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IDEAS
- The McCallum Theatre seeks Vice President—General Manager
Organization
The McCallum Theatre (the McCallum), operated by Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc., is a premier performing arts institution dedicated to entertaining, educating, and enriching the Coachella Valley through world class performances and transformative arts education. Rooted in the belief that the performing arts foster connection, creativity, and community vitality, the McCallum serves as both a cultural anchor and an artistic catalyst for the region. Located in Palm Desert, California, the McCallum was established in 1988 through a visionary public-private partnership among the City of Palm Desert, the Desert Community College District, and the Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc. Its 1,127 seat venue, designed with state of the art acoustics and technical capabilities, has earned a reputation as one of Southern California’s most distinguished performance spaces, welcoming artists and audiences from across the country and around the world.
Education and community engagement are central to the McCallum’s mission. Through its award winning McCallum Theatre Education program, the organization serves more than 40,000 students, educators, and community members each year. Classroom residencies, student matinees, teacher professional development, and deep partnerships with schools and community organizations bring the arts directly into learning environments, expanding access and nurturing creativity, confidence, and academic growth among young people. This commitment to equitable arts education has positioned the McCallum as a leader in regional cultural enrichment.
Each season, the McCallum Theatre presents a dynamic array of performances that span Broadway productions, classical and popular music, dance companies, comedy, and world renowned solo artists. The 2025–2026 season features national touring productions, global music ensembles, celebrated performers, and beloved community traditions such as the Palm Desert Choreography Festival and the Open Call Talent Project. This breadth of programming reflects the McCallum’s dedication to artistic excellence, cultural diversity, and community relevance, drawing audiences from across the Coachella Valley and beyond.
Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc. d/b/a McCallum Theatre is governed by a 52 member board of trustees led by Chairman Garry Kief, with Yvonne Bell serving as President and Chief Executive Officer. For the fiscal year ending July 31, 2024, the organization’s audited financial statements, which include the McCallum Theatre Foundation, reported total revenue of $25.3 million, including $11.3 million from contributions and grants, $11 million from program services, and $2.5 million from investment income. Total expenses were $19.6 million, underscoring the scale and impact of the Theatre’s artistic and educational work. For the year ending July 31, 2026, the organization expects to continue its pattern of generating an annual surplus.
Sources: edited from mccallumtheatre.org; propublica.org
Community
Set against the dramatic backdrop of the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains, Palm Desert is a warm and welcoming community at the heart of the Coachella Valley, a region of more than 450,000 year round residents that expands to over 800,000 during the peak season. Incorporated in 1973, the city has grown into a vibrant desert oasis where natural beauty meets contemporary comfort. While Palm Desert itself is home to just over 50,000 year round residents, it serves as a central hub within this larger valley community, offering sweeping mountain vistas, sun drenched skies, and a climate that invites outdoor living nearly every day of the year. With less than three inches of annual rainfall and more than 340 days of sunshine, Palm Desert provides an environment where hiking trails, golf courses, and open air gathering places are woven into daily life.
Palm Desert’s lively cultural and commercial corridors reflect the broader region’s spirit of creativity and exploration. El Paseo, often called the “Rodeo Drive of the Desert,” is lined with galleries, boutiques, and cafés that draw visitors from across the Coachella Valley and beyond. Families enjoy an array of amenities, from expansive parks and community centers to The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, a beloved destination for residents throughout the valley. Palm Desert’s hospitality tradition runs deep, shaped by the arrival of luxury resorts and golf clubs beginning in the late 1970s. Today, more than 30 hotels and 5,000 guest rooms welcome travelers from around the world, contributing to a regional tourism economy that thrives during the high season. The city’s celebrated golf culture—rooted in the opening of Shadow Mountain Golf Club in 1948—continues to flourish alongside tennis, hiking, and the valley’s growing enthusiasm for pickleball.
Palm Desert’s cultural life is equally dynamic and plays a significant role in the artistic identity of the entire Coachella Valley. The McCallum Theatre anchors the performing arts landscape, presenting national touring productions, concerts, dance companies, and community showcases that draw audiences from every corner of the region. The city also holds a distinctive place in music history as the birthplace of the Palm Desert Scene, the influential ’90s movement that helped shape the stoner rock genre and launched bands such as Kyuss and Queens of the Stone Age. Artists, performers, and public figures have long been drawn to the area’s serenity and creative energy, contributing to a community that values both artistic expression and a relaxed desert sensibility.
Palm Desert’s educational and civic landscape further strengthens its role as a regional center. The city is home to the main campus of College of the Desert as well as branches of UC Riverside and Cal State San Bernardino, making Palm Desert the Coachella Valley’s hub for public higher education. A network of private schools, cultural organizations, and community groups, including the Jewish Federation of the Desert, adds depth and connection to local life. The city’s economy is stable and diverse, with approximately 24,145 households, of which about 64 percent are owner occupied. The median household income is roughly $79,500, and the median home value is approximately $491,600. Palm Desert’s population reflects a broad mix of residents, including about 68 percent white and 26 percent Hispanic or Latino, along with smaller percentages of other groups. Together, these elements create a community defined by openness, accessibility, and a distinctive blend of desert tranquility and cultural vibrancy—qualities that resonate across the entire Coachella Valley.
Sources: www.palmdesert.gov; www.visitgreaterpalmsprings.com; www.desertusa.com
Position Summary
The Vice President—General Manager will bring a proven ability to build trust with a wide range of stakeholders and, in collaboration with the President & CEO, will guide the McCallum Theatre’s artistic vision by managing program bookings, logistics, contract administration, and season scheduling. They will ensure that programming serves the community and delivers meaningful cultural opportunities for the Coachella Valley and beyond, drawing on a solid history of programming as both presenter and producer and staying informed about trends and competitive offerings to help sustain a dynamic and successful season. The Vice President—General Manager will demonstrate knowledge of the arts and community while fostering a cohesive internal team and staff culture that integrates innovative approaches with industry best practices across programming, production, marketing, front of house, and box office. They will cultivate strong industry relationships and work directly with agents, artists, programs, and internal staff to ensure clear communication, accurate agreements, and the smooth execution of contracts that comply with legal and organizational policies. Reporting directly to the President & CEO, the Vice President—General Manager will help ensure that the organization fulfills its mission through its artistic programming, educational offerings, productions, community partnerships, and staffing.
Role and Responsibilities
Artistic Programming and Contracting
- Articulate with the President & CEO an overall artistic vision consistent with the organizational mission that models current industry trends, audience demographics, and local competitor programming, prioritizing a balance of local, regional, and national touring artists and events that appeal to multi-generational audiences.
- Develop, present, select, and contract annual programming of multi-disciplinary offerings, including music, theatre, dance, lectures, film, and multimedia programs, and associated year-round scheduled activities designed to bring dynamic cultural activity to the Coachella Valley.
- Nurture and sustain strong relationships with presenters, promoters, and talent representatives, including attending booking conferences.
- Serve as the primary point of contact for booking, negotiating all artist contracts, and executing offer letters to agents, managers, and artists’ agents to confirm terms, and coordinate details for artist and program engagements.
- Build strong relationships with fellow presenters, national and local guest artists/ensembles, and other production companies, and industry stakeholders to support ongoing and future collaborations, shared expenses, and block booking.
- Embrace and support additional artistic programming and contracting responsibilities as needed.
General Management and Operations
- Partner with the President & CEO to contribute to, oversee, guide, and implement McCallum Theatre’s long-term strategic planning.
- Serve on the senior management team as a creative partner, between senior management, the marketing, finance, and development departments, the production staff, the box office, and front of house staff, so all parties have the most up-to-date and correct information, including occasional attendance and presentations at board meetings as requested.
- Manage key business agreements, utilizing relevant experience in programming, logistics, and maintenance of a multi-use multi-venue facility for items such as ongoing union and lease agreements, operations management, and service contracts.
- Oversee all theatre rental activity, including evaluating rental requests, negotiating terms, coordinating internal departments, ensuring contract compliance, and maximizing earned revenue while protecting the integrity of the McCallum Theatre’s mission, brand, and operational capacity.
- Guide operations to ensure employees and business practices comply with regulatory and legal requirements, ensuring the facility is maintained in the safest, most creatively conducive environment possible.
- Supervise and manage emergency response training to ensure staff and volunteer preparedness during performances and on non-performance days.
- Monitor advancements in technology, including newly developed software and hardware resources in partnership with the President & CEO and department heads, to guide new system implementations, ongoing maintenance, and multi-year facility upgrades.
- Advise on capital projects regarding facility maintenance, system upgrades, large construction multi-year facility renovation projects, capital expansion planning, and expenditures for replacement of aging systems and equipment as needed, with an emphasis on safety.
- Embrace and support additional general management and operations responsibilities as needed.
Staff Leadership and Team Communication
- Manage and support staff members, monitoring productivity, while also providing constructive feedback, reinforcing accountability, encouraging proactive approaches, and ensuring adherence to legal and organizational policies.
- Assist the McCallum to grow in all regards, guiding department heads to be open to both new internal and external perspectives, where challenges are viewed as opportunities to achieve and excel, and encouraging a pathway for growth and creative solutions to the work.
- Further unity across all departments to align with the organization’s greater mission, while proactively working against silos, to build a safe creative space, and foster team building in which staff members are advocates for each other, accountable for the work, and partners to do their best work.
- Empower department heads to respond to the needs of and challenge their staff, nurturing critical thinking skills, encouraging accountability with clear lines of communication, and incorporating various strategies to achieve the highest professional standards that align with industry best practices.
- Oversee the hiring, supervision, and mentoring of programming and front of house staff, providing professional development and growth to attract, retain, and empower highly qualified employees and volunteers to ensure organizational growth and sustainability.
- Provide strategic oversight of the volunteer usher program, ensuring exceptional patron service through recruitment, training, scheduling, and performance standards.
- Ensure that creative teams, production staff, development, marketing, box office, finance, and education staff receive all relevant production information with clarity and in a timely manner, responding promptly to inquiries, as well as providing regular communications to long-term artist partners, including both internal staff and outside contract services.
- Embrace and support additional staff leadership and team communication responsibilities as needed.
Production Supervision
- Analyze the annual production calendar and staffing for better system options, creating, building, and establishing new policies and procedures on how shows are produced, including the implementation of new administrative resources, system programs, and strategies.
- Create season performance schedules and oversee the master calendar, in conjunction with other departments and relevant stakeholders, to establish, communicate, and manage production schedules, including the scheduling of all related events.
- Provide artistic leadership and guidance to all artistic teams and partners throughout the entire production process, from selecting performance offerings to advising and consulting with the production staff, as well as ensuring readiness for each show’s opening and run.
- Track artist and program payments, deposits, and settlement requirements, working with Finance to ensure accuracy and compliance.
- Embrace and support additional production supervision responsibilities as needed.
Traits and Characteristics
The Vice President—General Manager will be a strong collaborator with an innovative spirit, modeling a strong work ethic and demonstrating passion and dedication. Ensuring that programming resonates with all the Coachella Valley communities, the Vice President—General Manager will uphold the McCallum’s commitment to professional excellence. As a creative, innovative programmer and producer, they will be an effective communicator and able to deliver high-quality performances and motivate teams with a clear sense of purpose. They will be resilient, flexible, and positive, as well as an effective, detail-oriented team builder and project manager who can inspire, coach, manage, and mentor a large staff. They will be a strong, knowledgeable, experienced, and organized leader who finds joy and fulfillment in the work.
Other key competencies include:
- Self-Starting and Leadership – The fortitude to effectively demonstrate initiative and willingness to begin working, along with the skill to organize and influence people to believe in a vision, while also creating a sense of purpose and direction.
