Showing posts with label shutdown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shutdown. Show all posts

11 May 2024

"If You Rebuild It, Will They Return?": Regional Theaters Struggle to Revive

by Rob Weinert-Kendt 

A Supplement to the Regional Theater Series

[Rob Weinert-Kendt’s report on the difficulties faced by America’s regional theaters to come back from the COVID shutdown was published on the American Theatre website on 20 March 2023 (AMERICAN THEATRE | If You Rebuild It, Will They Return?; nb: the online edition has hyperlinks to many of the topics and references in the article).  It’s the latest installment in Rick On Theater’s occasional series on the state of the non-profit theater sector in the United States.

[I’ve published several articles concerning the state and background of the regional theater in the United States, starting with “A Crisis In America’s Theaters” on ROT on 13 September 2023.  That post was followed by “The Regional Theater: Change or Die” on 3 October 2023 and “Regional Theater: History” on 8 October.  These articles reported on the declining prospects of the regional theater in the United States.

[I then posted a serialized history of the National Endowment for the Arts (in 11 parts, 5 November-10 December 2023) because the NEA was instrumental in the development of the modern non-profit theater in the U.S.  The plight of this segment of our theater is serious enough that I’ve continued to post on it from various perspectives to demonstrate the history and importance of the American regional theater system and to explain the situation that put U.S. theater, as it’s now constituted, in peril.  Below is my fifth post in this irregular series.]

3 years after shutdown, despite some encouraging signs, most U.S. theatres are struggling to get audiences to commit.

It is perhaps a dubious sign of progress that the third anniversary of the COVID shutdownwhich in the theatre field is marked as beginning March 12, 2020, the night Broadway went dark, along with most live performance venues across the U.S.—passed fairly quietly a week ago. [ROT’s coverage of the COVID shutdown is catalogued in the afterword to “‘Audiences Are Back, More or Less’” (Rick On Theater: "Audiences Are Back, More or Less"), 18 March 2024.] While we can’t say we are in a post-pandemic world as long as the virus’s daily death count remains in the hundreds and COVID safety advisors remain on theatres’ payrolls, we are, for better or worse, in a post-pandemic posture as a society. Federal relief money, including the Payroll Protection Program (PPP [3 April 2020-31 May 2021]) and the Shuttered Venues Operating Grant (SVOG [1 March 2020-30 June 2021]), which helped theatres keep many employees on payroll and maintain their operations over more than two years, has evaporated, and nearly all theatres, commercial and nonprofit alike, have lifted mask mandates, let alone vaccine requirements.

Indeed, things seem almost . . . normal again at many theatres. But are they? For the vast majority of theatres, the 2022-23 season we’re currently in the midst of is as close to a full return to live, in-person programming as they’ve managed since the COVID shutdown. And that’s a step forward, after many theatres’ plans for the 2021-22 season were scotched by the deadly Omicron [a variant of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19] wave of fall 2021 and winter 2022 (though Broadway got through a season of plays and musicals, and a fairly interesting one at that). But you don’t have to look far for signs of attrition: When, last fall [September 2022], American Theatre published its first full season preview of TCG member theatres’ programming since fall 2019, the overall quantity of shows submitted for our listings was down more than 40 percent from pre-pandemic levels. It might at least be considered a triumph that most of the shows announced in that issue did make it to the stage, with only a smattering of cancellations and reshufflings, but it’s also clearly an era of diminished expectations.

The more pressing question, now that theatres are back in some kind of business, is: How is business? Are audiences coming back at anything like pre-pandemic levels? And are theatres able to make ends meet? The evidence is mixed, and seems to vary by region, with reports from some theatres in Great Lakes states, including Milwaukee Rep and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, that subscription levels have held firm and may even be on the rise. Others have reported heartening bumps in single-ticket sales, particularly for last year’s holiday offerings, even as subscriptions have slumped. Broadway League president Charlotte St. Martin [St. Martin retired in February 2024] recently reported that Main Stem houses are filling 88 percent of their seats.

