As Madison Rep goes under, one last criticism from a critic

News
The "dialogue" between struggling arts organizations and struggling media continues across the country. Laura Collins-Hughes describes the latest sand throwing in Madison and Los Angeles in Survival Tip: Talk to the Media, on the NAJP blog. Tip courtesy Thomas Cott's fabulous You've Cott Mail daily arts news email.
Ever since Wall Street began its free fall last September, arts organizations going under have hardly needed to give a cause for their demise. The popular, rarely questioned assumption -- even on the part of many journalists -- is that the economy did them in. Which is what makes Milwaukee Journal Sentinel theater critic Damien Jaques' blog post about the recent death of Madison Repertory Theatre remarkable. "The news was disseminated in the same inept, clumsy way the company has conducted much of its business for the past five years," he writes. "The Madison Rep's financial and public relations problems began long before the national economy tanked." Arts organizations love to crow about the "free publicity" they get from the media, but too few of them grasp how crucial it is to engage in real communication with journalists: editors, reporters and critics. If journalists can't get close enough to organizations to try to understand them, it's unlikely we'll fully comprehend their value, let alone reflect it in the quality or quantity of our coverage. It's also probable that we won't detect any signs of trouble until they're screaming for help. That last might be fine for the people in charge, who'd rather keep their organizations' problems out of view, but it's not so great for employees or audiences or communities.

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Headshot of Leah Cooper
Leah Cooper

Leah Cooper is a freelance stage director, nonprofit administration consultant, co-founder of this here Web site, co-artistic director of Wonderlust Productions, and the Executive Director of the Minnesota Theater Alliance. She is also on the board of directors for Live Action Set and the California Institute of Contemporary Arts. From 2001 to 2006, she led the Minnesota Fringe Festival to annual attendance increases and financial stability. Up next, she is directing Shooting Star at Park Square Theatre and writing a play for Wonderlust's Adoption Play Project.