Grass root ideas wither in St. Louis political weather.
Judd, Dennis
The interminable fight over the Kiel Opera House seems strange and
perverse. Perhaps better than any recent controversy, the struggle over
whether to reopen Kiel - one of the most significant opera houses ever
built in the United States - reveals one of the reasons St. Louis
remains a leading example of urban failure.
St. Louis's civic elites have always circled the wagons when
confronted with a challenge to their hegemony. Perhaps for this reason
the city has rarely been in tune with the times. St. Louis long ago
turned its back on the river as a centerpiece of renewal, making it one
of the few waterfront cities in the country to do so. Now its civic
leadership seems ready to kill any project that it cannot control.
Who runs St. Louis?
That's what the Kiel controversy is about.
Around the country
Even the most casual urban tourist of the 1990s cannot fail to
notice the signs of downtown revival in cities from coast to coast. In
the space of just three decades - and much less in some cities -
bedraggled downtown streets inherited from a vanishing industrial era
have given way to places to play. Since the mid-1970s, cities have
renovated their waterfronts by razing abandoned docks and warehouses and
replacing them with shopping, recreational and condominium facilities.
They have engaged in a virtual arms race to build convention centers,
festival malls and sports stadiums. They have planned and subsidized
cultural, arts and entertainment districts. And they have built
connective tissues of walkways and bikeways, vest-pocket parks and
plazas, pedestrian malls and light-rail systems to knit together this
new infrastructure into spaces capable of nurturing a vital urban
culture and street life.
Obviously the construction of a space for urban culture does not
guarantee that anything will happen in it. But cities have not been
content to leave it to the marketplace to decide. Over the past decade
they have promoted and invested heavily in performance in its many
guises - the staging of festivals and parades, the return to the street
of pushcarts, musicians, make-up artists, jugglers, acrobats and other
accoutrements of street theater. The infrastructure for performance -
museums, performance halls, restaurants and bars - all have begun to
cluster together, and have been matched with a revival of local opera,
theater companies and local musical talent. These and other elements of
high and low culture define the essence and identity of cities in the
1990s. The storied past, when it still reverberates, does so because its
architectural and character supply a setting for a newly constructed
urban culture. Urban culture as a unique and sometimes exotic product
has become an engine of local economic growth, as avidly consumed as
cars, homes and the other material manifestations of middle-class life.
For better or worse, in the public imagination and in media images
the absence of a vital culture and street life has become more important
for defining a failing city in the 1990s than slums, poverty and crime.
According to the National Endowment for the Arts, every one of the
nation's 50 largest cities is providing support for the arts. From
the biggest cities (New York) to the smallest (Riverhead, a hamlet
outside New York) from the most blighted (Detroit and Newark) to the
already prosperous (Denver and San Francisco), culture has become the
nation's leading-edge formula for urban revival.
Almost but ...
In the early 1990s, it seemed possible that St. Louis might become
a leading player in this national revitalization movement. On Aug. 29,
1991, The New York Times highlighted St. Louis's old theater
district at Grand Center and called it "a new Lincoln Center."
With the St. Louis Symphony at Powell Hall; concerts at the Sheldon;
musicals, plays and national touring events at the Fox; and with local
theater at the Grandel Theatre, Grand Center seemed poised to become a
fully-fledged arts district. It has never quite happened - although the
individual venues are busy, the critical mass of restaurants, lounges
and the other businesses necessary to sustain an active street life
never arrived.
Grand Center remained separated from a downtown that continued to
languish. Reopening the Kiel for operas and other performances would
seem to be a no-brainer. It is close enough to the Grand Center to
create synergy with it. It could even anchor an enlarged arts district,
helping to link Grand Center to the downtown. The Edison Warehouse,
located close to the Kiel, will soon be renovated into condominiums, a
hotel, restaurants and shops. Developers have shown a lot of interest in
the Washington Avenue loft district. The idea that the opera house could
become a centerpiece of a growing interest in downtown has not made its
renovation a sure thing, however. Far from it. It has become a
battleground.