- Teamwork and Influencing Others – The ability to cooperate with others to meet objectives, while also being personally able to affect others’ actions, decisions, and opinions.
- Problem Solving and Resiliency – The dexterity to be able to define, analyze, and diagnose key components of a problem to formulate a solution, as well as the agility to quickly recover from adversity.
- Time and Priority Management – The organizational acumen to prioritize and complete tasks to deliver desired outcomes within allotted time frames.
Qualifications
The Vice President—General Manager will have the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree in Theatre, Arts Administration, Business, or a related field, or two to four years of equivalent professional experience in performing arts programming, booking, or contract administration. Excellent interpersonal, written, and verbal communication, and supervisory skills are essential, with the ability to lead, motivate, and manage diverse teams required. Strong financial and operational management skills, including oversight of a similarly sized budget and staff, are highly desirable. A thorough knowledge of music and the performing arts, coupled with a proven track record in programming, presenting, and engaging audiences, is preferred in addition to experience in operating and managing a successful performing arts center. Strong organizational and administrative skills, with the ability to handle multiple projects and deadlines simultaneously is expected. Familiarity with standard artist and program agreements, contracts, riders, and industry practices, ability to interpret legal language, and an understanding of implications for the organization, with an attention to detail and accuracy in contract review and financial documentation, is necessary. Proficiency with Microsoft Office, venue management software (Momentus Elite), and IT experience is advantageous. CRM and database experience, in particular Tessitura, is desirable. Ability to work flexible hours, including evenings and weekends during performance periods, is required.
The McCallum values the many ways leadership and operational expertise are developed, both professionally and personally, and strongly encourages applications from individuals whose lived experience and diverse career paths have comparably prepared them to provide operational and cultural leadership at the highest level.
Compensation and Benefits
The McCallum Theatre offers a competitive compensation package with an estimated salary range between $170,000 and $185,000, plus benefits.
Applications and Inquiries
To submit a cover letter and resume with a summary of demonstrable accomplishments (electronic submissions preferred), please visit https://artsconsulting.com/opensearches/mccallum-theatre-seeks-vice-president-general-manager/
McCallum Theatre provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment and prohibits discrimination and harassment of any type without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, national origin, disability status, genetics, protected veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or any other characteristic protected by federal, state, or local laws. This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, hiring, placement, promotion, termination, layoff, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation, and training.
- Good Morning
Today’s AJ highlights: In Washington, the Kennedy Center’s employment situation has become something of a farce: the newly hired VP of artistic programming has resigned after just two weeks on the job. (The New York Times). And the manager of artistic planning has been fired (reports the Kennedy Center). Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal agents in Los Angeles, an escalation that followed a judge’s prior rejection of charges against him while covering a demonstration in Minneapolis (AP). The former general manager of Sacramento’s Capital Public Radio has been arrested for allegedly embezzling more than $1.3 million (The Sacramento Bee).
A “resistance of the analog” is taking hold. Yale professors are increasingly requiring students to read on paper, banning screens to force a direct, unmediated encounter with texts in an age of AI (Yale Daily News). And there are new arguments that while AI can mimic competence, it cannot replicate the “uniqueness” of human memory and memoir (Aeon). Continuing the analog thread, psychologists are arguing for more “pockets of serenity” in cities to counteract the sensory overload of modern life (Psyche).
Finally, institutions are getting creative—and populist—to survive. Palo Alto Players has begun offering free childcare to lower barriers for audiences (San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)) , while the Detroit Opera is welcoming George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic for a full symphonic collaboration (AP). And in a twist of market irony, public television is being buoyed not by high art, but by the “happy little trees” of Bob Ross, whose paintings are now fetching nearly $800,000 at auction in benefit of public media (Artnet).
All of today’s stories below.
- President & CEO – Wharton Arts


Wharton Arts
(https://whartonarts.org/)With a history spanning nearly five decades, Wharton Arts is New Jersey’s largest independent non-profit community performing arts educator, serving nearly 2,000 students annually through a broad spectrum of musical programming. Four core programs – the New Jersey Youth Symphony, New Jersey Youth Chorus, Paterson Music Project, and Wharton Performing Arts School – provide exceptional performing arts education for students of all ages, abilities, and backgrounds.
Developed more than 45 years ago, the New Jersey Youth Symphony (NJYS) is a tiered orchestral program that offers ensemble education opportunities for more than 500 students in grades 3 through 12. NJYS ensembles have performed at venues ranging from the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and Musikverein in Vienna to local assisted living centers, libraries, and street fairs in New Jersey. NJYS has received awards for adventurous programming from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) and has been on six European tours, most recently to Italy and France in 2023. NJYS’s flagship ensemble, Youth Symphony, will travel to Scandinavia, Finland, and the Baltics, including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, in the summer of 2026.
Paterson Music Project (PMP) is an El Sistema-inspired program that uses music to empower and inspire young people through the community experience of ensemble learning and playing. PMP provides accessible, affordable, and high-quality instrumental instruction and focuses on musical excellence, community, and life skills. Since its inception in 2013, the program has grown from one class of 24 third graders to nearly 350 students in first to twelfth grades, providing tuition-free musical training to students from more than 25 schools throughout Paterson. PMP’s first class of third graders graduated from high school in June 2023. PMP now engages alumni as interns and leaders in the program.
The New Jersey Youth Chorus (NJYC) merged with Wharton Arts in 2022 as the Chorus celebrated its 30th anniversary season. NJYC is an auditioned choral ensemble for students in grades 3 through 12. NJYC encourages a love and appreciation for choral music while nurturing personal growth and creativity. NJYC’s more than 150 members regularly perform throughout the state and tour across the country. Past performances include the White House, the Super Bowl, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and Radio City Music Hall. In the summer of 2025, 30 choristers toured Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, appearing at renowned venues including the Cologne Cathedral, Bonn Cathedral, and Menin Gate in Ypres.
The Performing Arts School (PAS) provides instrumental and vocal instruction, musical theatre, drama, and other courses for students ages four through adult. PAS promotes personal growth through excellence in music education. PAS students have participated in music festivals and recitals in venues that include Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and the Musik Quartier in Vienna. A member of the National Guild for Community Arts Education, Wharton Arts offers private and group lessons, summer camp, and a CAFÉ (Creative Aging for Everyone) Choir for aspiring and accomplished musicians alike.
Wharton Arts is governed by a Board of 17 Trustees, has an annual operating budget of approximately $4 million and a team of more than 100 artistic and administrative staff members. Trustee Erika Fanelle is Interim Executive Director; Helen Cha-Pyo is Artistic Director and Principal Conductor. Wharton Arts operates three campuses located in Berkeley Heights, New Providence, and Paterson, New Jersey and draws students from twelve New Jersey counties.
The Opportunity
The President and CEO of Wharton Arts will assume a newly defined and expanded leadership role that includes responsibility for all aspects of the organization, both artistic and administrative. The CEO will have the opportunity to work with a dedicated and engaged board, faculty, and staff as they continue to expand the depth and reach of their education programs for children and adults. The CEO will take a lead role in developing the resources needed to secure a new shared music education facility for NJYS, NJYC, and the Performing Arts School. The CEO will ensure that Wharton Arts continues to represent the highest standards of excellence in music education programs and activities.
The Position
Reporting to the Board of Trustees through the Co-Chairs, the President and CEO provides leadership and vision to ensure that Wharton Arts fulfils its mission and achieves its goals for excellence in music education, community engagement, and long-term financial sustainability. The CEO is responsible and accountable for all aspects of Wharton Arts’ administration and operations, including: artistic planning and operations; budgeting and financial management; fundraising and external relations; program administration; marketing, promotion, and public relations; site development and facilities management; human resources; and community engagement. The CEO fosters an environment that allows Wharton Arts to recruit and retain the highest quality artistic and administrative staff.
The President and CEO articulates the vision, mission, and goals of Wharton Arts to internal and external audiences. The CEO takes a leadership role in the identification, cultivation, and solicitation of donors. The CEO leads the planning and execution of a capital campaign for a new music education facility. The CEO serves as chief spokesperson for Wharton Arts and advocate for the importance and value of music education throughout the community.
The President and CEO oversees the financial management of Wharton Arts, including budgeting, financial planning, and management of cash flow. The CEO assures that Wharton Arts achieves its annual and long-term budget goals for enrollment and earned and contributed income. The CEO maintains transparency in financial reporting to internal and external audiences and ensures that the Board and the Finance Committee have the information they need for sound decision-making.
The President and CEO leads Wharton Arts strategic planning. The CEO ensures the effective development and utilization of the human resources needed to accomplish the organization’s mission. The CEO oversees the recruitment and selection of faculty and the evaluation of faculty, programs, and curriculum. The CEO gives leadership and guidance to the artistic and administrative staff and provides a welcoming environment for students, parents, families, and other community stakeholders.
The President and CEO represents Wharton Arts in New Providence, Berkeley Heights, and Paterson, in Union, Passaic, and neighboring counties, and is an active member of the arts and education community throughout the state and nationally.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate will be a proven leader with the ability to embrace and articulate the vision, mission, and goals of Wharton Arts with clarity and conviction. The successful candidate will have a passionate belief in the value and importance of music education and the role that a vibrant music education center plays in development of children and the cultural life of a community. The candidate will have significant successful leadership and management experience with performing arts and/or music education organizations.
The successful candidate will be a strategic thinker with the vision and imagination to chart future directions, recognize opportunities, forge consensus, and harness the energies of diverse constituencies to accomplish common goals. The CEO will be a good listener with excellent interpersonal skills. The CEO will be decisive leader and a fearless agent for change when change is needed.
The successful candidate will be an enthusiastic fundraiser with the proven ability to achieve and exceed organizational goals for philanthropic support. The candidate will have strong experience in all aspects of fundraising, including annual giving, special events, and endowment campaigns. Experience achieving capital campaign goals of $10 million or more will be a plus. The candidate will be able to speak and write persuasively to diverse internal and external audiences.
The successful candidate will be an experienced manager with the demonstrated ability to set expectations and assure both financial and operational accountability throughout the organization. The candidate will be able to lead staff in an environment that fosters creativity, a commitment to excellence, and teamwork. The candidate will be able to innovate, manage change, move an agenda forward, and resolve conflict.
The successful candidate will be knowledgeable about facilities and project management. The candidate will bring successful experience working with local governments, developers, and community leaders to create alliances that achieve shared goals.
The successful candidate will have an engaging public personality and presence, high energy, and excellent listening skills. The candidate will be a leader who fully embraces principles of inclusion, diversity, equity, and access. The candidate will have the ability to interact effectively with stakeholders who represent every aspect of diversity in age, education, gender, sexual orientation, race, religion, ethnicity, and socio-economic status.
The successful candidate will be kind, creative, curious, and flexible. The candidate will have at least ten years’ senior executive experience and will possess common sense, sound judgment, and good humor in abundance. The successful candidate will be willing and able to maintain a schedule that includes frequent evening and weekend events.
Compensation
The salary range for this position is $150,000 to $185,000, depending on qualifications and experience. Wharton Arts offers a comprehensive benefits package that includes health insurance, a retirement plan, professional development opportunities, and paid time off.
Applications
Wharton Arts welcomes recommendations, nominations, and applications from all qualified candidates regardless of race, religion, political affiliation, disability, sexual orientation, gender, national origin, or marital status, or any other basis protected by law. Candidates must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Please submit a resumé along with a cover letter that describes your specific interest in the mission and work of Wharton Arts and your qualifications for the position as described in the candidate profile. On a separate sheet, provide the names and contact information for several professional references. All applications will be treated as confidential and references will not be contacted without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement.
