Jack in the Box & the Imminent Demise of the Local Arts Publicist
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Former stellar publicist Doug Tuck of the Vancouver Opera |
The idea of this blog has given me a week-long insomnia as I
wrestled in my mind about writing it.
I believe that with the fall of journalism, particularly in
Vancouver the lofty job of arts publicist is in the imminent process of
extinction. Last week it was about the demise of the arts critic.
In the 20th century when rock records were at
their apogee local record company reps were the kings of the block. They could
at a whim deny any access to their visiting stars to any arts or newspaper
publication that did not play by their rules. During my long stint as
photographer for Vancouver Magazine I worked with rock writer Les Wiseman whose
credibility was so good that record reps granted us access (particularly for back-stage
interviews with their corresponding photo sessions) to almost everything. As
records became second fiddles to CDs and with the advent of digital recordings
record companies and their reps lost their importance.
As a member of the board of the Pacific Baroque Orchestra in
the late 90s I once called up CBC Radio Arts Reporter Paul Grant on a Wednesday
with the following tease, “How would you like to interview a grown baritone who
sings in falsetto?” He nicely and graciously took the bait. He interviewed
countertenor Matthew White (now Executive and Artistic Director of Early MusicVancouver) on the Thursday. The interview was aired Friday morning and the
Friday night concert sold out. This sort of thing would be impossible now as
the CBC in Vancouver no longer has a a reporter dedicated to the arts.
Representing several local publications as an assigned
photographer I dealt with many arts publicists. In that 20th century
any decent arts organization had a full-time publicist who was savvy.
The most savvy of them all was Vancouver Opera publicist
Doug Tuck. He was never pushy. He was urbane, knowledgeable and inventive. When
I had to photograph an opera star he arranged for makeup and wigs just for me.
As a pre-opera commentator he was the best. What I was never able to tell him
is that he got covers and articles in publications because editors and arts
editors like him. For me the retraction of the season of the Vancouver Opera
into the present began when they promoted Tuck to marketing and starting hired
free-lance publicists.
How did film company’s promote their films in that 20th
century? Film writers and film critics were sent on junkets (that’s the word!)
to La and put up in the best hotels. Press conferences where planned in large
hotel rooms where the writers sat near the film star or director. They all
placed their recorders on a central table. Writers shot their questions. Local
Vancouver writers then wrote essays that were supposed to be exclusive
interviews. With the advent of cheap phone communications and the internet/email
interview the glorious junkets all but disappeared.
One version of it still survives in Vancouver. An editor or
good writer, as an example, is sent to South Africa (First Class naturally) by
let’s say the De Beers Group in South Africa to interview company principals.
De Beers provides the magazine with first class photographs. Then the magazine
publishes a lovely and wonderful “article” about the diamond industry.
In the 80s and 90s magazine or newspaper articles that were
hidden adds were called service pieces. A new variation appeared in the
Wednesday October 26 Vancouver Sun. In its first section it boast four
full-page section on interior design “sponsored by the likes of Inspiration
Furniture, Jag’s Furniture & Mattress and La-Z-Boy.
In this dying attempt to keep paper with ink my wife tells me that she refuses to read the local arts weekly because of the jumble of ads. Clean design disappeared years ago.
This finally brings me back to the publicist. Let us say you
are a publicist at a theatre company and you are full-time. What do you do?
As a frequent contributor to Vancouver Magazine, the Georgia
Straight and several business magazines in that dawn of things digital I
personally saw editors like Vancouver Magazine’s Malcolm Parry chuck into the
waste basket the countless press releases that were mailed to the magazine.
Imagine what happens to emailed press releases.
The publicist might attempt to communicate with overworked
arts editors or with publications that do not have such a thing. Then the
publicist if indeed a yes has been received is faced with the unwritten fact
that if a publication does a preview they will not do a review (or the
opposite). And if you count the fact that you might have around 3½ publications
that mention the arts (the Vancouver Sun on Wednesdays exclusively features
food as “the arts” attempting to fill seats in a concert hall is a tough
proposition.
So what how do arts organizations survive in our Vancouver?
Consider this: You go to an Early Music Vancouver concert. In the venue lobby
you are handed a program that includes a little sheet of paper where you are
asked to write your name, phone number (and very important you are asked for
your e-mail). You are told that there will be a draw before the concert begins
where you might win two tickets for upcoming concerts.
The purpose of the above is to enlarge their base of
would-be concert goer’s base. This is what now helps to fill seats in
Vancouver.
Because it is the responsibility of artists and art
organizations to call up city
publications to inform them of coming events (very little chance that that a
press release might have then call you) artists have found that the best way to
promote upcoming concerts, dance performances and small theatrical productions
is via their email base.
I am on the e-mail list of Turning Point Ensemble, ColinMacDonald, Marina Hasselberg, Early Music Vancouver, the Pacific BaroqueOrchestra, John Oliver, Vancouver Symphony/Jocelyn Morlock, La Modestine/MarcDestrubé , the Microcosmos Quartet and many more. Plus many churches including St.Philip's Anglican in the Dunbar area have very good musical programs.
I never miss anything. Plus every year the UBC School of
Music mails me their season’s brochure of concerts especially the noon ones.
As an example how would you know about this interesting
concert to be held at the Orpheum Annex on Saturday(how many of you reading this know of
the existence of the Annex?):
For Immediate Release:
Jack in the Box
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29th at 8 p.m.
Orpheum Annex, 823 Seymour St., Vancouver, BC
Tickets: $20/15 at the door or at www.yarilomusic.com
Once again Yarilo is offering intriguing new, and
unexpected musical ideas! This time we will take you on a path of musical
freedom - unrestricted, unpredicted! Together with the Colin MacDonald Pocket
Orchestra and ProArte Ballet Company we will follow on the steps of Francis
Picabia, one of the fathers of the Dada movement who said: "My mind
depends on rhythm, dance, movement" and we will play, dance with rhythm
and movement!
Our "Jack in the Box" is a musical journey back
in time in which we re-envision the atmosphere of some of history’s
entertainment hotspots. We will begin in the smoky cafes of turn of the century
Paris in the heady days of Toulouse Lautrec, Cancan girls and the music of Erik
Satie. The “Grande ritornelle” from Satie’s “La Belle Excentrique” serves as a
promenade as we dance our way from Paris with Satie’s ballet “Jack-in-the-Box”
to the early cinema and Michael Baker’s “Phantom of the Dance,” a musical
retelling of the silent film classic. Dance is the common theme as we move next
to a public square for a moving celebration in an Eastern European village with
a new commission by Colin MacDonald. Finally, we cross the globe to revisit the
clubs of New York and Los Angeles during the Swing Era, with a performance of
Igor Stravinsky’s jazz classic, “Ebony Concerto.” Satie provides our musical
guide on route.
Performers: Jane Hayes and Anna Levy - pianos; François
Houle - clarinet; Colin MacDonald Pocket Orchestra; ProArte Ballet Company.
As for reviews of these two wonderful shows the only ones
were mine:
Music of the Spheres - This Crazy Show - Noam Gagnon
That Funky Cascadia Reed Quintet
Music of the Spheres - This Crazy Show - Noam Gagnon
That Funky Cascadia Reed Quintet
What do publicists do besides twirling their thumbs?