Archive for Performing Arts Center – Page 6

“Free” concert advertising a little confusing

Late change in whether to charge for event explains confusion 

Flyer for Verde Monk concertYavapmond cencert newspaper advertisementai Community College is sponsoring one of those rare concerts on the Verde campus on Friday, August 22 at 7 p.m. at the Maybery Pavilion with the T.S. Monk Jr. Jazz Trio. In a Community College flyer tickets for the concert were advertised at $20 and $10 dollars. In an advertisement in the Sunday, August 17  Verde Independent, readers were urged to go to www.ycpac.com for tickets. Once there, you learn the tickets are FREE. However, nothing in the newspaper advertisement suggests they are free. An email sent by the College on Saturday, August 16 to a number of Verde residents informed them that the concert is free. 

Reliable sources say that the decision was made Friday afternoon, August 15 to change the concert from one with paid tickets to a free event.   Therefore, the confusing print advertising.  We have been assured that the event is FREE to the public on the Verde campus.

However, if you want to see the trio a day earlier (August 21), they will perform at 7:30 at the Performing Arts Center on the Prescott campus. Tickets for the performance in Prescott are $25 and $48 dollars per seat. 

T.S. Monk Jazz Trio free concert

T.S. Monk Jazz Trio to perform free concert on Verde Campus, Friday, August 22,  7 p.m.

The T.S. Monk Jazz Trio will perform a free concert at the outdoor Charles Mabery Pavilion at the Verde  Campus in Clarkdale, on Friday,  August 22.  The show begins at  7 p.m.  

TS MONK TRIOThe trio has received rave reviews in the Hollywood Reporter, Variety, the L.A. Times, and others.  There have been sold out concert hall shows across the United States, Europe, South America and the Middle East.

This should be an outstanding concert!

Yavapai College Art Faculty Exhibition

Art Exhibit will showcase the work of Prescott campus art faculty members 

In a Community College press release it was announced that Yavapai Community College will “showcase the work of its Prescott campus art faculty members from Friday, August 8 through Saturday, September 13.”   The press release did not indicate when, where or if ever ART FACULTY EXHIBITION 1Verde Valley art faculty will have their work showcased. 

Several of the artists will be on hand during the reception on Friday, August 22 from 5 to 7 p.m. to discuss their work, as well as the art courses they teach at Yavapai College.

Theater on Prescott campus lost $680,000 this past year

Auxillaries intended to be self-sufficient will lose $871,000; theater biggest loser; taxpayers to make up loss

What if you managed a theater and it lost a half million dollars or more every year over the past five years?  What if you obtained a $5 million dollar loan to improve the seating, lighting, technology, and add a fancy kitchen to the theater?  Then, after all that, you incurred a loss this past year of $680,000?  What do you think would happen to you?  And your theater project?

Well, for Prescott based Yavapai Community College administrators there is nothing to worry about when projects like these lose millions of dollars.  They simply dip into the taxpayer pot of money available to them and make-up for the losses.  No fuss; no concern; for them, no big deal. 

For example, the 1105 seat theater on the Prescott campus, dubbed by campus administrators as the Performing Arts Center, is now estimated to have gone into the hole the past academic year by at least $680 thousand dollars.  The huge loss was incurred in spite of a $5 million dollar renovation project covering the past five years, which was paid for through county property taxes. 

Performing Arts Cernter

The theater, with many programs not reasonably accessible to many County residents outside the Prescott area, continues to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars.

One of the renovation projects many felt was not needed involved installation of a kitchen at a cost of around $750,000 to make the campus theater a  dinner theater. If financial loses are any indication of how well the dinner theater worked, well, it didn’t work. 

Auxiliaries, which are viewed as campus businesses of sorts, are intended to break even.  This past year the Community College auxiliaries, which include the theater,  failed to break-even by $871,000.  Recall that Prescott administrators closed the Sedona Film school, an actual academic program, because they claimed it was being too highly subsidized.  However, it is doubtful they would ever consider closing a nonacademic project such as this theater because, as they see it, it brings culture to the city of Prescott and prestige to them.   Source:  August 2014 Governing Board Agenda with reports.