Media Archive
Town Hall seeking a diverse audience
By Sarah Crump
09.23.02 Plain Dealer Reporter
Town Hall of Cleveland, the nation's longest-running lecture series,
has brought speakers from ex-presidents and former prime ministers to
Ralph Nader and chimp researcher Jane Goodall to its lectern. Crisis
icon and former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani will kick off the season
Sept. 30.
But last year, after a popular lineup that included Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and Titanic explorer Robert Ballard, Town
Hall trustees took a long look at the 72-year old institution.
The problem wasn't the lecturers. It was the listeners.
The mostly white, wealthy audience was dwindling as subscribers were
lost to ill health and moves to Florida.
Town Hall decided to seek a more diverse audience, a decision that has
pleased the 10 foundations and companies that provide nearly half of
Town Hall's lean operating budget.
But how to lure the youthful zing and cultural mix that young professionals
and students could bring to Town Hall - and still make money? Some solutions:
- Order a package deal from a Washington speaker's bureau that brings
in Giuliani and other name-worthy lecturers. (The former New York mayor
will kick off the 2002-03 season of seven lecturers, including Air
Force Capt. Scott O'Grady. O'Grady, who survived on bugs and rainwater
after his F-16 was shot down in Bosnia, and "The NewsHour with
Jim Lehrer" journalist
Ray Suarez, whose book "The Old Neighborhood" has a chapter
about Cleveland.)
- Relocate from a Public Square hotel to vibrant Playhouse
Square, which soon will be bustling into a strong season featuring
Broadway touring shows of "The Producers" and "The Lion
King."
- Break a 72-year-old tradition. Have the lectures after work,
instead of lunchtime.
- Partner with civic and business groups that can't
afford a noteworthy speaker of their own. They can buy a block of tickets
to a Town Hall lecture, then convene afterward for a meeting.
- Persuade
area colleges to factor Town Hall lectures into their curricula, then
arrange transportation for the students. Students would buy discounted
tickets to the lectures.
- Distribute numerous free tickets to high schools
across eight counties.
- All bold moves for the lecture series that has
brought eminent people to Cleveland since 1931.
During Town Hall's first year, a little-known British politician may
have warned of an emerging threat in Europe. (Years before his wartime
oratory stiffened the upper lip of England and the world, Winston Churchill's
Town Hall date didn't rate a newspaper mention.)
In November 2000, Barbara Bush wondered along with the rest of the national
whether she would be the mother of the next president. "If you don't
ask me about chads, I won't ask you about the Browns," she told
the crowds.
Town Hall is where Yolanda King said that her father would abhor that
Martin Luther King Day is often spent at the mall rather than in reflection.
It's where former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, when asked
why Britain had a woman prime minister before the United States had a
woman president, said: "If I'd run for office here, I might have
done the same thing."
And it's where Dr. Ronan Tynan, who earned a degree in sports medicine
and sang his way to being one of the Irish Tenors after his legs were
amputated filled the ballroom with a glorious, a cappella rendition of "Amazing
Grace."
Staying Alive
Town Hall's 30 trustees, determined that its legacy go
on, began exploring a new direction earlier this year.
Their hand was forced by an ultimatum by the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel.
For years, its grand ballroom has hosted Town Hall lectures and the luncheon
question-and-answer sessions with the speaker. They had to either put
up with the noise form the renovation of the hotel's adjacent garage,
or move to a smaller room, a cramped solution for Town Hall, which attracts
audiences from about 800 to 1, 000 subscribers and single-ticket holders.
Four volunteers (the only paid Town Hall staffer is its administrative
secretary) called all 600 subscribers to get their reaction to a possible
move to Playhouse Square. "We let them vent, if they need to," said
Kathy Butler, retired teachers and past president of Town Hall, who made
many of the calls.
Especially sticky was the plan to hold lectures in the evening. A 6
p.m. starting time was a must, dictated by a lack of daytime parking
in Playhouse Square for such a large group. No meal will be added to
lecture ticket prices of about $40 each, but a couple of nearby restaurants
will stay open Mondays, the night the theaters are generally dark, to
enjoy the Town Hall influx. There still will be a question-and-answer
period following the talk - the most interesting part of the lecture
many say.
With an eye on a $465,000-a-year budget and speakers' fees that chew
up $155,000 of that (Giuliani will allegedly get about $100,000), Town
Hall is determined to sell itself a broad audience.
It's called staying alive after five in downtown Cleveland.
New Interest Grows
Town Hall was begun in 1932 by high-minded wives of
Cleveland millionaires. These were educated women who craved intellectual
stimulation, but were banned from other lecture groups. That spirited
tower of free speech, the City Club of Cleveland, only allowed men at
the time.
Though males currently make up about half of Town Hall's trustees, the
majority of its season subscribers are women, many of them past retirement
age, who enjoyed meeting for a lecture and the lunch that followed. Because
of the change to Monday evenings, "We lost some people," said
Joan Schaefer, the organization's president. But others refused to give
up the seat they'd held for decades. Instead, a little jittery about
being downtown at night, they'd bring along their husbands, they said.
Speakers were selected by a Washington speakers' bureau before Town
Hall's push to recruit younger subscribers. Surprisingly, sons, daughters
and under-30 friends react with unexpected interest to Segei Khrushchev,
the expert on Russia who will appear Oct. 7 at Town Hall.
They remember his father, Nikita, and his 1960 "We will bury you" threat
at the United Nations from their history books.
"Did you know that when he pounded his shoe on the table, that
it was just a prop?" a young woman told one trustee. "He had
shoes on both feet."
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