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New York arts organizers make best-laid plans for live events

Tommy Brunett plays The Penthouse.
Aaron Winters
Tommy Brunett plays The Penthouse.
Tommy Brunett plays The Penthouse.
Credit Aaron Winters
Tommy Brunett plays The Penthouse.

I had my coming-out from COVID-19 about a week and a half ago.

My first indoor concert in more than a year. Two solo acoustic performers: a ridiculously talented young guy, Max Doud, then Tommy Brunett, scratchy-voiced scenester and Fairport whiskey baron. It was a night at The Penthouse at One East Avenue, 11 floors up in the downtown Rochester skyline. It’s a spacious room, and the tables seemed separated enough. All four of the people at our table were fully vaccinated.

But what about everyone else in the fairly crowded room? Were they vaccinated? Were they a threat? I was a little edgy, asking myself: Am I doing the right thing?

When debating the question of when our arts scene will “return to normal,” as the optimists like to say, one thing’s for certain: Nothing’s for certain.

Last week, I also sat through a webinar called “Event Planning for Performing Arts Organizations and Venues,” presented by Rochester Area Community Foundation and the Rochester Fringe Festival. The title was reassuring, yet the speakers seemed to generate as many questions as answers. Like, when will we see any live music events bigger than a band playing a local bar? Will state guidelines on capacities for large venues and festivals be expanded to the point that those events are economically feasible?

Erica Fee
Credit Matt DeTurck
Erica Fee.

Erica Fee, founding producer and executive director of the Rochester Fringe Festival, was one of several webinar guests. While many similar events have decided to sit out 2021 (most recently July’s Corn Hill Arts Festival), Rochester Fringe’s September dates are cautiously viewed as pandemic-workable. So the Fringe is moving forward, although Fee admitted that the multi-arts extravaganza is behind on its usual date for inviting acts to apply to be a part of the event.

And there will be modifications. Last year’s Rochester Fringe was an all-virtual presentation; this fall’s performances will be a hybrid of virtual and in-person attendance. There will be no Spiegeltent, the quaint, mirror-filled Victorian theater usually parked at the intersection of Gibbs and East Main streets. And there will be no Parcel 5 extravaganza, attended by 10,000 people. The former is too intimate, the latter too likely a super-spreader event.

Hillary Olson, president and CEO of the Rochester Museum & Science Center, said that, like most museums, it is open with a caveat. “We’re not ready to come all the way back,” she said. But by mid-June, “when kids are on break and we have more audience,” RMSC expects to be ready, open seven days a week.

Erez Ziv is managing artistic director of FRIGID New York. The organization runs two New York City theater spaces that host five resident companies, generally offering 1,000 performances each year, two dozen shows each month, and eight festivals. When FRIGID was looking to put the live-entertainment freezeout behind it, Ziv was told that “guidelines are forthcoming.” 

“That’s all the guidelines we had when we decided to do a show,” he said.

So in early April, Ziv said he presented New York City’s only publicly ticketed theatrical performance with a live audience and a live performer in more than a year. And he didn’t hold back. Monologist Mike Daisey delivered an excoriating solo show attacking the alleged bullying tactics of Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the hugely influential film and theater producer Scott Rudin.

Under Ziv’s guidelines, audience members had to be vaccinated. Ziv also sold nearly 600 livestream views. That virtual link went up a half-hour before the start of the performance so that viewers could enjoy that pre-show murmur that always accompanies any sold-out live theater performance; for this venue’s capacity limitations, that was the murmur of 22 people.

The response of the arts to the pandemic has been open to individual interpretation, and that’s not the fault of the arts. It’s business. Some bars and small venues have been presenting music -- something “incidental” to go along with your dinner -- for months now. It’s economic survival.

Festivals and large venues can’t turn on a dime. Orlando Ortiz is president of the Puerto Rican Festival, which celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2019, then took a COVID-19 break last year. “We’re in a holding pattern until we get more guidance from the state,” he said of this year’s festival.

Several of the webinar speakers encouraged the use of the Excelsior Pass, a New York state initiative. It’s an optional verification that you’ve been vaccinated against COVID-19, good for anything from wedding receptions to concerts to sports events. A Centers for Disease Control vaccination card can be forged, but the information on an Excelsior Pass is tightly regulated. 

The public hesitancy is the fear that personal information can be stolen from the card. ButLuke Charde of the state’s Office of Information Technology Service pointed out that the card contains no private information, save for: Yes, this person has been vaccinated against COVID-19.

As one speaker pointed out, “This means we won’t kill people.”

If there’s any through-line here, it’s uncertainty. Or, as another speaker admitted, “It’s all a guessing game.”

Steve Adelman was what you might call the webcast’s keynote speaker. Looks and sounds a bit like the actor Steve Carell. “Why should I listen to this guy?” he said, seemingly questioning his own credentials, as well as his coffee intake. “He seems rather caffeinated.”

But Adelman has credentials in this discussion. He is an Arizona sports and entertainment lawyer and a law school professor, focusing on risk and safety at live events. He was called upon to examine the 2017 Route 91 Harvest Festival shooting in Las Vegas, in which a hotel-room sniper killed 60 people and injured hundreds more at a Jason Aldean concert.

Sports and entertainment lawyer Steve Adelman, wearing his Safety Monitor fez, speaks at a webinar titled Event Planning for Performing Arts Organizations and Venues
Credit Zoom screenshot
Sports and entertainment lawyer Steve Adelman, wearing his Safety Monitor fez, speaks at a webinar titled Event Planning for Performing Arts Organizations and Venues

Adelman is a serious pro, who gently mocked the approach of Arizona Governor and “ice-cream scooper” Doug Ducey. Ducey is the former CEO of Cold Stone Creamery, if you’re wondering about the background of the people making life-or-death decisions. “If you would listen to our governor,” Adelman said, “the pandemic is over.”

Adelman makes it clear, the pandemic is by no means over. Masking remains key. That’s if the people you’re around wear the mask properly over the nose, and below the chin. Or wear it at all. Face coverings are unreliable, Adelman said, because people are unreliable.

Protecting ourselves from hazards can be an inconvenience, Adelman admitted. At one point during his talk, he put on a bright yellow fez labeled “Safety monitor” to emphasize -- or more likely mock -- his own role in warning the public of the danger presented by COVID-19. When the mask comes off, whether for singing or for eating and drinking, the opportunity for transmitting the virus increases, he noted.

“I don’t eat in public places these days," Adelman said, “because, well, I’m surrounded by knuckleheads.”

Jeff Spevak is WXXI’s Arts & Life editor and reporter. He can be reached at jspevak@wxxi.org.

Copyright 2021 WXXI News

Jeff Spevak has been a Rochester arts reporter for nearly three decades, with seven first-place finishes in the Associated Press New York State Features Writing Awards while working for the Democrat and Chronicle. He has also been published in Musician and High Times magazines, contributed to WXXI, City newspaper and Post magazine, and occasionally performs spoken-word pieces around town. Some of his haikus written during the Rochester jazz festival were self-published in a book of sketches done by Scott Regan, the host of WRUR’s Open Tunings show. Spevak founded an award-winning barbecue team, The Smokin’ Dopes, and believes Bigfoot is real. His book on the life of a Lake Ontario sailor who survived the sinking of his ship during World War II will be published in April of 2019 by Lyons Press.