Some see these bright spots as leading indicators, but it might [be] more accurate to view them as outliers. The theatre administrators and researchers I spoke to, many of whom shared both hard figures and anecdata with me, told me that audiences and income are down from pre-pandemic levels by anywhere from 20 to 50 percent. That’s a wide chasm, over which the fortunes of America’s theatre industry may hang in the balance.

It’s not that trendlines are all heading in the wrong direction. According to Jill Robinson, CEO & owner of TRG Arts, which collects data on performing arts organizations in the U.S. and U.K., the gap is closing. Using 2019 as a pre-pandemic benchmark, TRG data shows June 2022 theatres reporting admissions down by 51 percent from 2019 levels, and income down by 50 percent. By December 2022, those numbers had shrunk to 33 and 35, respectively.

The issue is the pace of improvement.

“It has been coming back since about May 2021 . . . slowly,” said Zannie Voss, director of SMU DataArts, which gathered data from 200-plus performing arts organizations through 2022. “The question mark now is when is it going to plateau, or is it going to continue to slowly rebuild to earlier levels? That remains to be seen.”

Another rising trend line that is more concerning, but which speaks to theatres’ preparation for the worst: Data collected by Theatre Communications Group, the publisher of American Theatre, shows a sharp increase in the number of theatres projecting deficits into their budgets: While for fiscal year 2021, just 10 percent of theatres projected deficits, for fiscal year 2023 that number is 60 percent.

“Overall, I think 99 percent of us are back now only because of the federal funds that we received, the extraordinary fundraising we did, the generosity of our communities, and decisions that are a bit of a slippery slope, like additional draws from an endowment,” said Jennifer Bielstein, executive director of San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theater, whose current budget is around $22 million. “The key thing to me is that we need more runway. It was assumed by all of us that federal funds would be what we needed to get back fully, but we’re seeing that it is a much slower return and rebuild with a lot of our theatres across the country.” That’s why, she said, ACT is planning with a longer recovery in mind. After a long practice of making mostly three-year contingency plans, she said, “Starting with next fiscal year ’24, we’re looking five years out, thinking that it could take that length of time to get back to where we were.”

Chandra Stephens-Albright, managing director at Atlanta’s True Colors Theatre, is also taking the long view.

“Everyone thought we were crazy when we did our strategic plan in 2020, but it has really helped us stay focused,” said Stephens-Albright, who like many theatre leaders reported a big drop in subscriptions, only partly offset by single-ticket spikes. A focus on the theatre’s mission—to support new work and education, as part of the larger aim of remaining a leading Black theatre in the U.S.—has provided a guiding light through a financially precarious time in which cash flow must be managed “very, very carefully” and seven-show performance weeks have been scaled back to five.

That strategic focus has also created some opportunities. “There’s been some spotlight on how small organizations, Black organizations, have been under-resourced,” she said. “That has got some attention, and it’s opened some doors for us to tell our story—doors that weren’t open before. That’s a positive; it isn’t enough to get us back to where we were pre-pandemic, but it certainly does make more people aware of our work and help advance our strategic objective.”

Greg Reiner, who heads the theatre and musical theatre programs for the National Endowment for the Arts [see the above-referenced 11-part ROT post], pointed to similarly encouraging signs of new participation. Though general relief funds for the field have dried up, the NEA, which just approved its highest level of appropriations ever, did pump $135 million of American Rescue Plan funding through state, regional, and local arts agencies, in addition to its direct grants to arts organizations, and that seed work is bearing fruit. As a result of what he called “a really broad engagement plan,” the endowment is “reaching folks that weren’t even applying to us before. We’ve brought in new, smaller organizations that are now applying through our regular granting programs.”

The NEA’s purview includes a lot of programming outside the realm of traditional, proscenium-based theatre, including work in correctional facilities and educational theatre. Another non-traditional area that has seen growth, according to Alan Brown of the WolfBrown arts consultancy firm, is immersive, virtual, and augmented theatre. But even when he shows theatres research showing that audiences are increasingly less willing to shell out for live, in-person theatre—a pre-pandemic trend that has only accelerated—he said he meets resistance.

