Fair goes big for bands
Lolita Harper
In a time of belt tightening around the state, Orange County Fair
officials have planned a gluttonous concert series -- starting
tonight -- and are spending $5.8 million to bring in big-name bands
and state-of-the-art productions.
Fair officials increased their entertainment budget by $4.8
million, or 551%, this year, to take advantage of the newly renovated
Pacific Amphitheatre. The total is a dramatic increase from last
year’s $1.05-million budget. Last year, the fair spent $715,000 to
acquire talent and about $300,000 for production, compared to this
year’s budget of $5 million and $800,000, respectively. Tonight’s
opening act, Diana Krall, alone cost $450,000.
Although the fair is a state entity, it is run independently of
the state general fund, said Steve Beazley, the fair’s deputy general
manager. When the fair makes money, it keeps it, and when it loses
money -- which has not happened recently -- they eat it. Beazley said
officials are optimistic the increased budget will balance itself.
“The event this year -- with all that’s new and the buzz that
surrounds it -- is positioned to do very well,” Beazley said.
The fair has a “break-even” plan that balances the amount paid to
book the talent and production costs against ticket prices. Beazley
said fair officials were trying to keep ticket prices as low as
possible, while trying to make sure the concerts didn’t lose money.
The average cost, depending on location, for a show this year is
between $20 and $90 -- compared to $10 last year. This year, concert
tickets include fair admission, when in years past that was not the
case.
The plan requires 21 shows, playing every night of the week but
Mondays, to sell at least 85% of tickets to break even, he said.
LAST-MINUTE HOPES
Beazley said the strategy depends largely on “walk-up” sales.
According to presale totals as of Wednesday, the shows are on a
“break-even pace,” he said. Beazley could offer no concrete numbers
or figures to support that assertion, but said sales are “right where
we thought they would be.”
“Some of our shows still have almost a month to sell, so we can’t
really judge their presale levels right now,” Beazley said. “We are
tracking for that break-even point. The reason I can’t answer
definitively is because there is no formula. ... It certainly is not
science.”
If a show has sold 50% of its seats in presale tickets, it will
most likely break even, he said. Krall has sold 50%, and Duran Duran
is sold out. The biggest variable is whether fair-goers will shell
out $30 to $90 at the door.
“We have to wonder if everyone who was interested in seeing a
certain band bought their tickets before hand, or if there are more
spur-of-the-moment fans out there,” Beazley said.
Spontaneous aficionados can expect more than an impromptu concert
at the newly renovated Pacific Amphitheatre. The shows at the
8,500-seat venue are “full-blown” concerts, he said -- the same shows
performed on tour. The major difference is that the shows are more
complex, Beazley said. The shows require more money, more production
and more negotiation to get the big names at a county fair.
PLAYING OFF THE AMPHITHEATER
Some people have criticized the fair for getting in over its head
in the entertainment industry and paying way too much for headlining
bands. Beazley said officials did a lot of research to know how much
to pay.
A talent buyer was hired to research the going rates of various
artists. The buyer analyzed past performances in the market and gross
sales at other venues, he said. Beazley admits bands have to be wooed
to play at fairs -- which usually denote a stage in the middle of an
arena right after a rodeo -- but said the Pacific Amphitheatre was a
huge selling point.
“What really helps is that most of these bands played the Pacific
Amphitheatre, or remember it when it was open,” Beazley said.
Residents of College Park and Mesa del Mar remember the
amphitheater also and were wary of its revival.
College Park resident Patrick Clark led the opposition to the
concert locale, saying no matter how they reconfigure the
amphitheater, the noise will still be unbearable.
“It was a mistake 10 years ago, and it’s a mistake now,” Clark
said.
Beazley said residents will most likely be surprised by how little
noise escapes the new venue. With new sound technology, designed to
aim noise at the audience instead of releasing it into the
neighborhood, neighbors should be able to get a good night’s sleep.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
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