Electronic submissions are requested. Please send to:
President and CEO – Wharton Arts
c/o Catherine French Group
applications@catherinefrenchgroup.com(Adobe Acrobat PDF attachments only, please)
- Chief Financial Officer – Sarasota Opera


Sarasota Opera is marking its 67th season of bringing internationally acclaimed opera to audiences on Florida’s Gulf Coast while celebrating the Centennial of its home, the historic Sarasota Opera House. The Company’s Winter Opera Festival will take place at the Sarasota Opera House in February and March 2026, and will include 34 performances of four major operas: La bohème, The Merry Widow, Il trovatore, and Susannah.
The Company was launched in 1960 in the historic 320-seat Asolo Theater on the grounds of Sarasota’s Ringling Museum of Art. In 1984, the Company moved into the former A.B. Edwards Theater, now the Sarasota Opera House. The 1,119-seat Sarasota Opera House, which underwent a $20 million renovation and rehabilitation in 2007, has been named “one of America’s finest venues for opera” by Musical America.
Since then, Sarasota Opera has gained an international reputation as one of the leading regional opera companies in the United States. The Company’s major artistic initiatives have included the Masterworks Revival Series, the American Classics Series, and the Verdi Cycle. The Company’s Sarasota Youth Opera is the most comprehensive youth opera program in the United States.
Since 1983, Sarasota Opera has been under the artistic leadership of Victor DeRenzi. In 1989, the Company and DeRenzi launched a monumental Verdi Cycle. When the Cycle concluded in 2016, Sarasota Opera became the only opera company in the world to have performed every note composed by Giuseppi Verdi. Since 2012, the Company’s administrative leader has been General Director Richard Russell. When Victor DeRenzi steps down as Artistic Director in May 2026, Richard Russellwill become General Director and Artistic Director.
Sarasota Opera is governed by a Board of 28 and has a year-round staff of 30, which grows to 200 during the winter season. The Company’s budget is $11 million.
The Position
The Chief Financial Officer (CFO) is the senior executive responsible and accountable for overseeing financial strategy, planning, and operations for Sarasota Opera. The CFO drives the processes of budgeting, forecasting, and financial analysis; ensures the Company’s compliance with government regulations, contracts, donor agreements, and reporting requirements; and ensures that controls are in place to protect the Opera’s assets and non-profit tax status.
The CFO maintains the integrity of the Company’s accounting systems and records, and ensures full and accurate integration of the accounting records with Tessitura and other applications in use by the Company. The CFO provides timely, accurate, and complete financial reports and information to the General Director, the Board, and the staff to guide and inform their decision-making. The CFO provides budgets, reports, and necessary financial data to the Development Department to support grant applications and fulfill reporting requirements.
The CFO monitors the Company’s bank accounts, cash flow, and investments and serves as liaison to the Company’s investment advisors. The CFO reviews all invoices, contracts, and agreements. The CFO is the liaison with the insurance agency and ensures that the Company has adequate coverages. The CFO oversees the payroll process to ensure accuracy and timeliness, and oversees the administration of employee benefits.
The CFO reports to the General Director, supervises the accounting staff, and works closely with the Treasurer of the Board and members of the executive management team. The CFO is the staff liaison for the Finance Committee, the Investment Committee; and the Audit Committee. The CFO provides reports and documents as needed for the annual audit and ensures that all tax filings are prepared correctly and in a timely manner. The ensures compliance with FASB and GAAP guidelines.
As a member of the executive management team, the CFO attends performances and events and serves as an ambassador for the Company with donors, patrons, and audiences as well as external stakeholders throughout the greater Sarasota community.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate will have significant senior financial management experience; thorough familiarity with non-profit fund accounting; proven budgeting, forecasting, and cash management ability; and a genuine interest in connecting audiences with opera. Experience working with a not-for-profit organization is essential; experience working with an opera company or other performing arts organization will be a plus.
The successful candidate will be thoroughly knowledgeable about, and experienced with, institutional planning and helping to shape, implement, and monitor strategic plans. The candidate will have a thorough working knowledge of the technology available to support finance and operations in a non-profit organization. Prior experience with Sage MIP Accounting and Tessitura will be viewed as an asset. The successful candidate will bring experience in human resources and benefits administration.
The successful candidate will be a leader with strong supervisory skills and a management style that encourages collaboration and teamwork. The candidate will be able to manage multiple deadlines and competing priorities with grace and good humor. The candidate will be curious, persistent, and nimble.
The successful candidate will be able to accept a work schedule that includes performances and events on nights and weekends during production periods. The candidate will welcome the opportunity to play a key role in the management of Sarasota Opera and become an active participant in the Sarasota community.
Compensation
Sarasota Opera offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. The annual salary range for this position is $110,000 to $125,000, plus a benefits package that includes paid time off; health insurance; life insurance; and a voluntary 403(b) retirement plan.
Applications
Sarasota Opera welcomes recommendations, nominations, and applications from all qualified candidates regardless of race, religion, political affiliation, disability, sexual orientation, gender, national origin, or marital status, or any other basis protected by law. Candidates must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Please submit a resumé along with a cover letter that describes your specific interest in the mission and work of Sarasota Opera and your qualifications for the position as described in the candidate profile. On a separate sheet, provide the names and contact information for several professional references. All applications will be treated as confidential and references will not be contacted without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement.
Electronic submissions are requested. Please send to:
Chief Financial Officer – Sarasota Opera
c/o Catherine French Group
applications@catherinefrenchgroup.com(Adobe Acrobat PDF attachments only, please)
- How “The New Yorker Story” Became A Genre

“I hadn’t investigated this term in depth, but I understood it to mean ‘a short story that is meandering, plotless, and slight — full of middle-class people discussing their relentlessly banal problems.’ … But they were also good!” Those characteristics were deliberately shaped by the different preferences of two key editors. – Woman of Letters
ISSUES
- San Francisco Has A Public Space Ripe For Becoming The Next High Line

“The second-level promenade of the Embarcadero Center is one of the more scenic, beautifully landscaped, well-maintained spaces in San Francisco. … Yet despite its charms, the Embarcadero Center is also one of San Francisco’s most-underutilized spaces. … (It) can and should be our High Line — only better.” – San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)
- To Wall-Text Or Not-To-Wall-Text

“It feels more important than ever to invite multiple voices into the museum space. There isn’t one perfect solution for all visitors, but we strive to offer a variety of access points—whether it’s traditional labels, guided gallery conversations or prompts to spark reflection and dialogue.” – The Art Newspaper
- James Rondeau Is Ready To Beef Up The Art Institute Of Chicago (And Let’s Just Forget About That Airplane Incident, Okay?)

As some other American museums struggle, the Institute is doing very well under Rondeau’s leadership (notwithstanding the medication-and-alcohol-fueled disrobing during a commercial flight last April). He’s now pushing for an expansion, saying the museum needs more display space. – WBEZ (Chicago)
- Museum Of Fine Arts, Boston Resorts To Layoffs

“The MFA faces ‘an unsustainable deficit that we have committed to resolve,’ (an) email to employees stated. … The institution said in a statement to WBUR it plans to reduce 6.3% of its workforce. More than 30 museum positions will be affected.” – WBUR (Boston)
- With Little Warning, SFMOMA “Pauses” Its Free First Thursday Program

“Free First Thursday, which waives the general admission fee for all Bay Area residents from 4-8 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month, has been temporarily halted starting in February. … No return date has been set, but SFMOMA plans to announce a new program series in the summer.” – San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)
MEDIA
- Why More Professors Are Making Their Students Read On Paper
“The English classroom is increasingly a kind of special place where it’s still possible to converse without the screen. AI only seems to make it more imperative to make sure that students are having a direct experience with the text.” – Yale Daily News
- Why Small Liberal Arts Colleges Are The Education Of Choice
At a small liberal-arts college, where a cohort may number fewer than 500 people, admissions officers can also take a stronger hand in assembling a group of students who match the institution’s culture and its vibe while also having very different backgrounds. – The Atlantic
- When Students Are “Customers” Education Suffers
Over the past 15 to 20 years, declining numbers of college-age Americans and a seemingly endless rise in tuition have brought about a shift in power. Students are now treated like customers who rarely have to hear information that upsets them — because schools need their money to survive. – The New York Times
- Kennedy Center VP Of Artistic Planning, Resigns After Being On The Job Two Weeks
Kevin Couch, formerly the director of programming for ATG Entertainment, a British theater company, is the latest in a string of resignations and show cancellations since President Trump purged the center’s board and made himself chairman last year. – The New York Times
- Kennedy Center Fires Senior Director Of Artistic Operations
Sarah Kramer “(had) spent the past decade rising through the ranks of the once-venerated cultural institution. She started as an assistant manager for special programming in 2016. Over the years, she was promoted to assistant manager, then manager for programming, then director, and finally senior director of artistic operations.” – The Daily Beast
MUSIC
- How “The New Yorker Story” Became A Genre
“I hadn’t investigated this term in depth, but I understood it to mean ‘a short story that is meandering, plotless, and slight — full of middle-class people discussing their relentlessly banal problems.’ … But they were also good!” Those characteristics were deliberately shaped by the different preferences of two key editors. – Woman of Letters
- How Did The Iconic “Infinite Jest” Become A Punchline?
The occasion is a moment to ask how a novel that mourns addiction and venerates humility and patience became a glib cultural punch line, routinely subjected to the word “performative” in its most damning sense. – The New Yorker
- Minneapolis Bookshop Becomes Famous After ICE Murders
Greg Ketter became a social media phenomenon over the weekend, when MS Now aired a video of him pacing half a block away from where Alex J. Pretti had been murdered by agents an hour earlier, cursing the 50-100 armed ICE agents keeping the crowd back. – Publishers Weekly
- With Adelaide Writers’ Week Cancelled, A Grassroots Festival Is Popping Up Instead
“Constellations – also jokingly dubbed ‘Not Writers’ Week’ – is being put on by “a loose coalition” of writers and publishers and the support of not-for-profit Writers SA, with dozens of free events to be staged from 28 February to 5 March.” – The Guardian
- A Marathon Moby Dick As A “Radical Act”
Moby-Dick, by Herman Melville, published in 1851. Let’s consider it. Is there another book at once so good and so bad, so thrilling and so boring, so authentic to the currents of the soul and so hideously contrived, so stunningly patrolled by dreamlike visions and so crushed by its own intellectual baggage? – The Atlantic
PEOPLE
- The McCallum Theatre seeks Vice President—General Manager
Organization
The McCallum Theatre (the McCallum), operated by Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc., is a premier performing arts institution dedicated to entertaining, educating, and enriching the Coachella Valley through world class performances and transformative arts education. Rooted in the belief that the performing arts foster connection, creativity, and community vitality, the McCallum serves as both a cultural anchor and an artistic catalyst for the region. Located in Palm Desert, California, the McCallum was established in 1988 through a visionary public-private partnership among the City of Palm Desert, the Desert Community College District, and the Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc. Its 1,127 seat venue, designed with state of the art acoustics and technical capabilities, has earned a reputation as one of Southern California’s most distinguished performance spaces, welcoming artists and audiences from across the country and around the world.
Education and community engagement are central to the McCallum’s mission. Through its award winning McCallum Theatre Education program, the organization serves more than 40,000 students, educators, and community members each year. Classroom residencies, student matinees, teacher professional development, and deep partnerships with schools and community organizations bring the arts directly into learning environments, expanding access and nurturing creativity, confidence, and academic growth among young people. This commitment to equitable arts education has positioned the McCallum as a leader in regional cultural enrichment.
