part in realizing it. That means more communication, more dialogue and more listening.
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Gilbert Albright
09:54 AM on 01/22/2012
Hopefully it will die out and be gone twenty years from now. Broadway is well past its expiration date. It is an It is like an old jalopy car, an anachronism compared to modern forms of entertainment.
01:51 PM on 01/21/2012
Out of touch – again! The producers, marketers, entrepreneurs, economists and artists who are planning to come together on Monday for this TEDxBroadway conference to imagine what Broadway will be like in the next 20 years, are all failing to realize that the main reason why audience attendance is down for most shows is due to the exorbitantly high per-ticket prices which most middle class people can’t afford. Granted, it does cost a lot of money to produce a Broadway show (especially when salaries of A-list performers are included), but to charge ticket prices of somewhere in the range of $200 or more per person precludes most of us from attending many Broadway productions. (Even most actors performing in these shows probably could not afford these expensive tickets!) Also, tickets for this one-day conference on Monday are a pricey $100 each, and while several hundred people have presumably signed up to attend, and videos will likely be made available later, the organizers have completely lost touch with reality. Obviously, the public will *not* be present to provide their input. Just how many "regular" folks can afford to take off a full day from work and spend $100 to provide their valuable input at this conference? And the folks who *will* be attending Monday’s conference are wondering why audience attendance is down?! The privileged just don't get it!
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Gilbert Albright
09:56 AM on 01/22/2012
The REAL reason it is dying is because it is an outdated form of entertainment that has no appeal to young people in the 21st Century.
07:05 PM on 01/22/2012
Gilbert, while Broadway shows may not appeal to ALL young people of today, most have not been exposed to this form of entertainment simply because of the high cost of ticket prices (and sometimes due to travel and accessibility issues). I have children in their late 20s and early 30s, and they do like Broadway shows because they saw them from their earliest childhood years on. They still like their generation's shows, performers, and bands, etc. and other contemporary entertainment -- live and on devices, but they DO like Broadway productions! One of my kids now lives in NYC and hasn't been to a Broadway show only because of the prohibitive costs. I hope that those who attend Monday's TEDxBroadway conference will keep these realities in mind. Early exposure and more affordable ticket prices (perhaps having A-list celebrities work at scale instead of demanding millions to star in these productions) will ensure that this creative art form continues for many more generations. HTH!
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fredimessina
12:26 PM on 01/23/2012
Clearly you have not seen the audiences for Rent, Spring Awakening, Wicked, Hairspray and countless other productions as of late.
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pab08
Partisan agendas can't compete with objective fact
01:33 PM on 01/21/2012
What will Broadway be like in 20 years? I predict there will be blockbuster musicals based on The Jason Bourne movies with music and lyrics by an aging and irrelevant Lady Gaga.
In ten years there will SpongeBob Square Pants The Musical scored by Toby Keith..........
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Jenny M Derfler
New York City, Boston, Chicago, and Denver Girl!
08:47 PM on 01/20/2012
A Broadway experience is something that should never be outdated!! It can never be replaced by technology!! Famncy shmancy technology may be able 2 replace other things but it will not (& SHOULD not) replace the thrill of watching a live musical performance!
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fredimessina
08:07 PM on 01/20/2012
If Broadway Producers would stop making it primarily about money, it will be. Stop giving star roles to celebrities who have never sung or danced and paying them 3 million dollars a week. Start using full orchestras instead of a synthesizer. Drop ticket prices and offer comps and discounts to public high school students so they can experience everything that's wonderful about the theatre.
03:17 PM on 01/20/2012
My pre-conference answer is, yes there will be a Broadway and yes, it will look a bit different than it does today. But only a bit. We need only look at the "big box" musicals that run for ages and the smaller non-star vehicle production that don't last, to see the future. I natter more on it here:
www.HereSheIsBoys.com/2011/08/20/there-are-two-broadways/
03:12 PM on 01/20/2012
With the huge prices, and they're still climbing, I don't see it lasting - it's almost a pastime strictly for the 1%.
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Mike Dennison
01:47 PM on 01/20/2012
Broadway will be underwater in 20 years if the ice caps keep melting.
01:11 PM on 01/20/2012
Reduce ticket prices and it will. Why pay those prices when you can fly to London and see stellar theater for more half the price.
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01:45 PM on 01/20/2012
Yes - and lose money on the air fare. No, we need a really versatile and complex grouping of stages similar to the National Theatre. Big and small productions in one location. And videos of the best of the productions sold to people who live outside New York. If only the Boyle production of Frankenstein could be purchased with both Miller and Cumberbatch in turn as the Creature, I'd be happy. !!!
03:20 PM on 01/20/2012
Frankenstein has been my favorite theater experience!