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Originally Posted by
BDP
Rover is right. You will not see "millennials" at these places. Again, stage center was never really condusive to the local idea of "establishment" arts like the places Rover references are, and is why it could never survive in a city like this, or most cities, in the location where it was built. It was always way too high profile for its intended use. Oklahoma City has and will always have treasured local arts, it just won't be at this location or in the unique setting that it offered. Part of what made it different was that it was a great place for local talent to showcase its ability in a unique setting in the heart of a city. That's extremely rare and it now seems like gross hubris for a town like OKC to think it could do what the biggest of cities have trouble doing. We can't be expected to reach beyond a standard unachievable by greater peers.
I understand that my experiences at Stage Center were not only unique to OKC, but unique to most art communities. Usually, local art is economically and feasibly forced out of city centers, or at least out of the mainstream art centers. Stage Center was a facility that tried to go against that trend and unsurprisingly failed. It's unfortunate that so many people, even those that are active consumers of local art like Rover, never got to experience stage center as an innovative local theater facility, art museum, music venue, and gallery. Obviously, I can't convince anyone who never experienced it those ways that it excelled in all those capacities, but I saw it do all of that. So, I guess I can just count myself lucky that I got to see it that way and wait for the next amazing performed of Hedwig or the next production of Surburbia, or the next Momentum, or the next locally organized tribute to Prince that will inevitably take place in OKC and be well attended by "millennials" or whatever the next buzz word is for young creative individuals, knowing that it will just not be held in a high profile or center piece venue like a stage center.
And maybe that's okay. Bigger communities than ours usually cant pull that off. Not having a Stage Center will not prevent that from happening. It just means that it will happen in a far less descript setting like most everywhere else. Stage Center was a unique place because it offered the unexpected setting for the unexpected production in a city that was not expected to offer such efforts. Removing Stage Center from Oklahoma City's landscape will not prevent the works that were displayed there from being produced in Oklahoma City, it will just end Oklahoma City's potential ability from presenting those works in a way that cities twice its size wish they could do. We will, as intended and so desired, be more like somewhere else.
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