Each season, the McCallum Theatre presents a dynamic array of performances that span Broadway productions, classical and popular music, dance companies, comedy, and world renowned solo artists. The 2025–2026 season features national touring productions, global music ensembles, celebrated performers, and beloved community traditions such as the Palm Desert Choreography Festival and the Open Call Talent Project. This breadth of programming reflects the McCallum’s dedication to artistic excellence, cultural diversity, and community relevance, drawing audiences from across the Coachella Valley and beyond.
Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc. d/b/a McCallum Theatre is governed by a 52 member board of trustees led by Chairman Garry Kief, with Yvonne Bell serving as President and Chief Executive Officer. For the fiscal year ending July 31, 2024, the organization’s audited financial statements, which include the McCallum Theatre Foundation, reported total revenue of $25.3 million, including $11.3 million from contributions and grants, $11 million from program services, and $2.5 million from investment income. Total expenses were $19.6 million, underscoring the scale and impact of the Theatre’s artistic and educational work. For the year ending July 31, 2026, the organization expects to continue its pattern of generating an annual surplus.
Sources: edited from mccallumtheatre.org; propublica.org
Community
Set against the dramatic backdrop of the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains, Palm Desert is a warm and welcoming community at the heart of the Coachella Valley, a region of more than 450,000 year round residents that expands to over 800,000 during the peak season. Incorporated in 1973, the city has grown into a vibrant desert oasis where natural beauty meets contemporary comfort. While Palm Desert itself is home to just over 50,000 year round residents, it serves as a central hub within this larger valley community, offering sweeping mountain vistas, sun drenched skies, and a climate that invites outdoor living nearly every day of the year. With less than three inches of annual rainfall and more than 340 days of sunshine, Palm Desert provides an environment where hiking trails, golf courses, and open air gathering places are woven into daily life.
Palm Desert’s lively cultural and commercial corridors reflect the broader region’s spirit of creativity and exploration. El Paseo, often called the “Rodeo Drive of the Desert,” is lined with galleries, boutiques, and cafés that draw visitors from across the Coachella Valley and beyond. Families enjoy an array of amenities, from expansive parks and community centers to The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, a beloved destination for residents throughout the valley. Palm Desert’s hospitality tradition runs deep, shaped by the arrival of luxury resorts and golf clubs beginning in the late 1970s. Today, more than 30 hotels and 5,000 guest rooms welcome travelers from around the world, contributing to a regional tourism economy that thrives during the high season. The city’s celebrated golf culture—rooted in the opening of Shadow Mountain Golf Club in 1948—continues to flourish alongside tennis, hiking, and the valley’s growing enthusiasm for pickleball.
Palm Desert’s cultural life is equally dynamic and plays a significant role in the artistic identity of the entire Coachella Valley. The McCallum Theatre anchors the performing arts landscape, presenting national touring productions, concerts, dance companies, and community showcases that draw audiences from every corner of the region. The city also holds a distinctive place in music history as the birthplace of the Palm Desert Scene, the influential ’90s movement that helped shape the stoner rock genre and launched bands such as Kyuss and Queens of the Stone Age. Artists, performers, and public figures have long been drawn to the area’s serenity and creative energy, contributing to a community that values both artistic expression and a relaxed desert sensibility.
Palm Desert’s educational and civic landscape further strengthens its role as a regional center. The city is home to the main campus of College of the Desert as well as branches of UC Riverside and Cal State San Bernardino, making Palm Desert the Coachella Valley’s hub for public higher education. A network of private schools, cultural organizations, and community groups, including the Jewish Federation of the Desert, adds depth and connection to local life. The city’s economy is stable and diverse, with approximately 24,145 households, of which about 64 percent are owner occupied. The median household income is roughly $79,500, and the median home value is approximately $491,600. Palm Desert’s population reflects a broad mix of residents, including about 68 percent white and 26 percent Hispanic or Latino, along with smaller percentages of other groups. Together, these elements create a community defined by openness, accessibility, and a distinctive blend of desert tranquility and cultural vibrancy—qualities that resonate across the entire Coachella Valley.
Sources: www.palmdesert.gov; www.visitgreaterpalmsprings.com; www.desertusa.com
Position Summary
The Vice President—General Manager will bring a proven ability to build trust with a wide range of stakeholders and, in collaboration with the President & CEO, will guide the McCallum Theatre’s artistic vision by managing program bookings, logistics, contract administration, and season scheduling. They will ensure that programming serves the community and delivers meaningful cultural opportunities for the Coachella Valley and beyond, drawing on a solid history of programming as both presenter and producer and staying informed about trends and competitive offerings to help sustain a dynamic and successful season. The Vice President—General Manager will demonstrate knowledge of the arts and community while fostering a cohesive internal team and staff culture that integrates innovative approaches with industry best practices across programming, production, marketing, front of house, and box office. They will cultivate strong industry relationships and work directly with agents, artists, programs, and internal staff to ensure clear communication, accurate agreements, and the smooth execution of contracts that comply with legal and organizational policies. Reporting directly to the President & CEO, the Vice President—General Manager will help ensure that the organization fulfills its mission through its artistic programming, educational offerings, productions, community partnerships, and staffing.
Role and Responsibilities
Artistic Programming and Contracting
- Articulate with the President & CEO an overall artistic vision consistent with the organizational mission that models current industry trends, audience demographics, and local competitor programming, prioritizing a balance of local, regional, and national touring artists and events that appeal to multi-generational audiences.
- Develop, present, select, and contract annual programming of multi-disciplinary offerings, including music, theatre, dance, lectures, film, and multimedia programs, and associated year-round scheduled activities designed to bring dynamic cultural activity to the Coachella Valley.
- Nurture and sustain strong relationships with presenters, promoters, and talent representatives, including attending booking conferences.
- Serve as the primary point of contact for booking, negotiating all artist contracts, and executing offer letters to agents, managers, and artists’ agents to confirm terms, and coordinate details for artist and program engagements.
- Build strong relationships with fellow presenters, national and local guest artists/ensembles, and other production companies, and industry stakeholders to support ongoing and future collaborations, shared expenses, and block booking.
- Embrace and support additional artistic programming and contracting responsibilities as needed.
General Management and Operations
- Partner with the President & CEO to contribute to, oversee, guide, and implement McCallum Theatre’s long-term strategic planning.
- Serve on the senior management team as a creative partner, between senior management, the marketing, finance, and development departments, the production staff, the box office, and front of house staff, so all parties have the most up-to-date and correct information, including occasional attendance and presentations at board meetings as requested.
- Manage key business agreements, utilizing relevant experience in programming, logistics, and maintenance of a multi-use multi-venue facility for items such as ongoing union and lease agreements, operations management, and service contracts.
- Oversee all theatre rental activity, including evaluating rental requests, negotiating terms, coordinating internal departments, ensuring contract compliance, and maximizing earned revenue while protecting the integrity of the McCallum Theatre’s mission, brand, and operational capacity.
- Guide operations to ensure employees and business practices comply with regulatory and legal requirements, ensuring the facility is maintained in the safest, most creatively conducive environment possible.
- Supervise and manage emergency response training to ensure staff and volunteer preparedness during performances and on non-performance days.
- Monitor advancements in technology, including newly developed software and hardware resources in partnership with the President & CEO and department heads, to guide new system implementations, ongoing maintenance, and multi-year facility upgrades.
- Advise on capital projects regarding facility maintenance, system upgrades, large construction multi-year facility renovation projects, capital expansion planning, and expenditures for replacement of aging systems and equipment as needed, with an emphasis on safety.
- Embrace and support additional general management and operations responsibilities as needed.
Staff Leadership and Team Communication
- Manage and support staff members, monitoring productivity, while also providing constructive feedback, reinforcing accountability, encouraging proactive approaches, and ensuring adherence to legal and organizational policies.
- Assist the McCallum to grow in all regards, guiding department heads to be open to both new internal and external perspectives, where challenges are viewed as opportunities to achieve and excel, and encouraging a pathway for growth and creative solutions to the work.
- Further unity across all departments to align with the organization’s greater mission, while proactively working against silos, to build a safe creative space, and foster team building in which staff members are advocates for each other, accountable for the work, and partners to do their best work.
- Empower department heads to respond to the needs of and challenge their staff, nurturing critical thinking skills, encouraging accountability with clear lines of communication, and incorporating various strategies to achieve the highest professional standards that align with industry best practices.
- Oversee the hiring, supervision, and mentoring of programming and front of house staff, providing professional development and growth to attract, retain, and empower highly qualified employees and volunteers to ensure organizational growth and sustainability.
- Provide strategic oversight of the volunteer usher program, ensuring exceptional patron service through recruitment, training, scheduling, and performance standards.
- Ensure that creative teams, production staff, development, marketing, box office, finance, and education staff receive all relevant production information with clarity and in a timely manner, responding promptly to inquiries, as well as providing regular communications to long-term artist partners, including both internal staff and outside contract services.
- Embrace and support additional staff leadership and team communication responsibilities as needed.
Production Supervision
- Analyze the annual production calendar and staffing for better system options, creating, building, and establishing new policies and procedures on how shows are produced, including the implementation of new administrative resources, system programs, and strategies.
- Create season performance schedules and oversee the master calendar, in conjunction with other departments and relevant stakeholders, to establish, communicate, and manage production schedules, including the scheduling of all related events.
- Provide artistic leadership and guidance to all artistic teams and partners throughout the entire production process, from selecting performance offerings to advising and consulting with the production staff, as well as ensuring readiness for each show’s opening and run.
- Track artist and program payments, deposits, and settlement requirements, working with Finance to ensure accuracy and compliance.
- Embrace and support additional production supervision responsibilities as needed.
Traits and Characteristics
The Vice President—General Manager will be a strong collaborator with an innovative spirit, modeling a strong work ethic and demonstrating passion and dedication. Ensuring that programming resonates with all the Coachella Valley communities, the Vice President—General Manager will uphold the McCallum’s commitment to professional excellence. As a creative, innovative programmer and producer, they will be an effective communicator and able to deliver high-quality performances and motivate teams with a clear sense of purpose. They will be resilient, flexible, and positive, as well as an effective, detail-oriented team builder and project manager who can inspire, coach, manage, and mentor a large staff. They will be a strong, knowledgeable, experienced, and organized leader who finds joy and fulfillment in the work.
Other key competencies include:
- Self-Starting and Leadership – The fortitude to effectively demonstrate initiative and willingness to begin working, along with the skill to organize and influence people to believe in a vision, while also creating a sense of purpose and direction.
- Teamwork and Influencing Others – The ability to cooperate with others to meet objectives, while also being personally able to affect others’ actions, decisions, and opinions.
- Problem Solving and Resiliency – The dexterity to be able to define, analyze, and diagnose key components of a problem to formulate a solution, as well as the agility to quickly recover from adversity.
- Time and Priority Management – The organizational acumen to prioritize and complete tasks to deliver desired outcomes within allotted time frames.
Qualifications
The Vice President—General Manager will have the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree in Theatre, Arts Administration, Business, or a related field, or two to four years of equivalent professional experience in performing arts programming, booking, or contract administration. Excellent interpersonal, written, and verbal communication, and supervisory skills are essential, with the ability to lead, motivate, and manage diverse teams required. Strong financial and operational management skills, including oversight of a similarly sized budget and staff, are highly desirable. A thorough knowledge of music and the performing arts, coupled with a proven track record in programming, presenting, and engaging audiences, is preferred in addition to experience in operating and managing a successful performing arts center. Strong organizational and administrative skills, with the ability to handle multiple projects and deadlines simultaneously is expected. Familiarity with standard artist and program agreements, contracts, riders, and industry practices, ability to interpret legal language, and an understanding of implications for the organization, with an attention to detail and accuracy in contract review and financial documentation, is necessary. Proficiency with Microsoft Office, venue management software (Momentus Elite), and IT experience is advantageous. CRM and database experience, in particular Tessitura, is desirable. Ability to work flexible hours, including evenings and weekends during performance periods, is required.