“The public has embraced immersive experiences, and commercial producers are running away with millions of dollars in demand for them. That’s not only going to grow—it’s going to explode over the coming years,” Brown said, citing not only the aesthetic possibilities of this technology but also its utility in closed-captioning and enhanced accessibility. “What are nonprofit theatres going to do? Are they going to say, ‘We don’t do that; we’re about a live, authentic experience,’ or are they going to say, ‘Maybe we should figure out if we have a role to play in augmented, immersive, and virtual reality experience’? The theatre field is is pretty progressive compared to the other fields; there’s a good deal of innovative work going on. But you have artistic directors who still want to do important theatrical work on their mainstages for an audience of critics. When I start breathing fire about immersive experiences, I just get blank stares.”

For some theatres, doubling down on the live theatre experience still makes business sense, even after the stress of the pandemic. Milwaukee Rep, for instance, went into its cancelled 2020-21 season with a subscriber base of 16,000; that dropped off to [14,500] in the following year, according to managing director Chad Bauman, but has turned back around. When subscription numbers are tallied next fall, Bauman said he expects the count for the 2023-24 season to surpass pre-pandemic levels.

Milwaukee Rep has done all this without reducing the number of performances, opening last fall with a large-cast musical, Titanic [book by Peter Stone, music and lyrics by Maury Yeston; 20 September-23 October 2023], and running 11 productions since. Like many of its peers, the Rep had projected a deficit for this year, but, said Bauman, “It looks like we’re going to have a break-even budget, because our ticket sales have far outpaced our projections. Next year, we have a $15 million budget, and we don’t anticipate any extraordinary fundraising needs.”

His colleague at ACT, Jennifer Bielstein, told me she wondered if the success story in Milwaukee has something to do with how early in the pandemic that theatre was able to reopen—that is, comparatively earlier than theatres in the Bay Area or New York City. Bauman said that the Rep followed the advice of the Medical College of Wisconsin, and that a member of their board, who is the team doctor of the Milwaukee Bucks and Brewers, “had access to all the protocols that professional sports were going through, and if you remember, sports came back way ahead of everybody else. We were watching what they were doing and how it was working. They were basically testing a lot, creating bubbles, creating all these different protocols.”

Ultimately, though, Equity protocols won out, leading Milwaukee Rep, like many large U.S. theatres, including ACT, to cancel some or all of its 2021-22 season. Perhaps more importantly, Bauman noted that Milwaukee Rep was fully ready to reopen when they had the greenlight. They’d kept 80 percent of their staff on payroll, Bauman said, figuring that if they’d laid off staff, they “would leave Wisconsin, and we would never be able to attract that talent back.”

Bauman gives some credence to the early-reopening theory, noting that many performing arts organizations in the South never really shut down at all, and many in the Midwest were similarly unfazed. “Those that reopened faster, and were allowed to do so by their communities, which historically were in the Midwest and the South, are in a much healthier spot today,” he concluded. “I believe that’s because the longer we were closed down, the more out of sight, out of mind we were, people forgot about us and got addicted to Netflix, and it’s harder to get them off their couch.”

Danny Williams, managing director at Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, seconded the sense that the pandemic shattered some folks’ longtime consumption habits.

“Since we’ve come back, we have seen a decline in subscriptions of around 60 percent,” said Williams, who added that single-ticket sales have been strong for such recent production as Dominique Morisseau’s Confederates [11 February-5 March 2023] and A Christmas Carol [adapted by stage and artistic director (Hartford Stage, 1998-2011) Michael Wilson; 20 November-30 December 2022]He attributed the drop-off to a number of factors: “One is the pandemic breaking the cycle of people just renewing; it just was something that you did—you got your letter in the mail and you sent in your money and you picked your dates. I think the other is that the demographics have changed; there are folks who are aging out of going to the theatre, and the new folks who are joining us aren’t necessarily the ones looking for a subscription. Folks younger than 50 or so definitely are not looking to drop a couple of $100 at once to commit to a season worth of plays. They want to see what they want when they want to see it.”

This change has been a major focus of WolfBrown’s research. Said Alan Brown, “I think COVID accelerated macro trends that existed well before the pandemic—shifts in public tastes and in consumer behavior, like late planning behavior. People can’t make up their minds that they’re gonna go out, often until the last minute now, and that’s wreaking havoc on marketing. People’s lives are more complicated. I don’t think that’s changing. I think that’s more or less a permanent condition. So do we fight that and keep trying to get people to buy in advance, or do we offer a late buyers’ club?”