A bad deal for the city
The St. Louis Municipal Auditorium, later named the Kiel Opera
House and Auditorium, opened on April 14, 1934. It was a much-heralded,
state-of-the art building, constructed in the midst of the Great
Depression, at a time when city after city invested in all-purpose
municipal auditoriums capable of handling conventions, trade shows and
large performances. The opera house, where the St. Louis Symphony played
from 1934 to 1968, has more than 3,500 seats and is flanked on each side
by four smaller theaters of about 700 seats each. A maze of offices,
prop rooms and dressing rooms runs beneath the opera house, along with a
space - the Kiel Club - for receptions and dining. Though the spaces
around the opera house continued to be used, the opera house held its
last event in 1990. Used for decades for conventions and exhibitions,
rock concerts, wrestling matches and graduation ceremonies, the
auditorium was replaced in 1994 by the Kiel Center, built at a cost of
$170 million, as a home for the St. Louis Blues. Basically as an
afterthought the St. Louis University Billikens were also given space in
the center, in exchange for a rental fee.
The Kiel Center Partners, Inc., was originally organized by 22
members of Civic Progress to build a house for the Blues (the group has
since renamed itself Clark Enterprises, and currently has 20 members).
The partners succeeded in cutting themselves a sweet deal with the city
for the rights to build and manage the Kiel Center (the agreement was
actually signed by the St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission and
the city's Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority). Although
the St. Louis Board of Aldermen was apparently ignorant of many of its
key provisions when the deal was signed in 1994, the agreement placed
limits on the city's ability to market the new convention center
and stadium, reserving for the Kiel first dibs on all sporting events
requiring at least 21,000 seats and conventions requiring less than
60,000 square feet.
The city also committed itself to making $35 million in capital
improvements for site preparation and construction of a parking garage.
Finally, and ultimately of great consequence, the city handed over
to the Kiel partners exclusive control over the use and future plans for
redevelopment of the Kiel arena. Whoever represented the city at this
poker table folded without even looking at the cards.
As little more than a symbolic gesture (or, more accurately, as an
afterthought), the Kiel partners agreed to spend up to $2.5 million to
"repair" the opera house. For several years the controversy
over the Kiel has focused mainly on allegations that the Kiel partners
have reneged on their promise. Since 1994, the Riverfront Times and the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch have repeatedly castigated the Kiel partners and
Civic Progress over the issue. The pressure for reopening the Kiel seems
to be building. In January 1996, the board of aldermen passed a
resolution asking Comptroller Darlene Green to pursue action to reopen
the opera house. Later the same year, in October, the board passed
another resolution, this time asking Green to report on her progress.
Green has consistently made comments supporting the idea of reopening
the Kiel, but seems to have taken different positions about what should
go into it. Lately, it is said, she has been favoring the idea of a
satellite museum of the Smithsonian, though at other times she has said
she also is considering restoring it for performances.
Last year, St. Louis Clarence Mayor Harmon suggested that the city
would explore the possibility of legal action against the partners, but
since then little has been heard about it. There is good reason for the
mayor to proceed cautiously. Though a lawyer hired by the Post expressed
the view that the language of the Kiel Center agreement obligates the
partners to fully renovate the Kiel, in fact, in 1994, the Land
Clearance for Redevelopment Authority signed a certificate of
completion, which might carry considerable weight in a court of law.
Thus, despite the apparent support for the opera house, it remains
shuttered, perhaps a typical case of St. Louis political gridlock.
Ed Golterman's proposal
Last August, Ed Golterman stepped into the breach, claiming that he
could save everybody a lot of trouble if the city would allow his Kiel
Performing Arts, Inc. to assume the opera house lease. He could, he
said, make the opera house into a money-making venture that would cost
the city not one dime.
Golterman estimates that a full renovation would cost about $20
million, with possibly $12 million more needed if it is necessary to
make the structure earthquake-proof. A bond issue of $50 million would
cover both the costs of renovation and the first years of start-up. He
has even promised to give the city 20 percent of the annual operating
income for the first five years. For a change, the city would actually
be making, rather than paying, money for a new project.
According to Golterman, the economic spin-offs would be sizable as
well. He estimates that $12 million in union crafts salaries would be
generated over the 18-month construction period. After it opened, the
opera house and other venues would employ upwards of 200 people and it
would bring thousands of people into downtown each year.