The McCallum values the many ways leadership and operational expertise are developed, both professionally and personally, and strongly encourages applications from individuals whose lived experience and diverse career paths have comparably prepared them to provide operational and cultural leadership at the highest level.
Compensation and Benefits
The McCallum Theatre offers a competitive compensation package with an estimated salary range between $170,000 and $185,000, plus benefits.
Applications and Inquiries
To submit a cover letter and resume with a summary of demonstrable accomplishments (electronic submissions preferred), please visit https://artsconsulting.com/opensearches/mccallum-theatre-seeks-vice-president-general-manager/
McCallum Theatre provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment and prohibits discrimination and harassment of any type without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, national origin, disability status, genetics, protected veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or any other characteristic protected by federal, state, or local laws. This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, hiring, placement, promotion, termination, layoff, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation, and training.
- Good Morning
Today’s AJ highlights: In Washington, the Kennedy Center’s employment situation has become something of a farce: the newly hired VP of artistic programming has resigned after just two weeks on the job. (The New York Times). And the manager of artistic planning has been fired (reports the Kennedy Center). Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal agents in Los Angeles, an escalation that followed a judge’s prior rejection of charges against him while covering a demonstration in Minneapolis (AP). The former general manager of Sacramento’s Capital Public Radio has been arrested for allegedly embezzling more than $1.3 million (The Sacramento Bee).
A “resistance of the analog” is taking hold. Yale professors are increasingly requiring students to read on paper, banning screens to force a direct, unmediated encounter with texts in an age of AI (Yale Daily News). And there are new arguments that while AI can mimic competence, it cannot replicate the “uniqueness” of human memory and memoir (Aeon). Continuing the analog thread, psychologists are arguing for more “pockets of serenity” in cities to counteract the sensory overload of modern life (Psyche).
Finally, institutions are getting creative—and populist—to survive. Palo Alto Players has begun offering free childcare to lower barriers for audiences (San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)) , while the Detroit Opera is welcoming George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic for a full symphonic collaboration (AP). And in a twist of market irony, public television is being buoyed not by high art, but by the “happy little trees” of Bob Ross, whose paintings are now fetching nearly $800,000 at auction in benefit of public media (Artnet).
All of today’s stories below.
- President & CEO – Wharton Arts

Wharton Arts
(https://whartonarts.org/)With a history spanning nearly five decades, Wharton Arts is New Jersey’s largest independent non-profit community performing arts educator, serving nearly 2,000 students annually through a broad spectrum of musical programming. Four core programs – the New Jersey Youth Symphony, New Jersey Youth Chorus, Paterson Music Project, and Wharton Performing Arts School – provide exceptional performing arts education for students of all ages, abilities, and backgrounds.
Developed more than 45 years ago, the New Jersey Youth Symphony (NJYS) is a tiered orchestral program that offers ensemble education opportunities for more than 500 students in grades 3 through 12. NJYS ensembles have performed at venues ranging from the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and Musikverein in Vienna to local assisted living centers, libraries, and street fairs in New Jersey. NJYS has received awards for adventurous programming from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) and has been on six European tours, most recently to Italy and France in 2023. NJYS’s flagship ensemble, Youth Symphony, will travel to Scandinavia, Finland, and the Baltics, including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, in the summer of 2026.
Paterson Music Project (PMP) is an El Sistema-inspired program that uses music to empower and inspire young people through the community experience of ensemble learning and playing. PMP provides accessible, affordable, and high-quality instrumental instruction and focuses on musical excellence, community, and life skills. Since its inception in 2013, the program has grown from one class of 24 third graders to nearly 350 students in first to twelfth grades, providing tuition-free musical training to students from more than 25 schools throughout Paterson. PMP’s first class of third graders graduated from high school in June 2023. PMP now engages alumni as interns and leaders in the program.
The New Jersey Youth Chorus (NJYC) merged with Wharton Arts in 2022 as the Chorus celebrated its 30th anniversary season. NJYC is an auditioned choral ensemble for students in grades 3 through 12. NJYC encourages a love and appreciation for choral music while nurturing personal growth and creativity. NJYC’s more than 150 members regularly perform throughout the state and tour across the country. Past performances include the White House, the Super Bowl, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and Radio City Music Hall. In the summer of 2025, 30 choristers toured Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, appearing at renowned venues including the Cologne Cathedral, Bonn Cathedral, and Menin Gate in Ypres.
The Performing Arts School (PAS) provides instrumental and vocal instruction, musical theatre, drama, and other courses for students ages four through adult. PAS promotes personal growth through excellence in music education. PAS students have participated in music festivals and recitals in venues that include Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and the Musik Quartier in Vienna. A member of the National Guild for Community Arts Education, Wharton Arts offers private and group lessons, summer camp, and a CAFÉ (Creative Aging for Everyone) Choir for aspiring and accomplished musicians alike.
Wharton Arts is governed by a Board of 17 Trustees, has an annual operating budget of approximately $4 million and a team of more than 100 artistic and administrative staff members. Trustee Erika Fanelle is Interim Executive Director; Helen Cha-Pyo is Artistic Director and Principal Conductor. Wharton Arts operates three campuses located in Berkeley Heights, New Providence, and Paterson, New Jersey and draws students from twelve New Jersey counties.
The Opportunity
The President and CEO of Wharton Arts will assume a newly defined and expanded leadership role that includes responsibility for all aspects of the organization, both artistic and administrative. The CEO will have the opportunity to work with a dedicated and engaged board, faculty, and staff as they continue to expand the depth and reach of their education programs for children and adults. The CEO will take a lead role in developing the resources needed to secure a new shared music education facility for NJYS, NJYC, and the Performing Arts School. The CEO will ensure that Wharton Arts continues to represent the highest standards of excellence in music education programs and activities.
The Position
Reporting to the Board of Trustees through the Co-Chairs, the President and CEO provides leadership and vision to ensure that Wharton Arts fulfils its mission and achieves its goals for excellence in music education, community engagement, and long-term financial sustainability. The CEO is responsible and accountable for all aspects of Wharton Arts’ administration and operations, including: artistic planning and operations; budgeting and financial management; fundraising and external relations; program administration; marketing, promotion, and public relations; site development and facilities management; human resources; and community engagement. The CEO fosters an environment that allows Wharton Arts to recruit and retain the highest quality artistic and administrative staff.
The President and CEO articulates the vision, mission, and goals of Wharton Arts to internal and external audiences. The CEO takes a leadership role in the identification, cultivation, and solicitation of donors. The CEO leads the planning and execution of a capital campaign for a new music education facility. The CEO serves as chief spokesperson for Wharton Arts and advocate for the importance and value of music education throughout the community.
The President and CEO oversees the financial management of Wharton Arts, including budgeting, financial planning, and management of cash flow. The CEO assures that Wharton Arts achieves its annual and long-term budget goals for enrollment and earned and contributed income. The CEO maintains transparency in financial reporting to internal and external audiences and ensures that the Board and the Finance Committee have the information they need for sound decision-making.
The President and CEO leads Wharton Arts strategic planning. The CEO ensures the effective development and utilization of the human resources needed to accomplish the organization’s mission. The CEO oversees the recruitment and selection of faculty and the evaluation of faculty, programs, and curriculum. The CEO gives leadership and guidance to the artistic and administrative staff and provides a welcoming environment for students, parents, families, and other community stakeholders.
The President and CEO represents Wharton Arts in New Providence, Berkeley Heights, and Paterson, in Union, Passaic, and neighboring counties, and is an active member of the arts and education community throughout the state and nationally.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate will be a proven leader with the ability to embrace and articulate the vision, mission, and goals of Wharton Arts with clarity and conviction. The successful candidate will have a passionate belief in the value and importance of music education and the role that a vibrant music education center plays in development of children and the cultural life of a community. The candidate will have significant successful leadership and management experience with performing arts and/or music education organizations.
The successful candidate will be a strategic thinker with the vision and imagination to chart future directions, recognize opportunities, forge consensus, and harness the energies of diverse constituencies to accomplish common goals. The CEO will be a good listener with excellent interpersonal skills. The CEO will be decisive leader and a fearless agent for change when change is needed.
The successful candidate will be an enthusiastic fundraiser with the proven ability to achieve and exceed organizational goals for philanthropic support. The candidate will have strong experience in all aspects of fundraising, including annual giving, special events, and endowment campaigns. Experience achieving capital campaign goals of $10 million or more will be a plus. The candidate will be able to speak and write persuasively to diverse internal and external audiences.
The successful candidate will be an experienced manager with the demonstrated ability to set expectations and assure both financial and operational accountability throughout the organization. The candidate will be able to lead staff in an environment that fosters creativity, a commitment to excellence, and teamwork. The candidate will be able to innovate, manage change, move an agenda forward, and resolve conflict.
The successful candidate will be knowledgeable about facilities and project management. The candidate will bring successful experience working with local governments, developers, and community leaders to create alliances that achieve shared goals.
The successful candidate will have an engaging public personality and presence, high energy, and excellent listening skills. The candidate will be a leader who fully embraces principles of inclusion, diversity, equity, and access. The candidate will have the ability to interact effectively with stakeholders who represent every aspect of diversity in age, education, gender, sexual orientation, race, religion, ethnicity, and socio-economic status.
The successful candidate will be kind, creative, curious, and flexible. The candidate will have at least ten years’ senior executive experience and will possess common sense, sound judgment, and good humor in abundance. The successful candidate will be willing and able to maintain a schedule that includes frequent evening and weekend events.
Compensation
The salary range for this position is $150,000 to $185,000, depending on qualifications and experience. Wharton Arts offers a comprehensive benefits package that includes health insurance, a retirement plan, professional development opportunities, and paid time off.
Applications
Wharton Arts welcomes recommendations, nominations, and applications from all qualified candidates regardless of race, religion, political affiliation, disability, sexual orientation, gender, national origin, or marital status, or any other basis protected by law. Candidates must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Please submit a resumé along with a cover letter that describes your specific interest in the mission and work of Wharton Arts and your qualifications for the position as described in the candidate profile. On a separate sheet, provide the names and contact information for several professional references. All applications will be treated as confidential and references will not be contacted without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement.
Electronic submissions are requested. Please send to:
President and CEO – Wharton Arts
c/o Catherine French Group
applications@catherinefrenchgroup.com(Adobe Acrobat PDF attachments only, please)
- Chief Financial Officer – Sarasota Opera

Sarasota Opera is marking its 67th season of bringing internationally acclaimed opera to audiences on Florida’s Gulf Coast while celebrating the Centennial of its home, the historic Sarasota Opera House. The Company’s Winter Opera Festival will take place at the Sarasota Opera House in February and March 2026, and will include 34 performances of four major operas: La bohème, The Merry Widow, Il trovatore, and Susannah.
The Company was launched in 1960 in the historic 320-seat Asolo Theater on the grounds of Sarasota’s Ringling Museum of Art. In 1984, the Company moved into the former A.B. Edwards Theater, now the Sarasota Opera House. The 1,119-seat Sarasota Opera House, which underwent a $20 million renovation and rehabilitation in 2007, has been named “one of America’s finest venues for opera” by Musical America.
Since then, Sarasota Opera has gained an international reputation as one of the leading regional opera companies in the United States. The Company’s major artistic initiatives have included the Masterworks Revival Series, the American Classics Series, and the Verdi Cycle. The Company’s Sarasota Youth Opera is the most comprehensive youth opera program in the United States.
