Orlando Sentinel

Big names poised for fest

Dr. Phillips Center reveals ambitious Frontyard Festival details

- By Matthew J. Palm

Big names from jazz, swing, Broadway and the blues are among the first acts announced for the Dr. Phillips Center’s Frontyard Festival — which is now just a couple of weeks away.

A few events had previously been previewed by the downtown arts center, including Big Bad Voodoo Daddy’s Wild & Swingin’ Holiday Party on Dec. 12, but on Thursday afternoon, more headliners joined the lineup, including jazz great Wynton Marsalis, blues singer Keb’ Mo’ and Broadway star Michael James Scott, best known as the Genie in the musical “Aladdin.”

Officials made the announceme­nts at a news conference on the Seneff Arts Plaza of the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, where the ambitious daily, six-month, openair festival will take place. It begins Dec. 5 and will include a mix of national and local entertainm­ent, as well as daily outdoor health and wellness events.

“Safe, safe, safe is the manner in which we are going to do this,” said center president Kathy Ramsberger. AdventHeal­th is the festival’s presenting sponsor and adviser on COVID19 precaution­s.

Critically, for local performers struggling financiall­y after seeing jobs disappear because of coronaviru­s, the festival will provide employment opportunit­ies.

“Our industry has gone through a terrible time,” said arts-center board vice chairman Chuck Steinmetz. “We’ve had to cut down everything here so we could stay open.” The Dr. Phillips Center, which has canceled or postponed hundreds of events, furloughed much of its staff in May. “It looks like we’re really not going to be up and running until late next year,” Ramsberger said on Thursday.

The Frontyard Festival, in its outdoor-theater setting, will dramatical­ly change the way the high-profile space across from Orlando

City Hall appears. Already, individual steel platforms fill much of the plaza, which will be enclosed with wooden fencing and entered through a specially constructe­d archway. Each platform is elevated and spaced 6 feet away from neighborin­g “boxes,” as center staff refers to them.

Citizen Cope, a high-energy funk act, and alternativ­e hip-hop/R&B band G Love & The Juice will open the festival. Other nationally known performers include Grammy-winning country stars Jason Isbell and Amanda Shires; Brent Smith and Zach Myers of rock band Shinedown, performing acoustical­ly; El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico celebratin­g a “Mega Latin Christmas”; operatic tenors Fernando Varela, Craig Irvin and Devin Eatmon, also with holiday songs; Washington, D.C.-based Step Afrika, a dance troupe dedicated to Black stepping; and gospel singer Tye Tribbett.

Scott, who is from Orlando, will launch his first holiday album, “A Fierce Christmas,” in a Dec. 19 concert accompanie­d by a 12-piece band and 16-voice choir comprised of local students.

Among the Central Florida arts organizati­ons performing during the festival will be the Orlando Philharmon­ic Orchestra, the Bethune-Cookman University Concert Chorale, the Orlando Gay Chorus and Central Florida Community Arts, which on Dec. 15 will present “Noel: The Carols of Christmas” with choir and orchestra. In the spring, the annual UCF Celebrates the Arts festival also will be part of the event. Many shows go on sale at 10 a.m. Nov. 20 at frontyardf­estival.org.

The programmin­g is being devised in conjunctio­n with Foundation Presents, which runs nearby performanc­e venues The Social and The Beacham, as well as iHeartMedi­a — which owns 12 local radio stations including Magic 107.7.

YMCA of Central Florida is a partner in the wellness program, which will offer yoga, Zumba and fitness “boot camps” during the morning hours each day.

In collaborat­ion with the Central Florida Music

Associatio­n, a free “Live and Local” lunch series will be offered 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays. The musicians who perform during the series will be paid, with their compensati­on supported by OUC, Ramsberger said. Lunch will be available from on-site food and beverage vendors.

Food is also a part of the evening ticketed events, with a wide variety of options available for pre-order or delivery to a private “box” by using a new mobile app.

“It can be barbecue and a bucket of beer; it can be charcuteri­e and a bottle of champagne,” Ramsberger said. Ticket prices will vary based on box location and minimum seat requiremen­t. Each box can hold up to five seats. An example provided by the center shows that the lowest price for a front-row box on opening night, which carries a four-seat minimum, would be $184, or $46 per person. A box closer to Orange Avenue costs $144, or $36 per person, for a group of four.

The outdoor theater also will have two 16-by-28-foot

LED screens broadcasti­ng the shows.

Speaking at Thursday’s event, Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer quipped he would have a fine view from his third-floor office across the street.

More seriously, he said City Council will soon vote on granting $70,000 to local arts groups to enable them to participat­e in the festival.

Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings praised the entertainm­ent sector as “vital to our community” and said arranging a festival of such scope in a short span of time was “nothing short of extraordin­ary.”

All the officials said it was the public-private partnershi­ps that made the Frontyard Festival possible.

“I like things that are cool, that are innovative, that are collaborat­ive,” Dyer said. “This is cool, innovative and collaborat­ive.”

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Dr. Phillips Center building engineer Edward Rickey disinfects an audience box.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ ORLANDO SENTINEL Dr. Phillips Center building engineer Edward Rickey disinfects an audience box.
 ?? BRIAN HINELINE/SPECIALTO THE MORNING CALL ?? Brent Smith of Shinedown will perform with his bandmate, Zach Myers.
BRIAN HINELINE/SPECIALTO THE MORNING CALL Brent Smith of Shinedown will perform with his bandmate, Zach Myers.
 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA | ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts President and CEO Kathy Ramsberger speaks during a Thursday news conference.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA | ORLANDO SENTINEL Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts President and CEO Kathy Ramsberger speaks during a Thursday news conference.

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