Energized by his vision of what the opera house could do for St.
Louis, Golterman became a one-man band, calling politicians and people
in the arts community and asking (or, some say, demanding) support. His
zealous approach flagrantly violated a well-established code of conduct
in St. Louis. Rather than going hat-in-hand to Civic Progress, he
organized a citizens' group and sponsored a street demonstration
downtown.
About 40 people attended on a sunny Sunday afternoon - hardly an
auspicious beginning. He started showing up for various functions
wearing a sandwich board festooned with photographs of the historic era
opera house and of events once held there. On Halloween, he won a prize
for his costume at the annual Headache Ball. Some people regarded him as
a somewhat comic figure, well-meaning but single-minded, even obsessed,
about his cause.
But he hasn't gone away. Indeed, he seems to be gaining
momentum and picking up support week by week. On Dec. 8, a group of both
local backers and out-of-town supporters recruited by Golterman toured
the opera house. Letters to the editor of the Post have come in a steady
stream, and the Post has covered his proposals in detail and
sympathetically.
On Dec. 30, Windows on Washington held a "Re-Open the Kiel
Opera House" fundraiser, sponsored by St. Louis CORE and
Intermission magazine. An impressive line-up of musical performers
entertained a packed room, and Golterman showed his own considerable
singing talent. Golterman's crusade began to look very much like a
citizens' movement instead of a one-man band.
Some of the people attending the Windows on Washington event
carried genuine credentials as arts entrepreneurs, giving muscle to what
might otherwise have appeared to be a mere social occasion. The occasion
demonstrated that there was substance to Golterman's claim that his
proposal was serious and substantial. He has lined up Palm Capital of
Boca Raton, Fla., to market an estimated $50 million in bonds, if the
city will agree to approve a tax-free municipal bond issue.
Ray Shepardson, who has renovated several theaters (including the
much-publicized Alan Theatre in Cleveland) and who was the first general
manager of St. Louis's Fox Theatre, has agreed to manage the
renovation and get the opera house up and running. John Kinnamon,
producer and owner of the Burn Brae Dinner Theatre in Burtonsville, Md.,
and who Golterman claims is the biggest producer of dinner theater in
the country, has agreed to use some of the space in the Kiel for dinner
theater, make the Kiel Club into a lounge and help book productions. Tom
Kline, owner of Windows on Washington, says he plans to open a Windows
on Kiel. Steve Schankman, co-president of Contemporary Productions, has
offered to book productions into the Kiel (it is interesting that
Shepardson and Schankman proposed to reopen the opera house several
years ago, but the idea was vetoed by the Kiel partners). Golterman also
talks of putting in children's theater, a jazz and blues museum and
of providing space for cultural educational programs and exhibits.
Who is Ed Golterman?
Are Golterman's plans practical, or are they merely a mirage
billowing up from the fantasies of a man driven to live up to a family
opera tradition? In a profile distributed by Golterman, he describes his
grandfather, Guy Golterman, as "the father of Grand Opera in St.
Louis from 1910 to 1940." The blurb goes on to say that between
1910 and 1917, Guy Golterman brought a series of major opera
performances to St. Louis, with performances by the greats - Caruso,
Farrar, Tetrazzini, Ruffo, Campanini, and more. In 1917, Golterman and
the Grand Opera committee inaugurated the new outdoor municipal theater
(the Muny) in Forest Park with a week-long performance of
"Aida," and Pagliacci came later the same summer. After a few
years away from the city, he returned and organized three seasons of
opera at the Muny in 1924, 1925 and 1926, again with a line-up of
international stars. His production of "Aida" dedicated the
Kiel Opera House in 1934. Through his St. Louis Grand Opera Company, he
produced major opera all through the 1930s, productions featuring the
greatest stars of the time - Lily Pons, Giovanni Martinelli, Maria
Jeritza, Kirsten Flagstad among them.
Ed Golterman's mother was a grand opera singer, continuing her
career after marriage by appearing with the St. Louis Light Opera Guild
in the 1940s and getting parts with opera companies touring through St.