Since 1983, Sarasota Opera has been under the artistic leadership of Victor DeRenzi. In 1989, the Company and DeRenzi launched a monumental Verdi Cycle. When the Cycle concluded in 2016, Sarasota Opera became the only opera company in the world to have performed every note composed by Giuseppi Verdi. Since 2012, the Company’s administrative leader has been General Director Richard Russell. When Victor DeRenzi steps down as Artistic Director in May 2026, Richard Russellwill become General Director and Artistic Director.
Sarasota Opera is governed by a Board of 28 and has a year-round staff of 30, which grows to 200 during the winter season. The Company’s budget is $11 million.
The Position
The Chief Financial Officer (CFO) is the senior executive responsible and accountable for overseeing financial strategy, planning, and operations for Sarasota Opera. The CFO drives the processes of budgeting, forecasting, and financial analysis; ensures the Company’s compliance with government regulations, contracts, donor agreements, and reporting requirements; and ensures that controls are in place to protect the Opera’s assets and non-profit tax status.
The CFO maintains the integrity of the Company’s accounting systems and records, and ensures full and accurate integration of the accounting records with Tessitura and other applications in use by the Company. The CFO provides timely, accurate, and complete financial reports and information to the General Director, the Board, and the staff to guide and inform their decision-making. The CFO provides budgets, reports, and necessary financial data to the Development Department to support grant applications and fulfill reporting requirements.
The CFO monitors the Company’s bank accounts, cash flow, and investments and serves as liaison to the Company’s investment advisors. The CFO reviews all invoices, contracts, and agreements. The CFO is the liaison with the insurance agency and ensures that the Company has adequate coverages. The CFO oversees the payroll process to ensure accuracy and timeliness, and oversees the administration of employee benefits.
The CFO reports to the General Director, supervises the accounting staff, and works closely with the Treasurer of the Board and members of the executive management team. The CFO is the staff liaison for the Finance Committee, the Investment Committee; and the Audit Committee. The CFO provides reports and documents as needed for the annual audit and ensures that all tax filings are prepared correctly and in a timely manner. The ensures compliance with FASB and GAAP guidelines.
As a member of the executive management team, the CFO attends performances and events and serves as an ambassador for the Company with donors, patrons, and audiences as well as external stakeholders throughout the greater Sarasota community.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate will have significant senior financial management experience; thorough familiarity with non-profit fund accounting; proven budgeting, forecasting, and cash management ability; and a genuine interest in connecting audiences with opera. Experience working with a not-for-profit organization is essential; experience working with an opera company or other performing arts organization will be a plus.
The successful candidate will be thoroughly knowledgeable about, and experienced with, institutional planning and helping to shape, implement, and monitor strategic plans. The candidate will have a thorough working knowledge of the technology available to support finance and operations in a non-profit organization. Prior experience with Sage MIP Accounting and Tessitura will be viewed as an asset. The successful candidate will bring experience in human resources and benefits administration.
The successful candidate will be a leader with strong supervisory skills and a management style that encourages collaboration and teamwork. The candidate will be able to manage multiple deadlines and competing priorities with grace and good humor. The candidate will be curious, persistent, and nimble.
The successful candidate will be able to accept a work schedule that includes performances and events on nights and weekends during production periods. The candidate will welcome the opportunity to play a key role in the management of Sarasota Opera and become an active participant in the Sarasota community.
Compensation
Sarasota Opera offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. The annual salary range for this position is $110,000 to $125,000, plus a benefits package that includes paid time off; health insurance; life insurance; and a voluntary 403(b) retirement plan.
Applications
Sarasota Opera welcomes recommendations, nominations, and applications from all qualified candidates regardless of race, religion, political affiliation, disability, sexual orientation, gender, national origin, or marital status, or any other basis protected by law. Candidates must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Please submit a resumé along with a cover letter that describes your specific interest in the mission and work of Sarasota Opera and your qualifications for the position as described in the candidate profile. On a separate sheet, provide the names and contact information for several professional references. All applications will be treated as confidential and references will not be contacted without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement.
Electronic submissions are requested. Please send to:
Chief Financial Officer – Sarasota Opera
c/o Catherine French Group
applications@catherinefrenchgroup.com(Adobe Acrobat PDF attachments only, please)
- How “The New Yorker Story” Became A Genre
“I hadn’t investigated this term in depth, but I understood it to mean ‘a short story that is meandering, plotless, and slight — full of middle-class people discussing their relentlessly banal problems.’ … But they were also good!” Those characteristics were deliberately shaped by the different preferences of two key editors. – Woman of Letters
PEOPLE
- The McCallum Theatre seeks Vice President—General Manager
Organization
The McCallum Theatre (the McCallum), operated by Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc., is a premier performing arts institution dedicated to entertaining, educating, and enriching the Coachella Valley through world class performances and transformative arts education. Rooted in the belief that the performing arts foster connection, creativity, and community vitality, the McCallum serves as both a cultural anchor and an artistic catalyst for the region. Located in Palm Desert, California, the McCallum was established in 1988 through a visionary public-private partnership among the City of Palm Desert, the Desert Community College District, and the Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc. Its 1,127 seat venue, designed with state of the art acoustics and technical capabilities, has earned a reputation as one of Southern California’s most distinguished performance spaces, welcoming artists and audiences from across the country and around the world.
Education and community engagement are central to the McCallum’s mission. Through its award winning McCallum Theatre Education program, the organization serves more than 40,000 students, educators, and community members each year. Classroom residencies, student matinees, teacher professional development, and deep partnerships with schools and community organizations bring the arts directly into learning environments, expanding access and nurturing creativity, confidence, and academic growth among young people. This commitment to equitable arts education has positioned the McCallum as a leader in regional cultural enrichment.
Each season, the McCallum Theatre presents a dynamic array of performances that span Broadway productions, classical and popular music, dance companies, comedy, and world renowned solo artists. The 2025–2026 season features national touring productions, global music ensembles, celebrated performers, and beloved community traditions such as the Palm Desert Choreography Festival and the Open Call Talent Project. This breadth of programming reflects the McCallum’s dedication to artistic excellence, cultural diversity, and community relevance, drawing audiences from across the Coachella Valley and beyond.
Friends of the Cultural Center, Inc. d/b/a McCallum Theatre is governed by a 52 member board of trustees led by Chairman Garry Kief, with Yvonne Bell serving as President and Chief Executive Officer. For the fiscal year ending July 31, 2024, the organization’s audited financial statements, which include the McCallum Theatre Foundation, reported total revenue of $25.3 million, including $11.3 million from contributions and grants, $11 million from program services, and $2.5 million from investment income. Total expenses were $19.6 million, underscoring the scale and impact of the Theatre’s artistic and educational work. For the year ending July 31, 2026, the organization expects to continue its pattern of generating an annual surplus.
Sources: edited from mccallumtheatre.org; propublica.org
Community
Set against the dramatic backdrop of the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains, Palm Desert is a warm and welcoming community at the heart of the Coachella Valley, a region of more than 450,000 year round residents that expands to over 800,000 during the peak season. Incorporated in 1973, the city has grown into a vibrant desert oasis where natural beauty meets contemporary comfort. While Palm Desert itself is home to just over 50,000 year round residents, it serves as a central hub within this larger valley community, offering sweeping mountain vistas, sun drenched skies, and a climate that invites outdoor living nearly every day of the year. With less than three inches of annual rainfall and more than 340 days of sunshine, Palm Desert provides an environment where hiking trails, golf courses, and open air gathering places are woven into daily life.
Palm Desert’s lively cultural and commercial corridors reflect the broader region’s spirit of creativity and exploration. El Paseo, often called the “Rodeo Drive of the Desert,” is lined with galleries, boutiques, and cafés that draw visitors from across the Coachella Valley and beyond. Families enjoy an array of amenities, from expansive parks and community centers to The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, a beloved destination for residents throughout the valley. Palm Desert’s hospitality tradition runs deep, shaped by the arrival of luxury resorts and golf clubs beginning in the late 1970s. Today, more than 30 hotels and 5,000 guest rooms welcome travelers from around the world, contributing to a regional tourism economy that thrives during the high season. The city’s celebrated golf culture—rooted in the opening of Shadow Mountain Golf Club in 1948—continues to flourish alongside tennis, hiking, and the valley’s growing enthusiasm for pickleball.
Palm Desert’s cultural life is equally dynamic and plays a significant role in the artistic identity of the entire Coachella Valley. The McCallum Theatre anchors the performing arts landscape, presenting national touring productions, concerts, dance companies, and community showcases that draw audiences from every corner of the region. The city also holds a distinctive place in music history as the birthplace of the Palm Desert Scene, the influential ’90s movement that helped shape the stoner rock genre and launched bands such as Kyuss and Queens of the Stone Age. Artists, performers, and public figures have long been drawn to the area’s serenity and creative energy, contributing to a community that values both artistic expression and a relaxed desert sensibility.
Palm Desert’s educational and civic landscape further strengthens its role as a regional center. The city is home to the main campus of College of the Desert as well as branches of UC Riverside and Cal State San Bernardino, making Palm Desert the Coachella Valley’s hub for public higher education. A network of private schools, cultural organizations, and community groups, including the Jewish Federation of the Desert, adds depth and connection to local life. The city’s economy is stable and diverse, with approximately 24,145 households, of which about 64 percent are owner occupied. The median household income is roughly $79,500, and the median home value is approximately $491,600. Palm Desert’s population reflects a broad mix of residents, including about 68 percent white and 26 percent Hispanic or Latino, along with smaller percentages of other groups. Together, these elements create a community defined by openness, accessibility, and a distinctive blend of desert tranquility and cultural vibrancy—qualities that resonate across the entire Coachella Valley.
Sources: www.palmdesert.gov; www.visitgreaterpalmsprings.com; www.desertusa.com
Position Summary
The Vice President—General Manager will bring a proven ability to build trust with a wide range of stakeholders and, in collaboration with the President & CEO, will guide the McCallum Theatre’s artistic vision by managing program bookings, logistics, contract administration, and season scheduling. They will ensure that programming serves the community and delivers meaningful cultural opportunities for the Coachella Valley and beyond, drawing on a solid history of programming as both presenter and producer and staying informed about trends and competitive offerings to help sustain a dynamic and successful season. The Vice President—General Manager will demonstrate knowledge of the arts and community while fostering a cohesive internal team and staff culture that integrates innovative approaches with industry best practices across programming, production, marketing, front of house, and box office. They will cultivate strong industry relationships and work directly with agents, artists, programs, and internal staff to ensure clear communication, accurate agreements, and the smooth execution of contracts that comply with legal and organizational policies. Reporting directly to the President & CEO, the Vice President—General Manager will help ensure that the organization fulfills its mission through its artistic programming, educational offerings, productions, community partnerships, and staffing.
Role and Responsibilities
Artistic Programming and Contracting
- Articulate with the President & CEO an overall artistic vision consistent with the organizational mission that models current industry trends, audience demographics, and local competitor programming, prioritizing a balance of local, regional, and national touring artists and events that appeal to multi-generational audiences.
- Develop, present, select, and contract annual programming of multi-disciplinary offerings, including music, theatre, dance, lectures, film, and multimedia programs, and associated year-round scheduled activities designed to bring dynamic cultural activity to the Coachella Valley.
- Nurture and sustain strong relationships with presenters, promoters, and talent representatives, including attending booking conferences.
- Serve as the primary point of contact for booking, negotiating all artist contracts, and executing offer letters to agents, managers, and artists’ agents to confirm terms, and coordinate details for artist and program engagements.
- Build strong relationships with fellow presenters, national and local guest artists/ensembles, and other production companies, and industry stakeholders to support ongoing and future collaborations, shared expenses, and block booking.