Jamie Alexander, director of the consulting team at the firm JCA Arts Marketing, has tracked a similar crash in subscriptions, noting that among all performing arts organizations, theatres have been both hardest hit by the dropoff and the most adventurous in trying new substitutes. She pointed to membership options like Steppenwolf’s [Chicago] Black Card, Woolly Mammoth’s [Washington, D.C.] Golden Ticket, and ZACH Theatre’s [Austin, Texas] Zach XP, as well as tech-enabled opportunities for “cross-media loyalty programs.”

“Our study shows that there’s definitely growth in the people and number of organizations that are doing those sorts of programs, and there’s growth in those programs,” said Alexander. “I mean, it’s tepid—it’s not the runaway hit that subscriptions once were. But it’s something that’s growing as opposed to shrinking.”

SMU DataArts’s Zannie Voss, whose studies have shown, among other things, a troubling drop-off in corporate support for the arts, also sounded a cautionary note about plans to simply refill theatre seats. The urgency around getting people to return defines the problem the wrong way; in that framing, she said, “The organization is meeting its own need, its own desire to produce work they need people to come see, rather than thinking about, is the work that you’re doing super relevant to the community you’re serving? If it’s a community of artists you’re serving, if that’s your reason for being—great. But a profound sense of relevance is critical at a time like this.”

JCA’s Alexander concurred. “The thing I always say is, just talk to the community. What do they want, not just artistically—what do they want? What is going to speak to them? What will they pay for? Doing the research is really important. I feel like often people will just be like, ‘Oh, let’s just do a new flex package,’ and they haven’t figured out if there’s good evidence or data to promote that, and then they just waste money on promoting it.”

The challenge of marketing individual shows while also creating loyalty and awareness among theatregoers takes constant, even granular attention. Said Stephens-Albright, “We had stopped doing direct mail, but we started doing direct mail again—but very targeted. Now we do direct mail within a two-mile radius of the theatre, because heat maps tell us that people come from a certain set of zip codes.” She said she also focuses on “identifying people that are specific ambassadors, like, ‘I need you to go after these: These are your folks, go get them.’”

Zooming out, the theatres that have fared best, according to TRG’s Jill Robinson, are the ones that were not only aggressive about fundraising but about programming, despite the pandemic—the ones who said, as she put it, “‘We’re going to get back to business as soon as we can—we’re going to be outdoors, we’re going to do it digitally. We’re going to do everything we can to get back going.’ The companies that did that are in the strongest position, because they have databases that are more active, they have staff teams that have not lost momentum and skill. They have the best likelihood of heading into 2024 and ’25 feeling like they’ve got the furnace and the fuel.” Those organizations also were more likely to do what she calls “both-and programming—both programming in ways they know audiences will come back to in volume, as well as things they know that people who really love theatre will show up for, and that they know missionally they want to do for their community.”

Alan Brown is less sanguine.

“It’s curious—what made us so resilient is also what’s making us slow to change,” he said. Looking back on past three years, he marveled, “People doubled down and worked unbelievably long hours, boards of directors came together and worked together like never before, and people homed in on their core work. They didn’t have to think about innovation and new products. They could just focus in—and nearly everyone survived.” But with relief money dried up, the reality of producing again in a changed world is bringing some theatres up short. Brown offered this analogy, “What do you call it when you’re driving on the highway, on mountainous terrain, and they have those escape routes for trucks that can’t go up? We’re on one of those.” Now that the rubber is hitting the road, so to speak, Brown warned, “I think the other shoe has not yet dropped, and it’s about to. There’s going to be a lot of painful downsizing and potentially more paradigmatic change.”

The pain may be unwelcome, but change is not. The NEA’s Reiner, citing the endowment’s current chair, Maria Rosario Jackson, said, “Dr. Jackson has been talking about resisting the instinct to just snap back to the way it was before. There’s an opportunity here for a new reality. The arts ecosystem is demanding new ways of working, new ways of gauging success and progress. So there’s an opportunity here to take stock and figure out what we’ve learned, and to reimagine how we work, to move on from past practices, because a lot of those practices weren’t working before the pandemic. What are the opportunities to make arts participation more relevant and accessible and equitable?”