Louis. Golterman says the first thing he remembers as a child is opera -
and the St. Louis sports scene: "I grew up enmeshed in those
worlds."
He attended St. Louis University High School and sang for years in
the St. Louis Cathedral Choir. "All I remember is music at home,
music at the Kiel." Though it is not the source of his livelihood,
Golterman's love affair with music is still very apparent. In his
bio statement he refers to himself as a concert and show baritone. He
sang the national anthem for the Blues for 16 seasons, and continues to
sing it on various occasions.
Some who encounter Golterman could be excused for thinking that he
is a zealot when it comes to the opera house. This would be hard to
dispute. He has, after all, taken 11 months off from his professional
life and business so that he can devote himself fully to the cause. He
has spent eight years in radio and television as a newscaster,
sportscaster, reporter and writer/producer, but for the last 25 years he
has written and produced training films and videos on worker safety,
hazardous materials, emergency response, and on AIDS education in the
schools. His corporate clients have included Monsanto; Solutia, Inc. (a
spin-off of Monsanto); Shell Oil Company; Anheuser-Busch, and the
Missouri Lutheran Synod. To put a hold on all this to reopen the opera
house - does this make him a nut, or a dedicated public servant working
without pay?
Can Golterman's proposal work?
Critics say that Golterman's proposals, or for that matter,
any proposals for reopening the opera house, are economically
unrealistic. Last July, a consultant working for the Urban Land
Institute. (which was, in turn, hired by Downtown Now) issued a report
recommending that the opera house not be reopened as a performing arts
venue. The ULI said that a reopened opera house would compete with the
Fox Theatre and with a $50-million performing arts center being planned
on the UMSL campus. It recommended instead that the Kiel be turned into
a museum. Later, some civic leaders proposed that the Kiel be torn down
and turned into a parking garage (for the chief benefit, no doubt, of
the Kiel Center).
More recently, on Dec. 10, St. Louis 2004 released a report (the
St. Louis Cultural Assessment Study) admitting that the reaction to the
ULI study had been controversial, but then going on to say that
"the Kiel is too large" in its present configuration. The
study stated that 18 performing arts facilities of various sizes were
being planned in the St. Louis area, leading to the conclusion that
there would not be enough demand for a renovated opera house. On Jan.
19, Mark Sauer, the president of the Kiel Center and the St. Louis
Blues, when asked by a Post reporter about Golterman's plans, was
quoted as saying, "There's not a molecule of substance in
it."
The politics
Whether it is financially feasible to reopen the opera house would
seem to be an empirical question. Obviously the answer is relevant. A
plausible argument can be made that the capital costs and debt service
would be too high, that operating costs would be excessive and that
demand would be insufficient, especially considering the competition
from the Fox and other venues. Especially with the weight of so much
authority behind them, it is hard to rebut such assertions. Skeptics
within the arts community ought not to be dismissed lightly; they do,
after all, speak from hard experience. They know how hard it is to make
any venue turn a profit, how difficult it is to schedule a steady flow
of performances and how long it often takes to attract audiences to a
new location. According to an arts administrator, the 470-seat Grandel
Theatre, opened in 1992, took five years to build up a full schedule,
and it still operates at a loss of about $100,000 per year.
Palm Capital, the Boca Raton firm that says it will market bonds to
finance the renovation of the Kiel, has not actually conducted the
research yet to show that the opera house can operate as a successful
commercial venture. Evan Schwartzfarb, Palm Capital's president,
says that he is confident that the numbers will add up at the end of the
day. He points out that the multiple venues supporting the opera house
make it an unusual structure, one that can support a variety of mutually
supporting activities. Every new use in the building, he points out,
will require very little added capital. When previous studies are
mentioned, he points out that none of those studies has been based upon
any actual economic analysis. They talk about population shifts and the
number of performing arts venues in the St. Louis area, the perceptions
of civic and political elites and members of the arts community - but do
not present data on the probable uses of the Kiel and an estimated
demand for those uses, or the revenues and costs of particular uses. He
says that that's the kind of analysis that Palm Capital would do
before trying to market bonds to investors. The bottom line remains: No
one can be sure whether the Kiel Opera House can be made into a
successful commercial venture.