- Embrace and support additional artistic programming and contracting responsibilities as needed.
General Management and Operations
- Partner with the President & CEO to contribute to, oversee, guide, and implement McCallum Theatre’s long-term strategic planning.
- Serve on the senior management team as a creative partner, between senior management, the marketing, finance, and development departments, the production staff, the box office, and front of house staff, so all parties have the most up-to-date and correct information, including occasional attendance and presentations at board meetings as requested.
- Manage key business agreements, utilizing relevant experience in programming, logistics, and maintenance of a multi-use multi-venue facility for items such as ongoing union and lease agreements, operations management, and service contracts.
- Oversee all theatre rental activity, including evaluating rental requests, negotiating terms, coordinating internal departments, ensuring contract compliance, and maximizing earned revenue while protecting the integrity of the McCallum Theatre’s mission, brand, and operational capacity.
- Guide operations to ensure employees and business practices comply with regulatory and legal requirements, ensuring the facility is maintained in the safest, most creatively conducive environment possible.
- Supervise and manage emergency response training to ensure staff and volunteer preparedness during performances and on non-performance days.
- Monitor advancements in technology, including newly developed software and hardware resources in partnership with the President & CEO and department heads, to guide new system implementations, ongoing maintenance, and multi-year facility upgrades.
- Advise on capital projects regarding facility maintenance, system upgrades, large construction multi-year facility renovation projects, capital expansion planning, and expenditures for replacement of aging systems and equipment as needed, with an emphasis on safety.
- Embrace and support additional general management and operations responsibilities as needed.
Staff Leadership and Team Communication
- Manage and support staff members, monitoring productivity, while also providing constructive feedback, reinforcing accountability, encouraging proactive approaches, and ensuring adherence to legal and organizational policies.
- Assist the McCallum to grow in all regards, guiding department heads to be open to both new internal and external perspectives, where challenges are viewed as opportunities to achieve and excel, and encouraging a pathway for growth and creative solutions to the work.
- Further unity across all departments to align with the organization’s greater mission, while proactively working against silos, to build a safe creative space, and foster team building in which staff members are advocates for each other, accountable for the work, and partners to do their best work.
- Empower department heads to respond to the needs of and challenge their staff, nurturing critical thinking skills, encouraging accountability with clear lines of communication, and incorporating various strategies to achieve the highest professional standards that align with industry best practices.
- Oversee the hiring, supervision, and mentoring of programming and front of house staff, providing professional development and growth to attract, retain, and empower highly qualified employees and volunteers to ensure organizational growth and sustainability.
- Provide strategic oversight of the volunteer usher program, ensuring exceptional patron service through recruitment, training, scheduling, and performance standards.
- Ensure that creative teams, production staff, development, marketing, box office, finance, and education staff receive all relevant production information with clarity and in a timely manner, responding promptly to inquiries, as well as providing regular communications to long-term artist partners, including both internal staff and outside contract services.
- Embrace and support additional staff leadership and team communication responsibilities as needed.
Production Supervision
- Analyze the annual production calendar and staffing for better system options, creating, building, and establishing new policies and procedures on how shows are produced, including the implementation of new administrative resources, system programs, and strategies.
- Create season performance schedules and oversee the master calendar, in conjunction with other departments and relevant stakeholders, to establish, communicate, and manage production schedules, including the scheduling of all related events.
- Provide artistic leadership and guidance to all artistic teams and partners throughout the entire production process, from selecting performance offerings to advising and consulting with the production staff, as well as ensuring readiness for each show’s opening and run.
- Track artist and program payments, deposits, and settlement requirements, working with Finance to ensure accuracy and compliance.
- Embrace and support additional production supervision responsibilities as needed.
Traits and Characteristics
The Vice President—General Manager will be a strong collaborator with an innovative spirit, modeling a strong work ethic and demonstrating passion and dedication. Ensuring that programming resonates with all the Coachella Valley communities, the Vice President—General Manager will uphold the McCallum’s commitment to professional excellence. As a creative, innovative programmer and producer, they will be an effective communicator and able to deliver high-quality performances and motivate teams with a clear sense of purpose. They will be resilient, flexible, and positive, as well as an effective, detail-oriented team builder and project manager who can inspire, coach, manage, and mentor a large staff. They will be a strong, knowledgeable, experienced, and organized leader who finds joy and fulfillment in the work.
Other key competencies include:
- Self-Starting and Leadership – The fortitude to effectively demonstrate initiative and willingness to begin working, along with the skill to organize and influence people to believe in a vision, while also creating a sense of purpose and direction.
- Teamwork and Influencing Others – The ability to cooperate with others to meet objectives, while also being personally able to affect others’ actions, decisions, and opinions.
- Problem Solving and Resiliency – The dexterity to be able to define, analyze, and diagnose key components of a problem to formulate a solution, as well as the agility to quickly recover from adversity.
- Time and Priority Management – The organizational acumen to prioritize and complete tasks to deliver desired outcomes within allotted time frames.
Qualifications
The Vice President—General Manager will have the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree in Theatre, Arts Administration, Business, or a related field, or two to four years of equivalent professional experience in performing arts programming, booking, or contract administration. Excellent interpersonal, written, and verbal communication, and supervisory skills are essential, with the ability to lead, motivate, and manage diverse teams required. Strong financial and operational management skills, including oversight of a similarly sized budget and staff, are highly desirable. A thorough knowledge of music and the performing arts, coupled with a proven track record in programming, presenting, and engaging audiences, is preferred in addition to experience in operating and managing a successful performing arts center. Strong organizational and administrative skills, with the ability to handle multiple projects and deadlines simultaneously is expected. Familiarity with standard artist and program agreements, contracts, riders, and industry practices, ability to interpret legal language, and an understanding of implications for the organization, with an attention to detail and accuracy in contract review and financial documentation, is necessary. Proficiency with Microsoft Office, venue management software (Momentus Elite), and IT experience is advantageous. CRM and database experience, in particular Tessitura, is desirable. Ability to work flexible hours, including evenings and weekends during performance periods, is required.
The McCallum values the many ways leadership and operational expertise are developed, both professionally and personally, and strongly encourages applications from individuals whose lived experience and diverse career paths have comparably prepared them to provide operational and cultural leadership at the highest level.
Compensation and Benefits
The McCallum Theatre offers a competitive compensation package with an estimated salary range between $170,000 and $185,000, plus benefits.
Applications and Inquiries
To submit a cover letter and resume with a summary of demonstrable accomplishments (electronic submissions preferred), please visit https://artsconsulting.com/opensearches/mccallum-theatre-seeks-vice-president-general-manager/
McCallum Theatre provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment and prohibits discrimination and harassment of any type without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, national origin, disability status, genetics, protected veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or any other characteristic protected by federal, state, or local laws. This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, hiring, placement, promotion, termination, layoff, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation, and training.
- Good Morning
Today’s AJ highlights: In Washington, the Kennedy Center’s employment situation has become something of a farce: the newly hired VP of artistic programming has resigned after just two weeks on the job. (The New York Times). And the manager of artistic planning has been fired (reports the Kennedy Center). Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal agents in Los Angeles, an escalation that followed a judge’s prior rejection of charges against him while covering a demonstration in Minneapolis (AP). The former general manager of Sacramento’s Capital Public Radio has been arrested for allegedly embezzling more than $1.3 million (The Sacramento Bee).
A “resistance of the analog” is taking hold. Yale professors are increasingly requiring students to read on paper, banning screens to force a direct, unmediated encounter with texts in an age of AI (Yale Daily News). And there are new arguments that while AI can mimic competence, it cannot replicate the “uniqueness” of human memory and memoir (Aeon). Continuing the analog thread, psychologists are arguing for more “pockets of serenity” in cities to counteract the sensory overload of modern life (Psyche).
Finally, institutions are getting creative—and populist—to survive. Palo Alto Players has begun offering free childcare to lower barriers for audiences (San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)) , while the Detroit Opera is welcoming George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic for a full symphonic collaboration (AP). And in a twist of market irony, public television is being buoyed not by high art, but by the “happy little trees” of Bob Ross, whose paintings are now fetching nearly $800,000 at auction in benefit of public media (Artnet).
All of today’s stories below.
- President & CEO – Wharton Arts

Wharton Arts
(https://whartonarts.org/)With a history spanning nearly five decades, Wharton Arts is New Jersey’s largest independent non-profit community performing arts educator, serving nearly 2,000 students annually through a broad spectrum of musical programming. Four core programs – the New Jersey Youth Symphony, New Jersey Youth Chorus, Paterson Music Project, and Wharton Performing Arts School – provide exceptional performing arts education for students of all ages, abilities, and backgrounds.
Developed more than 45 years ago, the New Jersey Youth Symphony (NJYS) is a tiered orchestral program that offers ensemble education opportunities for more than 500 students in grades 3 through 12. NJYS ensembles have performed at venues ranging from the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and Musikverein in Vienna to local assisted living centers, libraries, and street fairs in New Jersey. NJYS has received awards for adventurous programming from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) and has been on six European tours, most recently to Italy and France in 2023. NJYS’s flagship ensemble, Youth Symphony, will travel to Scandinavia, Finland, and the Baltics, including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, in the summer of 2026.
Paterson Music Project (PMP) is an El Sistema-inspired program that uses music to empower and inspire young people through the community experience of ensemble learning and playing. PMP provides accessible, affordable, and high-quality instrumental instruction and focuses on musical excellence, community, and life skills. Since its inception in 2013, the program has grown from one class of 24 third graders to nearly 350 students in first to twelfth grades, providing tuition-free musical training to students from more than 25 schools throughout Paterson. PMP’s first class of third graders graduated from high school in June 2023. PMP now engages alumni as interns and leaders in the program.
The New Jersey Youth Chorus (NJYC) merged with Wharton Arts in 2022 as the Chorus celebrated its 30th anniversary season. NJYC is an auditioned choral ensemble for students in grades 3 through 12. NJYC encourages a love and appreciation for choral music while nurturing personal growth and creativity. NJYC’s more than 150 members regularly perform throughout the state and tour across the country. Past performances include the White House, the Super Bowl, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and Radio City Music Hall. In the summer of 2025, 30 choristers toured Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, appearing at renowned venues including the Cologne Cathedral, Bonn Cathedral, and Menin Gate in Ypres.
The Performing Arts School (PAS) provides instrumental and vocal instruction, musical theatre, drama, and other courses for students ages four through adult. PAS promotes personal growth through excellence in music education. PAS students have participated in music festivals and recitals in venues that include Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and the Musik Quartier in Vienna. A member of the National Guild for Community Arts Education, Wharton Arts offers private and group lessons, summer camp, and a CAFÉ (Creative Aging for Everyone) Choir for aspiring and accomplished musicians alike.
Wharton Arts is governed by a Board of 17 Trustees, has an annual operating budget of approximately $4 million and a team of more than 100 artistic and administrative staff members. Trustee Erika Fanelle is Interim Executive Director; Helen Cha-Pyo is Artistic Director and Principal Conductor. Wharton Arts operates three campuses located in Berkeley Heights, New Providence, and Paterson, New Jersey and draws students from twelve New Jersey counties.
The Opportunity
The President and CEO of Wharton Arts will assume a newly defined and expanded leadership role that includes responsibility for all aspects of the organization, both artistic and administrative. The CEO will have the opportunity to work with a dedicated and engaged board, faculty, and staff as they continue to expand the depth and reach of their education programs for children and adults. The CEO will take a lead role in developing the resources needed to secure a new shared music education facility for NJYS, NJYC, and the Performing Arts School. The CEO will ensure that Wharton Arts continues to represent the highest standards of excellence in music education programs and activities.
