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SudburyState of the Arts

Newer arts organizations finding success in Sudbury

While some in the Sudbury arts community are dealing with financial setbacks, younger organizations are finding success by offering audiences something new.

Engaging programming key to attracting new audiences

The cast of YES Theatre's "Violet" performs in August. The Sudbury theatre company is one example of newer arts organizations that are finding success, as other organizations face challenges. (YES Theatre/Facebook)

Alessandro Costantini remembers the early days of YES Theatre, when he was just a student at St. Charles Collegewho wanted to put on the musical Hair with his friends.

"We were rehearsing in the back of my high school," he recalls.

"I remember one day the high school was closed, we didn't have a key, so we just plugged my iPod into someone's car and just, like, opened the doors and were just rehearsing with the cast album."

Nearly a decade later, Costantiniis the artistic director for a theatre company that can now afford to pay its artists and even bring in talent from outside the city.

In August, YES Theatre wrapped up its first summer festival to have two main productions, and next summerthe theatre company will mark its tenth anniversary with an original commissioned musical.

"We've really gone from it being this little chill jam session with me and my friends, to it becoming this institution that I think is one of the most important in northern Ontario," Costantini says.

Alessandro Costantini, the artistic director for YES Theatre, started the theatre company when he was a high school student in Sudbury. (Robin De Angelis/CBC)

'We want to shake things up'

While other longstanding arts organizations in Sudbury are dealing with financial setbacks, younger organizationsare finding success by offering audiences something new.

More than 8,600 people took to the streets of downtown Sudbury for Up Here in August.

Over the last four years, the urban art and music festival known for the bold and colourful murals it has brought to the city's core has also been steadily growing.

Co-founder Jen McKerral admits the festival hasn't been without its challenges. In 2016, a dismal, rainy weekend put a dent in ticket sales and the festival ultimately took a financial hit.

The festival has been able to build back up since then, with a record number of people attending this summer.

McKerral says they've always strived to offer engaging programming, from murals and pop-up concerts, to mystery tours and family-friendly events.

"We always want to shake things up. We always want to make sure that we're not getting too comfortable," she says.

Up Here co-founder Jen McKerral says although the festival has faced it's challenges, they've always strived to offer engaging programming. (Robin De Angelis/CBC)

Unique experiences

Programming is also key for YES Theatre, which tends to offer big, crowd-pleasing musicals like Jesus Christ Superstar, Hairspray and Billy Elliot.

Costantini says another part of the company's appeal is that it offers a hybrid of community and professional theatre.

The cast ranges from professionally-trained, unionized actors to community members with a passion for theatre.

"That kind of like smashing together of different experiences creates a really unique energy that the audience, I think, really feels," Costantini says.

"It makes this really palpable, visceral energy that kind of strikes them when they take in these productions."

Programming key

The success of YES Theatre and Up Heremight provide lessons for Theatre Cambrian, The Sudbury Theatre Centre and the Sudbury Symphony Orchestra three organizations that are trying to recover, after receiving emergency funding from the city within the last year.

Like their younger counterparts, all three are trying to find programming that audiences will connect with.

For the Symphony, that meansoffering more traditional classical music. Board member Brian Koivu says audiences have been less responsive to more operatic fair in the past.

Theatre Cambrian dedicated its July board meeting strictly to programming, according to president Derek Young. In November, the theatre company is offering the family-friendly Addams Family Musical.

"We do community theatre," Young says. "And if we don't get this right, we're not putting bums in seats and we're not going to be generating revenue, and we're not going to have the buy-in from the community.

The Sudbury Symphony Orchestra is focusing on traditional classical music this season, according to board member Brian Koivu. (sudburysymphony.com)

'The arts isn't going anywhere'

John McHenry, the artistic director for the Sudbury Theatre Centre, emphasizes the importance of telling stories that are meaningful to a local audience, like the Ballad of Stompin' Tom, which debuts in September.

McHenry says the community has an appetite for the arts it's just a matter of figuring out what people want.

"I know it's a bit of a cliche and I've said it before, but there's nothing like it, than coming and sitting in a darkened theatre and sharing emotions with people around you," he says.

"The arts isn't going anywhere soon. We just need you know that new generation of people to start embracing live theatre, and finding out what it's all about."

Working together

Other changes are underway for these struggling organizations.

The Sudbury Theatre Centre and the Symphony have both scaled back on paid staff positions, while Theatre Cambrian is selling its building, all in an effort to reduce operating costs.

They're also looking for more opportunities to share resources, collaborate and learn from each other.

"The one thing that we're doing as a theatre family is learning from each other and growing and playing nice in the sandbox," Young says.

"So at some point, by Theatre Cambrian going through this process, it will become a best practice. If your organization's running deficits, if you're having operational challenges, this is how we fixed it."