I asked most of my interviewees about their level of optimism for the field; most were upbeat, relatively speaking, and seemed as eager to face current challenges as they were clear-eyed about the scale of them. True Colors’ Stephens-Albright put it best.

“I’m not nervous and panicked,” she said. “You can’t be nervous and panicked and work in theatre, especially if you got through 2020.” But, succinctly summing up the field’s next mandate, she concluded, “We’re gonna have to change our tactics.”

[Rob Weinert-Kendt (he/him) is editor-in-chief of American Theatre.

[In the American Theatre issue for Spring 2024, there are two articles pertinent to this examination: “Wish You Were Here: A Radical Access Roundtable,” moderated by Gabriela Furtado Coutinho, in which access consultants and artists discuss how they create sensory-conscious shows for disabled folks and their families, as well as how radical inclusivity enhances theater for everyone, and “Subscriptions Are Dead. Long Live Subscriptions!” by Rosie Brownlow-Calkin, where theater leaders talk about what’s working and what’s not in their efforts to change theatergoers ticket-buying habits. 

[The contents of these AT articles are very pertinent to the thrust of my Regional Theater Series.  I may, therefore, republish them on Rick On Theater in the coming weeks or months.  (The issue isn’t currently available online.)]


18 March 2024

"Audiences Are Back, More or Less"


A Supplement to the Regional Theater Series

[The following omnibus report on the lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic and shutdown on attendance at public events and venues such as plays, concerts, and museums appeared in the “Arts” section of the New York Times on 13 March 2024.  It’s a collection of mini-reports by Times writers who cover the various areas of arts, culture, and entertainment.

[Over the past few months, I’ve published several articles on Rick On Theater related to the state and background of the regional theater in the United States: “A Crisis In America’s Theaters” on 13 September 2023, “The Regional Theater: Change or Die” on 3 October 2023, and “Regional Theater: History” on 8 October 2023.  In November and December, I ran an 11-part series on “A History of the National Endowment for the Arts” because the NEA had a huge influence on the development and growth of the regional theater in the U.S. 

[Because of the seriousness of this subject, I said when I started this coverage that I’d post on it from various perspectives from time to time.  Below is my fifth report in that occasional series.]

With shutdowns over, pop concerts crowds are up, but Broadway is still a bit down.

It was four years ago — on March 12, 2020 — that the coronavirus brought the curtain down on Broadway for what was initially supposed to be a monthlong shutdown, but which wound up lasting a year and a half.

The pandemic brought live events and big gatherings to a halt, silencing orchestras, shutting museums and movie theaters and leaving sports teams playing to empty stadiums dotted with cardboard cutouts.

Now, four years later, audiences are coming back, but the recovery has been uneven. Here is a snapshot of where things stand from reporters of The New York Times.

Broadway audiences are still down 17 percent from prepandemic levels.

On Broadway, overall attendance is still down about 17 percent: 9.3 million seats have been filled in the current season as of March 3, down from 11.1 million at the same point in 2020. Box office grosses are down, too: Broadway shows have grossed $1.2 billion so far this season, 14 percent below the level in early March of 2020.

Broadway has always had more flops than successes, and the post-pandemic period has been challenging for producers and investors, especially those involved in new musicals. Three pop productions that have opened since the pandemic — “Six,” about the wives of King Henry VIII, “MJ,” about Michael Jackson and “& Juliet,” which imagines an alternate history for Shakespeare’s tragic heroine — are ongoing hits, but far more musicals have flamed out. The industry is looking with some trepidation toward next month, when a large crop of new shows is set to open.

Many nonprofit theaters around the country are also struggling [see “Theater in America Is Facing a Crisis as Many Stages Go Dark” by Michael Paulson (New York Times, 24 July 2023), posted on ROT in “A Crisis In America’s Theaters”] — attracting fewer subscribers and producing fewer shows — and some have closed. One bright spot has been the touring Broadway market, which has been booming.

michael paulson

Sales for the biggest pop concerts increased by 65 percent.

