On Friday, June 6, 2003, Ms. Diane Fisher-Post, the Artistic
Director for the Village Players in Oak Park was terminated from her job.
The Village Players in Oak Park has been performing now for some
42 years, and may soon close if things continue on the current path.
This year the Village Players of Oak Park did not even bother to fill out
a request for the Oak Park Area Arts Council funds, which might at least
have given Ms. Fisher-Post another month or so of employment, another
month or so of trying to save the theater, or another month or so
of notice-instead of a mere two weeks.
Before Diane Fisher-Post came to work at the Village Players
the company was in about as sad a shape as it could be, and in that period
of financial neglect the Board of the Village Players did not request available
Art's funds.
I hope that the Board now thinks of something other than
the rumored sales of the building and looks at an available emergency art
funds grant (not a loan) from the Oak Park Area Arts Council. The
Arts Council and the Village of Oak Park helped the Festival Theater out
when their attendance was adversely impacted due to in climate weather.
If the Village Players gets the same amount of funds it would pay the salary
of Diane Fisher-Post.
This town has some 600 subscribers to the Lyric Opera
and as much again to several other acting companies. Village Players
has served
served this community under the work of Diane Fisher-Post
in many
countless ways. Here are a few though, Doug Deuchler
and I have
reviewed many plays in the past year that were done very
well for
a community theater and had nice themes for one and all.
There have also been many of our local children (some even with agents)
who had a chance to perform on the Village Players stage. There have
been tons of kids who have had acting classes at Village Players and as
many who have seen some of their wonderful shows aimed at
Children. I have seen the children in the audience
exclaim with wonder as they saw Geppetto eaten by a large whale.
They sat forward in their seats and tried to warn him, they didn’t yell
because they were well behaved, but they did tell him to watch out for
the whale. This is not something kids do in everyday life, this is
something they do in a live performance. The kind of live performance
that may come to an end in the same town that will spend some 7.2 million
dollars to build a parking garage at the
Oak Park & River Forest High School for 300 cars.
We hear a lot of talk about the arts in Oak Park and how important they
are for one and all. I have heard John Mahoney talk on the subject
at fund-raisers for the Arts in Oak Park. Mr. Mahoney, who came from
meager means in Great Britain found the arts an escape for him in his youth,
from the harsh reality of life.
Oak Park speaks of diversity and with that diversity comes
kids of economically challenged families, some at one end of the achievement
gap-some who will now have a larger gap appear to them. I hope
that something is done real soon.
I have spoken to some local Banks leaders and will work
on getting
some funds to the Village Players. There will probably
not be a given Bank though that will be able to give as much as the Board
of the Village Players ignored when they did not apply for funds from the
Oak Park Area Arts Council. |