Turf battles
As shown so amply by recent events, St. Louis's civic elites
have not been notoriously conservative about fiscal matters, at least
when the public purse is involved. It made sure the Kiel Center would
work even if that meant taking business away from the stadium and the
convention center, and even if it meant the Arena could never be
reopened. Perhaps it would be superfluous, in this context, to mention
the prodigious amount of public money involved in persuading the Rams to
move to St. Louis. If Civic Progress wanted to reopen the opera house,
it would not be deterred by arguments about such mundane matters as
whether the facility would pay for itself. It would, if it wished,
arrange the finances and, if necessary, persuade the city to provide
subsidies. Its opposition to reopening the Kiel is not related, mainly,
to fiscal concerns, but to turf.
From the very beginning and long before Ed Golterman showed up, the
Kiel partners evinced an obvious indifference and/or hostility to the
opera house. When they reached their agreement with the city to build
the Kiel Center, the opera house was an afterthought worthy of just a
few lines in a long document. After the agreement was reached,
indifference seemed to turn to hostility. Golterman says he was told
that the roof of the opera house was left open to the weather for 15
months during the Center's construction, and that 40 dressing rooms
were demolished. The reason for the Kiel partners' attitude is not
difficult to fathom. Representing their views, perhaps, the ULI's
consultant concluded that night-time events at the opera house would
compete with uses of the Kiel Center, making access and parking a
significant problem. That was a principal reason the ULI report
recommended that a museum, with day-time uses, be put into the building.
Other players in this controversy are motivated by their own turf
concerns. On many occasions Leon Strauss, president of Fox Associates,
has said if the opera house opens, he will close the Fox. The fear of
competition has also colored the views of arts administrators and others
connected to the Grand Center. Grand Center has attracted $100 million
in investment over the past decade or so, but it has still not been able
to create a critical mass of activities sufficient to sustain a vibrant
street life. Even after several years the Grand Center has not exactly
transmogrified into a busy arts district. People drive to Powell Hall,
the Fox, the Grandel, or the Sheldon, park their cars and attend an
event, and then go home or somewhere outside the district for a
nightcap. Grand Center has become not so much an arts district as a
collection of arts venues. This gives people identified with it all the
more reason to be concerned about competition from outside the district
(though, curiously, UMSL's facility seems to be exempted from this
concern).
The desire to protect turf is driving most of the opposition to
Golterman's plan to reopen the opera house. But the most
significant turf battle is not over money or the spatial location of
performing arts. It is over political power.
The truly important question involving the Kiel is: Who runs St.
Louis? St. Louis's civic elite does not intend to allow an
interloper - sponsoring demonstrations, fundraisers, and wearing a
sandwich board, for God's sake - to come into this town and
challenge their authority to make the big decisions downtown.
It ought to be said that if eccentricity disqualified anyone from
participating in the civic life of St. Louis, there would scarcely be a
soul left to attend the charity balls or become eligible for the annual
Citizen-of-the-Year awards. Anyway, a healthy dose of eccentricity,
especially if laced with a bit of tongue-in-cheek self-deprecation,
would open up the city's politics to let some new light shine in.
Remember the famous poster, a view from behind of a man holding his
raincoat open to a statue, with the caption, "Open Yourself to
Art" That was Neil Goldschmidt, then the mayor of Portland, Ore.
St. Louis is starved for just this kind of irreverence, and it surely
won't come from Civic Progress.
If Ed Golterman succeeds, he will not help revive urban culture in
St. Louis and help revitalize a sagging downtown, but he may take
accomplish something equally important and enduring; he may be show how
a tired and anachronistic civic elite can be challenged. It would be
refreshing if a citizens' movement were to succeed in challenging
St. Louis's power structure. This would be the first time in memory
that a major project has been undertaken in downtown despite opposition
from Civic Progress. A reopened Kiel Opera House would be a major event
signaling that St. Louis intends to join the rest of the nation's
cities in using culture to revive downtown. Perhaps of more enduring
value. However, reopening the Kiel might revitalize the politics of the
city. St. Louis is overdue for a changing of the guard.
Dennis Judd is professor of political science at University of
Missouri St. Louis.