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	<title>Jeff Daniel &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Jeff Daniel &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Hippodrome hopes a new arts district can jumpstart the neighborhood</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/hippodrome-hopes-a-new-arts-district-can-jumpstart-the-neighborhood/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Feb 2014 10:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[arts district]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bromo Seltzer Arts Tower]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bromo Tower Arts & Entertainment District]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Everyman Theatre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[France-Merrick Performing Arts Center]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hippodrome]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeff Daniel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[theater]]></category>
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			<p>A champagne-colored Jaguar pulls to the curb in front of the<br />
Hippodrome Theatre on a snowy Sunday afternoon. Two middle-aged women<br />
get out, duck under the marquee, and scurry inside as the car departs.<br />
Other theatergoers—clustered in groups of two, three, and four—tramp<br />
down North Eutaw Street, navigating icy sidewalks and the stream of<br />
traffic. Not everyone heads to the Hippodrome’s <em>White Christmas</em> holiday show though—some folks are arriving early for a matinee of <em>Red</em><br />
 at Everyman Theatre, around the corner. Adding to the bustle, flocks of<br />
 fans in purple jerseys walk toward M&#038;T Bank Stadium for the Ravens<br />
game, or duck into Alewife to watch it on one of the bar’s televisions.</p>
<p>It’s<br />
 a scene envisioned by developers and city planners when the Hippodrome<br />
reopened 10 years ago after $70 million worth of renovations. The<br />
renovation included two adjacent buildings, and the new complex was<br />
rechristened the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center.</p>
<p>The<br />
theater, seen mostly as a destination for touring Broadway musicals, was<br />
 trumpeted as the crown jewel in what figured to be a transformative<br />
redevelopment of the surrounding area. The Hippodrome was “a project<br />
considered crucial to reviving Baltimore’s faded Westside,” according to<br />
 <em>The Sun</em> and many others. The strategic plan proposed by the<br />
Baltimore Development Corporation identified it as “the most significant<br />
 component of the Westside revitalization effort,” which would infuse<br />
the area with “residential, retail, and restaurants to serve the needs<br />
of theater patrons, visitors, workers, and residents.”</p>
<p>A decade<br />
later, the theater has mostly fulfilled its promise, enduring some rough<br />
 stretches along the way, while the broader renaissance it was supposed<br />
to kick-start never materialized. In fact, the larger Westside project,<br />
as embodied by its so-called “Superblock” component, has become<br />
synonymous with bureaucratic and legal gridlock. Observers rarely equate<br />
 the Westside with renaissance these days; instead, terms like “stalled”<br />
 and “in jeopardy” are more the norm.</p>
<p>“Since 90 percent of the<br />
development plans didn’t happen, it leads people to say, ‘I told you<br />
that wouldn’t work,’” says Jeff Daniel, president of the France-Merrick<br />
Performing Arts Center. “And we get dragged into those negative<br />
perceptions about the lack of development.”</p>
<p>So where does the<br />
revamped theater, a community anchor in a sea of red tape, turn for<br />
much-needed momentum and rebranding as it enters its second decade?</p>
<p>The<br />
 answer, says Daniel, is to downplay a dubious geographic designation<br />
and more fully embrace its role as a local arts organization, which<br />
makes sense considering recent developments.</p>
<p>Daniel notes the<br />
theater isn’t actually located on the city’s west side—it’s a downtown<br />
venue, like the arena, Convention Center, or sports stadiums. He also<br />
believes the Hippodrome’s inclusion within the boundaries of the Bromo<br />
Tower Arts &#038; Entertainment District, designated in 2012 as the<br />
city’s third arts district (after Station North and Highlandtown), is a<br />
natural fit for branding and marketing purposes, especially with<br />
Everyman in the mix. He feels the theaters can help establish the<br />
district’s identity and transform once-blighted properties into<br />
arts-centric incubators à la Station North.</p>
<p>“There’s something<br />
happening here now, in the past 18 months,” says Daniel of the period<br />
coinciding with the arts district designation. “I get information almost<br />
 daily that indicates we’re at a true tipping point.”  </p>
<p>Everyman<br />
artistic director Vincent Lancisi concurs. “We’re veteran pioneers, and<br />
we know what it’s like to move into an underdeveloped neighborhood,”<br />
says Lancisi, who moved his theater to the Bromo Tower Arts &#038;<br />
Entertainment District from Station North last year. “We have a ways to<br />
go, but something is definitely going on here.” </p>
<p>Sitting in the<br />
Hippodrome’s VIP lounge—surrounded by large-format photographs of<br />
automobiles by Lexus, the lounge’s corporate sponsor—the 43-year-old<br />
Daniel exudes measured, but unwavering, confidence in the overall<br />
development process. It can be painfully slow, he points out, and he’s<br />
seen it before, in cities like Boston, MA, and San Antonio, TX.  </p>
<p>Daniel<br />
 began his arts administration career 20 years ago, when, as a business<br />
major fresh out of Oklahoma State University, he worked with Theater<br />
Management Group (TMG) to help restore a vaudeville-era theater in San<br />
Antonio. Although he had no theater background, he was hooked. Daniel<br />
became general manager at TMG and specialized in devising public-private<br />
 partnerships to finance the development of historic theaters. He<br />
managed venues and promoted touring Broadway shows for Clear Channel<br />
after the media behemoth bought TMG in 1998. He also worked on the deal<br />
between Clear Channel, the Maryland Stadium Authority, and the nonprofit<br />
 Hippodrome Foundation that bankrolled the Hippodrome.</p>