The Position
Reporting to the Board of Trustees through the Co-Chairs, the President and CEO provides leadership and vision to ensure that Wharton Arts fulfils its mission and achieves its goals for excellence in music education, community engagement, and long-term financial sustainability. The CEO is responsible and accountable for all aspects of Wharton Arts’ administration and operations, including: artistic planning and operations; budgeting and financial management; fundraising and external relations; program administration; marketing, promotion, and public relations; site development and facilities management; human resources; and community engagement. The CEO fosters an environment that allows Wharton Arts to recruit and retain the highest quality artistic and administrative staff.
The President and CEO articulates the vision, mission, and goals of Wharton Arts to internal and external audiences. The CEO takes a leadership role in the identification, cultivation, and solicitation of donors. The CEO leads the planning and execution of a capital campaign for a new music education facility. The CEO serves as chief spokesperson for Wharton Arts and advocate for the importance and value of music education throughout the community.
The President and CEO oversees the financial management of Wharton Arts, including budgeting, financial planning, and management of cash flow. The CEO assures that Wharton Arts achieves its annual and long-term budget goals for enrollment and earned and contributed income. The CEO maintains transparency in financial reporting to internal and external audiences and ensures that the Board and the Finance Committee have the information they need for sound decision-making.
The President and CEO leads Wharton Arts strategic planning. The CEO ensures the effective development and utilization of the human resources needed to accomplish the organization’s mission. The CEO oversees the recruitment and selection of faculty and the evaluation of faculty, programs, and curriculum. The CEO gives leadership and guidance to the artistic and administrative staff and provides a welcoming environment for students, parents, families, and other community stakeholders.
The President and CEO represents Wharton Arts in New Providence, Berkeley Heights, and Paterson, in Union, Passaic, and neighboring counties, and is an active member of the arts and education community throughout the state and nationally.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate will be a proven leader with the ability to embrace and articulate the vision, mission, and goals of Wharton Arts with clarity and conviction. The successful candidate will have a passionate belief in the value and importance of music education and the role that a vibrant music education center plays in development of children and the cultural life of a community. The candidate will have significant successful leadership and management experience with performing arts and/or music education organizations.
The successful candidate will be a strategic thinker with the vision and imagination to chart future directions, recognize opportunities, forge consensus, and harness the energies of diverse constituencies to accomplish common goals. The CEO will be a good listener with excellent interpersonal skills. The CEO will be decisive leader and a fearless agent for change when change is needed.
The successful candidate will be an enthusiastic fundraiser with the proven ability to achieve and exceed organizational goals for philanthropic support. The candidate will have strong experience in all aspects of fundraising, including annual giving, special events, and endowment campaigns. Experience achieving capital campaign goals of $10 million or more will be a plus. The candidate will be able to speak and write persuasively to diverse internal and external audiences.
The successful candidate will be an experienced manager with the demonstrated ability to set expectations and assure both financial and operational accountability throughout the organization. The candidate will be able to lead staff in an environment that fosters creativity, a commitment to excellence, and teamwork. The candidate will be able to innovate, manage change, move an agenda forward, and resolve conflict.
The successful candidate will be knowledgeable about facilities and project management. The candidate will bring successful experience working with local governments, developers, and community leaders to create alliances that achieve shared goals.
The successful candidate will have an engaging public personality and presence, high energy, and excellent listening skills. The candidate will be a leader who fully embraces principles of inclusion, diversity, equity, and access. The candidate will have the ability to interact effectively with stakeholders who represent every aspect of diversity in age, education, gender, sexual orientation, race, religion, ethnicity, and socio-economic status.
The successful candidate will be kind, creative, curious, and flexible. The candidate will have at least ten years’ senior executive experience and will possess common sense, sound judgment, and good humor in abundance. The successful candidate will be willing and able to maintain a schedule that includes frequent evening and weekend events.
Compensation
The salary range for this position is $150,000 to $185,000, depending on qualifications and experience. Wharton Arts offers a comprehensive benefits package that includes health insurance, a retirement plan, professional development opportunities, and paid time off.
Applications
Wharton Arts welcomes recommendations, nominations, and applications from all qualified candidates regardless of race, religion, political affiliation, disability, sexual orientation, gender, national origin, or marital status, or any other basis protected by law. Candidates must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Please submit a resumé along with a cover letter that describes your specific interest in the mission and work of Wharton Arts and your qualifications for the position as described in the candidate profile. On a separate sheet, provide the names and contact information for several professional references. All applications will be treated as confidential and references will not be contacted without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement.
Electronic submissions are requested. Please send to:
President and CEO – Wharton Arts
c/o Catherine French Group
applications@catherinefrenchgroup.com(Adobe Acrobat PDF attachments only, please)
- Chief Financial Officer – Sarasota Opera

Sarasota Opera is marking its 67th season of bringing internationally acclaimed opera to audiences on Florida’s Gulf Coast while celebrating the Centennial of its home, the historic Sarasota Opera House. The Company’s Winter Opera Festival will take place at the Sarasota Opera House in February and March 2026, and will include 34 performances of four major operas: La bohème, The Merry Widow, Il trovatore, and Susannah.
The Company was launched in 1960 in the historic 320-seat Asolo Theater on the grounds of Sarasota’s Ringling Museum of Art. In 1984, the Company moved into the former A.B. Edwards Theater, now the Sarasota Opera House. The 1,119-seat Sarasota Opera House, which underwent a $20 million renovation and rehabilitation in 2007, has been named “one of America’s finest venues for opera” by Musical America.
Since then, Sarasota Opera has gained an international reputation as one of the leading regional opera companies in the United States. The Company’s major artistic initiatives have included the Masterworks Revival Series, the American Classics Series, and the Verdi Cycle. The Company’s Sarasota Youth Opera is the most comprehensive youth opera program in the United States.
Since 1983, Sarasota Opera has been under the artistic leadership of Victor DeRenzi. In 1989, the Company and DeRenzi launched a monumental Verdi Cycle. When the Cycle concluded in 2016, Sarasota Opera became the only opera company in the world to have performed every note composed by Giuseppi Verdi. Since 2012, the Company’s administrative leader has been General Director Richard Russell. When Victor DeRenzi steps down as Artistic Director in May 2026, Richard Russellwill become General Director and Artistic Director.
Sarasota Opera is governed by a Board of 28 and has a year-round staff of 30, which grows to 200 during the winter season. The Company’s budget is $11 million.
The Position
The Chief Financial Officer (CFO) is the senior executive responsible and accountable for overseeing financial strategy, planning, and operations for Sarasota Opera. The CFO drives the processes of budgeting, forecasting, and financial analysis; ensures the Company’s compliance with government regulations, contracts, donor agreements, and reporting requirements; and ensures that controls are in place to protect the Opera’s assets and non-profit tax status.
The CFO maintains the integrity of the Company’s accounting systems and records, and ensures full and accurate integration of the accounting records with Tessitura and other applications in use by the Company. The CFO provides timely, accurate, and complete financial reports and information to the General Director, the Board, and the staff to guide and inform their decision-making. The CFO provides budgets, reports, and necessary financial data to the Development Department to support grant applications and fulfill reporting requirements.
The CFO monitors the Company’s bank accounts, cash flow, and investments and serves as liaison to the Company’s investment advisors. The CFO reviews all invoices, contracts, and agreements. The CFO is the liaison with the insurance agency and ensures that the Company has adequate coverages. The CFO oversees the payroll process to ensure accuracy and timeliness, and oversees the administration of employee benefits.
The CFO reports to the General Director, supervises the accounting staff, and works closely with the Treasurer of the Board and members of the executive management team. The CFO is the staff liaison for the Finance Committee, the Investment Committee; and the Audit Committee. The CFO provides reports and documents as needed for the annual audit and ensures that all tax filings are prepared correctly and in a timely manner. The ensures compliance with FASB and GAAP guidelines.
As a member of the executive management team, the CFO attends performances and events and serves as an ambassador for the Company with donors, patrons, and audiences as well as external stakeholders throughout the greater Sarasota community.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate will have significant senior financial management experience; thorough familiarity with non-profit fund accounting; proven budgeting, forecasting, and cash management ability; and a genuine interest in connecting audiences with opera. Experience working with a not-for-profit organization is essential; experience working with an opera company or other performing arts organization will be a plus.
The successful candidate will be thoroughly knowledgeable about, and experienced with, institutional planning and helping to shape, implement, and monitor strategic plans. The candidate will have a thorough working knowledge of the technology available to support finance and operations in a non-profit organization. Prior experience with Sage MIP Accounting and Tessitura will be viewed as an asset. The successful candidate will bring experience in human resources and benefits administration.
The successful candidate will be a leader with strong supervisory skills and a management style that encourages collaboration and teamwork. The candidate will be able to manage multiple deadlines and competing priorities with grace and good humor. The candidate will be curious, persistent, and nimble.
The successful candidate will be able to accept a work schedule that includes performances and events on nights and weekends during production periods. The candidate will welcome the opportunity to play a key role in the management of Sarasota Opera and become an active participant in the Sarasota community.
Compensation
Sarasota Opera offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. The annual salary range for this position is $110,000 to $125,000, plus a benefits package that includes paid time off; health insurance; life insurance; and a voluntary 403(b) retirement plan.
Applications
Sarasota Opera welcomes recommendations, nominations, and applications from all qualified candidates regardless of race, religion, political affiliation, disability, sexual orientation, gender, national origin, or marital status, or any other basis protected by law. Candidates must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Please submit a resumé along with a cover letter that describes your specific interest in the mission and work of Sarasota Opera and your qualifications for the position as described in the candidate profile. On a separate sheet, provide the names and contact information for several professional references. All applications will be treated as confidential and references will not be contacted without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement.
Electronic submissions are requested. Please send to:
Chief Financial Officer – Sarasota Opera
c/o Catherine French Group
applications@catherinefrenchgroup.com(Adobe Acrobat PDF attachments only, please)
- How “The New Yorker Story” Became A Genre
“I hadn’t investigated this term in depth, but I understood it to mean ‘a short story that is meandering, plotless, and slight — full of middle-class people discussing their relentlessly banal problems.’ … But they were also good!” Those characteristics were deliberately shaped by the different preferences of two key editors. – Woman of Letters
THEATRE
VISUAL
- Lessons From The Aztecs: Rule By Coercion Never Works
The Aztec empire did not fall because it lacked capability. It collapsed because it accumulated too many adversaries who resented its dominance. This is a historical episode the US president, Donald Trump, should take notice of as his rift with traditional US allies deepens. – The Conversation
- Perversely — AI Is Proving The Uniqueness Of Our Creativity
A great human artist, we’d like to believe, amplifies and defends the exceptionalist spirit of our species but, in an echo of the anxieties that haunted early photography, a demonised version of AI threatens to steal away our souls. – Aeon
- Why Our Cities Need More Places Of Serenity
Perceptual psychologists have long studied what happens when people stare at uniform fields of colour without visual edges or contrasts. Sometimes, experiencing this kind of sensory deprivation can result in something known as the Ganzfeld effect: a response to a uniform field that causes the brain’s pattern recognition to work harder. – Psyche
- Why Liberal Arts Education May Be More Important In The Age Of AI
A machine will never possess the level of interpersonal skills needed to manage a team, to engage in civil discourse with individuals from different cultures and backgrounds, or to resolve messy human conflicts that resist logic. Judgment will never be AI’s strength. – US News
- We Used To Think That Our Brains Were Our Brains. Now We Know Different
Neuroplasticity therefore reframes the brain as neither rigid nor infinitely malleable, but as a living system shaped by experience, effort and time. – The Conversation



