After a fitful recovery, the pop touring industry has now reached record highs, enabled by superstar tours, pent-up fan demand and ever-higher ticket prices.

The top 100 tours around the world generated $9.2 billion in ticket sales last year — a record by far, according to the trade publication Pollstar, which tracks touring data. That was up an astonishing 65 percent from 2019. The average ticket price last year was $131, up 23 percent from 2022, which accounts for some of the jump. Concert attendance climbed about 18 percent last year, to 70 million.

Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour was the biggest of many success stories, estimated at just over $1 billion in ticket sales, a new high (with dozens of dates still to come in 2024). According to numbers crunched by Pollstar, Swifties paid an average of $239 per ticket to see her show.

Not every artist is celebrating the post-pandemic touring boom, though. Those who operate below the level of arenas and amphitheaters — and lack the promotional apparatus of a Swift or a BeyoncĂ© — have been sounding an alarm about skyrocketing costs, and continuing supply-chain issues, that have eroded profit margins and made touring riskier and more expensive for non-superstars.

ben sisario

There are 4,800 fewer movie screens.

Thanks to “Barbie,” “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” and “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” the 2023 domestic box office, which includes the United States and Canada, took in close to $9 billion. That’s a marked increase from 2022 but still not at prepandemic levels, when theaters reliably sold $11 billion in tickets annually.

Fewer films were released in 2023: There were 125 wide releases, down from 138 in 2019, said David A. Gross, a film consultant who publishes a newsletter [FranchiseRe (https://franchisere.substack.com/)] on box office numbers. Some films were delayed by the writers’ and actors’ strikes, which shut down Hollywood for close to six months [2 May-27 September 2023 and 14 July-9 November 2023, respectively.]

The number of screens across the country has also declined. Some independent theater chains like Pacific Theaters and ArcLight Cinemas went out of business. And the top three U.S. chains, AMC, Regal and Cinemark, shut about 1,000 screens collectively, according to David Hancock, the chief analyst for cinema at Omdia, a London-based research company. He said that at the end of 2023, there were 36,369 screens in the country, down 12 percent from the 41,172 screens before the shutdown.

nicole sperling

Orchestra ticket sales are up 2 percent, yet some opera companies struggle.

Many orchestras are beginning to return to, or even exceed, prepandemic levels. The number of tickets that orchestras sold increased by 2 percent in 2023 compared with 2019, according to a study of 42 medium- and large-size orchestras by TRG Arts, an analytics firm, in partnership with the League of American Orchestras. Some continue to struggle, though, and some are giving fewer performances than they used to.

The Philadelphia Orchestra is averaging 78 percent attendance so far this season, compared with 63 percent before the pandemic. The New York Philharmonic, which completed a $550 million renovation of its hall in 2022 that made it more audience-friendly and reduced its seating capacity, is averaging 85 percent attendance this season compared with 74 percent before the pandemic. The San Francisco Symphony has had 74 percent attendance so far this season, slightly ahead of where it was before the shutdown, but it has fewer performances. The Los Angeles Philharmonic is now averaging 89 percent attendance, back where it was before the pandemic, even as the number of subscribers has fallen to 6,409 from 8,791.

But the Detroit Symphony Orchestra said that its attendance had fallen to 59 percent through March this season, down from 74 percent in the same period during the 2019-20 season, a drop it attributed to a loss of subscribers who have yet to return.

Many opera companies have had a hard time, as the cost of staging live opera — which requires sets, costumes, singers, chorus members and large orchestras — has risen. Ticket revenues at opera houses across the nation were down by about 22 percent last season compared with 2018-19, according to a recent study by Opera America, a nonprofit group, which said that so far this season, revenues are up.

At the Metropolitan Opera in New York, paid attendance is about 73 percent so far this season, compared with 71 percent at the same point in 2019-20, when fears of the pandemic were already beginning to keep operagoers away. And the Met now gives fewer performances overall. The pandemic has seriously strained the Met’s finances: The company has withdrawn about $70 million from its endowment over the past two seasons.