<p>“I go way back with this project,” says Daniel. “I was there at the beginning, practically before the beginning.”</p>
<p>Key<br />
 Brand Entertainment, a company steeped in the development and<br />
production of live theater, eventually acquired Clear Channel’s theater<br />
assets and hired Daniel for the Hippodrome job in 2009. Upon arriving in<br />
 Baltimore, he was surprised to learn that Baltimoreans didn’t feel much<br />
 of a connection to the theater, which was known for productions of<br />
blockbusters such as <em>The Producers, The Lion King</em>, and <em>Wicked</em>,<br />
 but little else. “It was like Clear Channel developed a theater,<br />
dropped it downtown, and announced, ‘It’s open,’” recalls Daniel. “It<br />
wasn’t presented as a longterm asset for the community, so there seemed<br />
to be a disconnect.”</p>
<p>That belief was confirmed when he spoke with<br />
Hippodrome staffers. “None of their priorities involved the community or<br />
 taking a leadership role in the city,” says Daniel. “No one was given<br />
any credit for opening the doors and trying new things, which led to a<br />
decrease in the amount of people who felt any attachment to the theater<br />
and a decrease in the number of people who came here.”</p>
<p>The number<br />
of Broadway shows decreased, as well. The revamped Hippodrome was<br />
projected to host 26 weeks of theater by 2009, but, when Daniel arrived,<br />
 it was down to about half that, and the venue was losing money. Coupled<br />
 with the effects of the recession, it was a downward trend compounded<br />
by costly expenditures such as a yearly utility bill of $1 million. The<br />
average theater of the Hippodrome’s size pays $180,000.</p>
<p>That<br />
figure resulted from an arrangement that allowed the theater to tap into<br />
 city utility systems instead of constructing its own heating and<br />
cooling plant back in 2003. The deal reportedly saved $4 million up<br />
front, but its escalating fees and interest were ill-advised for the<br />
long-term.</p>
<p>Daniel knew things had to change.</p>
<p>Key Brand<br />
 renegotiated the utility arrangement, and, according to Daniel, the<br />
current deal is significantly better, though still more costly than the<br />
average Broadway theater. The Hippodrome retooled its subscription<br />
series, giving patrons more flexibility in their choices, and the number<br />
 of subscribers ticked up to 9,000 this year. (It had dwindled to a low<br />
of 8,000 for the 2008-2009 season, after peaking at 14,400 in<br />
2004-2005.)</p>
<p>The theater also expanded its offerings by presenting events like the Foodie Experience and a touring <em>MythBusters</em><br />
 show, as well as concerts by the likes of Neil Young and Styx. Daniel<br />
mentions he’d like to see an outside arts presenter curate and book a<br />
series of modern dance, ballet, and children’s shows to further expand<br />
the Hippodrome’s programming.</p>
<p>The moves are apparently paying off.<br />
 As a private company, Key Brand doesn’t disclose figures, but Daniel<br />
claims the venue is now profitable. “We were losing considerable sums<br />
when we got here, and we stopped that,” he says. “We’re not making<br />
considerable sums, but we have a lot to be proud of.”</p>
<p>With<br />
finances under control, Daniel has worked on improving the Hippodrome’s<br />
community standing. With help from the nonprofit Hippodrome Foundation,<br />
the theater brought Soulful Symphony, the predominantly African-American<br />
 orchestra led by Darin Atwater, aboard for a residency and shows,<br />
including an upcoming concert in May. The foundation also sponsors a<br />
summer arts camp (Camp Hippodrome), a Young Critics Program (run by<br />
Geoffrey Himes, an occasional Baltimore contributor), master classes for<br />
 local high-school students, and outreach programs at libraries, senior<br />
centers, and hospitals.</p>
<p>“The development of the Hippodrome<br />
Foundation has been important, because what we do can’t stop at the<br />
theater walls,” says Daniel. “It should extend into the neighborhood,<br />
where we can take a leadership role.”</p>
<p>With that in mind, the<br />
Hippodrome figures to be a major player in the new arts district.<br />
Bounded by Paca Street to the west and Park Avenue to the east, it<br />
extends from Lombard Street into Mt. Vernon and includes a variety of<br />
arts organizations—from the Maryland Historical Society and Eubie Blake<br />
National Jazz Institute and Cultural Center to Arena Players and<br />
galleries like Sub-Basement Artist Studios, Current Space, and Gallery<br />
Four. The designation, says Bromo Tower Arts &#038; Entertainment<br />
District director Priya Bhayana, not only provides tax incentives for<br />
arts-related development, it also “strengthens a critical sense of<br />
community that creates a framework for [these organizations] to<br />
recognize one another, collaborate, and participate in strategic and<br />
thoughtful planning for the neighborhood.”</p>
<p>Everyone pretty much<br />
agrees the district already has significant daytime foot traffic from<br />
the nearby University of Maryland, Baltimore campus, the University of<br />
Maryland Medical Center, and various government offices. Thanks to such<br />
entities, it also has a highly educated base of local residents. What it<br />
 needs is more foot traffic at night, enhanced safety measures, and a<br />
solid infrastructure of services for residents, who generally shop and<br />
dine elsewhere.</p>
<p>The same goes for Hippodrome patrons. “They drop<br />
in to see shows, get in their cars, and leave,” says Daniel, who<br />
believes that initiatives like the arts district designation, the<br />
proposed renovation of Lexington Market, and David S. Brown’s new<br />
Baltimore Street high-rise—a mix of apartments, office space, and<br />
retail—can help provide needed amenities for the Hippodrome’s coming<br />
decade.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Daniel says it would be great if some of the folks coming to this month’s run of <em>The Book of Mormon</em><br />
 drop in to see what’s on view at Current or check out what’s happening<br />
at EMP Collective. “There’s actually a lot going on already,” he says.<br />
“It’s not like we’re out here in the badlands by ourselves.”</p>
<p><em>John Lewis is arts and culture editor at Baltimore.</em></p>

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