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Originally Posted by
BDP
I went to a few art showings there and it was a very cool venue for it and I have never seen a theater used in such creative ways. It was different, for sure, but it was way more flexible that say Freede Little Theater, which only offers a traditional stage set up, one that is available in just about every high school auditorium in existence. There are a lot of cities of Oklahoma City's size that don't have any theater options that Stage Center offered. It was very unique in that way and part of the reason it was celebrated, but also probably part of the reason it didn't last in a city like Oklahoma City.
You often hear people question why Oklahoma City can not offer the arts and culture that ever smaller peer cities have. Well, there are several examples of why in this very thread. Oklahoma City, in general, has a very narrow definition of what constitutes art or creativity, and it does not have a big enough constituency that value out of the ordinary works or aesthetically challenging art and design for it to exist here. The result is that anything that does not manage some sort of mass appeal struggles, disappears completely, or simply never shows up. The irony is that the local art community is full of talent and puts on tons of great events, but few people of the non-artist general public (i.e. would be art "consumers") take notice. In the end, this is why Stage Center is a multi-million dollar problem now. This is why Oklahoma City struggles to match other peer communities in terms of art venues and performance facilities and continues to go backwards, not forwards, in that capacity. In general, enough people just don't care about them. It seems Stage Center was a reach for OKC from the beginning.
I'm not trying to be critical, I'm just pointing it out. Really, in general, this is a community that champions the latest chain restaurant pad site development on Memorial or Broadway, yet can never seem to muster up enough enthusiasm for its unique developments for them to survive. Simply put, Stage Center wasn't enough like something else, found somewhere else, for it to be accepted here. A city's developments and structures simply reflect the values and way of life of its community and they do so objectively. The disintegration of Stage Center and its impending demolition to make way for something that makes Oklahoma City look and feel like something more familiar is simply a reflection the broader community's disinterest in fostering a uniquely Oklahoma City experience. Most people measure this city's relative worth based on what we have or get that others have, not based on what we have that no one else has.
All that said, OKC is probably at a point where it has more pride in itself and has more people interested in developing a less homogenous way of life for the city. But, for the most part, these people still don't have enough resources or access to make singular "angelic" saves like the one Stage Center requires. They can only make slow collective efforts like you see Better Block doing, which has helped foster some of the most interesting developmental turnarounds in the city and is actually helping create things that feel like Oklahoma City experiences as opposed to imported concepts.
Obviously, Oklahoma City does not need this lot to have a new 20-40 story tower, whether iconic or not. That's instantly apparent to anyone who takes a 2 minute drive around downtown. It is just the one preferred by this developer. A developer who is familiar enough with the market's general attitude towards unique development and the arts, that he knows any resistance to his project will be mostly ceremonial. And, in the end, I don't think I would blame Williams for not going out on a limb to build an "iconic" spec tower. Usually, such an effort requires some level of unique and creative design. In this market, that can introduce unnecessary risk, which is not exactly the best coarse of action for a spec development (if that's what this actually turns out to be).
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