April 9, 2010, Los Angeles Times — It's time again for the national arts establishment's annual choreographed visit to Capitol Hill in an attempt to gain Congress' ear — and its favor in coming budget deliberations.
For Tuesday's "Arts Advocacy Day," actors Kyle McLachlan and Jeff Daniels will fill the famous-folks slot among those testifying at a congressional hearing on the arts.
Last year, Linda Ronstadt, Wynton Marsalis and Josh Groban were the celebrity artillery in the push coordinated by Americans for the Arts, a leading arts lobbying and support group. The bottom-line results weren't negligible. Advocates proposed a $200-million annual budget for the National Endowment for the Arts, and Congress did ultimately up President Obama's $161.3-million ante for the arts, passing a $167.5-million NEA appropriation. That 8.1% hike (compared with Obama's proposed increase of about 4%) came amid a dismal economy and on top of a one-time $50-million boost for the NEA to make job-creating grants, part of last year's economic stimulus bill.
McLachlan and Daniels will be joined on Tuesday by a military man: retired Army Brig. Gen. Nolen V. Bivens, who is expected to testify about the role of cultural diplomacy in furthering America's foreign policy and national security interests, with hopes of a bigger appropriation toward that end for the State Department. Also in the advocacy lineup are Charles Segars, chief executive of arts network Ovation TV; Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter; Terri Aldrich, director of a North Dakota arts council; and Robert Lynch, president of Americans for the Arts.
This time, the advocates will propose $180 million in NEA spending in the 2011 budget, Americans for the Arts spokeswoman Liz Bartolomeo said Wednesday. That would be a 7.5% hike, vaulting the agency over its previous high-water mark of $176 million in 1992, but still far short of the $272 million needed to equal the buying power the NEA had 18 years ago, before it was nearly dismantled amid that time's "culture wars." Obama is holding pat on the arts, proposing the same $161.3 million for the NEA that he did a year ago.
Mike Boehm
August 31, 2009, The Los Angeles Times — Hoping to boost attendance after a year of production cuts and emergency fundraising appeals, the financially stretched Geffen Playhouse has worked in a new marketing wrinkle: using the Web-based ticket-discounter Goldstar to sell season subscriptions at half price.
The J. Paul Getty Trust, envied as the economic Goliath of the museum world, is slashing its operating budget nearly 25% for the coming fiscal year, an emergency response to investment losses that have totaled $1.5 billion since July and nearly $2 billion since mid-2007.