Many leading dance companies have largely bounced back from the disruption brought by Covid. Attendance at New York City Ballet so far this season is at 79 percent, compared with 73 percent before the pandemic, and San Francisco Ballet is at 78 percent attendance, compared with 66 percent in the 2019-20 season.

javier c. hernández

Museum attendance is mixed.

While some major museums have been able to regain lost ground, others are still seeing fewer visitors, which continues to strain their already-stretched finances.

The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York reported nearly 861,000 visitors last year, a 26 percent decline from about 1.2 million visitors before the pandemic, when its Hilma af Klint exhibition [12 October 2018-23 April 2019] set new attendance records. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has seen a 15 percent decline over the same period, to 5.8 million visitors from 6.8 million, which could be partially attributed to the loss of its Met exhibition space at the Breuer building on Madison Avenue. And the Art Institute of Chicago said that attendance had also decreased by about 15 percent since the shutdown with about 1.3 million visitors in 2023, saying that while it now has more paid local visitors than it did before the pandemic, there are still fewer international visitors.

[The Met Breuer closed in July 2020 for budgetary reasons and the building was turned over to the Frick Collection while its Upper East Side home underwent expansion. The Frick vacated the Madison Avenue building on 3 March 2024 and it will be a facility of Sotheby’s auction house in September.]

Some regional organizations — relying more on local populations than international tourists — have seen stronger comebacks. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston said that it had experienced a 20 percent increase in visitors over the last fiscal year when compared to prepandemic levels. “We have also witnessed a change in the demographics of our audience, with a larger percentage of younger visitors, which bodes well for the future,” said Gary Tinterow, the museum’s director and chairman.

And the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, which completed a renovation project last year, said that it attracted a record 277,882 visitors last year, up from 240,706 in 2019.

Zachary Small and Robin Pogrebin

Sports fans are back.

Sports fans are back. All four major sports leagues — the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball and the National Hockey League — had bigger attendance in their most recent regular seasons than they did in 2019, according to a calculation of the leagues’ data by The Times.

The N.F.L. saw the sharpest increase: 18.9 million people in 2023, up 10.9 percent from the 17 million people in 2019. That is in part because the league added a game to the regular-season schedule in 2021 as part of a new media-rights package. That bumped the total number of games played in a season from 256 to 272.

Attendance for Major League Baseball increased 3.2 percent last season compared with its last full season before the pandemic.  The National Basketball Association had a 1.2 percent increase and the National Hockey League had a 1.1 percent increase.

Emmanuel Morgan

[This post is also the most recent entry in another ad hoc series: the effect of the COVID pandemic on the theater and the theater’s response to the crisis.  Other posts on that topic are:

•   “Theaters Go Dark Across the Nation,” 29 March and 1 April 2020

   “Suzan-Lori Parks on the Covid Pandemic,” 17 May 2020

   “Theater Online – A Preliminary Report” by Kirk Woodward and Rick, 19 May 2020

   “‘Connecting through art when a pandemic keeps us apart’” by Jeffrey Brown, 26 June 2020

   “Yo Yo Ma on the Artist’s Role in the Time of Covid-19,” 28 August 2020

   “‘Medical professionals turn to music as a tonic’” by Jeffrey Brown and Anne Azzi Davenport, 22 September 2020

   “‘At this Virginia theater, the show – and the masks – must go on’” by John Yang, et al., 18 October 2020

   “‘Despite the Pandemic, It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like “Christmas Carol’” by Jerald Raymond Pierce, 27 December 2020

   “‘Waiting out a pandemic – and for our “King Lear”’” by Peter Marks, 11 January 2021

   “The Show Goes On During the Pandemic,” 26 January 2021

   “‘Great Performances’: The Arts Interrupted” produced and directed by Akisa Omulepu, 3 and 6 June 2021

   “‘As Attendance Falls, Now Is the Winter of Broadway’s Discontent’” by Michael Paulson, 23 January 2022

   “At the Theater: To Wear A Mask, Or Not To Wear A Mask,” 27 June 2022

[In addition, there are many other posts in which Covid, the coronavirus, the pandemic, and/or the shutdown gets a mention.]