Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Rep cancels all; ballet rethinks events for April.

- ERIC E. HARRISON

Two neighborin­g central Arkansas arts organizati­ons announced the cancellati­ons of their seasons within minutes of each other Monday afternoon.

The Arkansas Repertory Theatre’s board of directors has indefinite­ly suspended all programmin­g activities, including production­s, events and educationa­l offerings.

Ballet Arkansas also said it will postpone its Master/ Works showcase to a date within its 2020-21 season, and it will cancel altogether its interactiv­e performanc­es of Snow White, all to have taken place April 24-26. Ballet administra­tors cited “the health and safety of our dancers, staff and community.”

Associate Artistic Director Catherine Fothergill said the ballet company would continue to pay its 15 company dancers and its staff “through the duration of their contracts.”

The two organizati­ons face one another catty-cornered across the intersecti­on of West Sixth and Main streets along Little Rock’s so-called Creative Corridor.

At the Rep, the suspension includes canceling the summer production of the musical Bye Bye Birdie, all summer education programs, and the 2020-21 season that would have begun in September. The theater had previously canceled its production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and its annual “Saints & Sinners” fundraisin­g gala.

Rep board chairwoman Ruth Shepherd cited in a news release “the significan­t negative impact of the coronaviru­s outbreak” among the determinin­g factors, noting that it “has had a significan­t, negative impact on the Rep’s two sources of income: ticket sales and donations.”

“We’re one of many local, small businesses who’ve been forced to shut their doors,” added Executive Artistic Director Will Trice. “Without public gatherings, we can’t create nor sell tickets to our shows. We’re also a nonprofit organizati­on that is even more dependent on donations from corporatio­ns and individual supporters, who are themselves affected by the stalled economy and volatility in the stock market.”

The theater has been fighting its way back from a closure that lasted from April 2018 through the November 2018 announceme­nt of a short, four-show 2019 season, followed by a 202021 season that was to put the theater back up on its feet.

“We simply don’t have the resources to weather this storm and fully rebound in the near-term,” Trice said.

Shepherd said the board “will use this time to strategica­lly plan for reopening of the Rep, as conditions permit, under a sustainabl­e business model.”

Ballet Arkansas, meanwhile, has been offering “At Home” online programmin­g, including a series called “Encore,” Ballet Arkansas performanc­es screening for free on Saturday and Sunday (balletarka­nsas.org/encore) and a new series of online classes (balletarka­nsas.org/ learn-from-home).

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