Culture Magazine

City Opera Occupies Financial District

By Superconductor @ppelkonen
Opera company moves into new office over a cigar store.
(No, really.)

City Opera Occupies Financial District

The ITT Building at 75 Broad Street,
new home of New York City Opera.

Like a rebellious teenager threatening to move out of the house, the  troubled New York City Opera has finally made good on its threat and left Lincoln Center altogether.
The opera company, which announced earlier this year that it would not be performing in its longtime home at the former New York State Theater, had maintained offices in the building for the last eight months. Their new digs are at 75 Broad Street, located in the heart of the financial district. An advertised rent for office space in the building listed it at $33 per square foot. 
Built in 1928 as the ITT building, this 33-story office block sits on the corner of Broad and South William Street, two blocks from the New York Stock Exchange. It is nowhere near any theaters, opera houses, concert halls, or anywhere else that could be used for the performance of opera. Perhaps the company will perform in the nine-seat cigar lounge of tobacconists Barclay Rex, who have a store in the building.
In other news, City Opera's labor impasse with two unions (Musicians' Local 806 and the American Guild of Musical Artists) continues after the musicians walked away from the table and started planning a strike. Opera company general manager George Steel has asked for a federal mediator to step in and jump-start a new session of negotiations. Given the new location two blocks from the heavily guarded New York Stock Exchange, Mr. Steel may enlist the New York Police Department as strike-breakers.
Before that happens, the mediator's task will be to persuade the musicians that a contract stripped of health benefits and offering only ten percent of their former salaries is some kind of upgrade over making money to perform opera. In November, the company rejected an offer from its orchestra to play for free in exchange for keeping their health benefits.
City Opera has until February to get their musicians in line (or hire scabs.) The company's truncated season is scheduled to open at the Brooklyn Academy of Music with productions of Verdi's La Traviata and Prima Donna, the new French-language opera by singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright.
The most disturbing news about City Opera comes from the blog VoiceTalk, written by singer Daniel James Shigo. Mr. Shigo published a story on Dec. 5 alleging that the opera company is planning to discard its archives. These include rare programs and photographs of the many stars who graced its stage in a history lasting more than half a century. Sad, but typical of the recent history under Mr. Steel's management.

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