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Better Get This Party Started
Gay Games Will Rely on Dance
Parties For Success
By
Sean Maher
Reprinted by permission from the Sydney
Star Observer
The
success or failure of five dance parties will be the financial
make-or-break factor for Sydney 2002 Gay Games.
In
an interview with Sydney Star Observer this week, Gay Games co-chair Bev Lange
revealed that the organization is “being blatantly reliant” on
revenue generated from the dance parties that will be held during the
Games period.
Sydney
2002 organizers are hoping for income of $3.9m from the five parties,
which will include two 25,000-capacity dance parties at Fox Studios
following on from the Games opening and closing ceremonies.
Two
smaller parties – a men’s party and a women’s party – will
also use parts of Fox while a “Sunset Party” will make use of the
much-loved Harbor Party site at Mrs. Macquaries Chair. It is
understood that these three parties will have a combined capacity of
13,000.
Justifying
the Games’ financial reliance on the dance parties, Lange said this
week that Sydney 2002 had been compelled to reduce its dependence on
revenue generated through sponsorships.
“We
are being blatantly reliant on party income and that’s probably
provided the difference between where our budget was sitting before
and where it’s sitting now,” Lange said.
However,
a financial strategy focused on party revenue may prove a risky
venture for Games organizers. Many gay and lesbian community organizations
have already experienced financial strain due to lean dance-party
seasons in recent years.
Pride
co-president Lou-Anne Lind told the Star
that she had already expressed concerns to Sydney 2002 organizers.
“We
explained that the last few seasons have been particularly difficult
not just for Pride but for Mardi Gras – even the private sector will
tell you the same thing. It’s been really difficult to generate hype
around events, particularly in the last couple of years,” Lind said.
Mardi
Gras president Julie Regan also advised caution. This year’s Mardi
Gras party was the smallest in many years.
“I
think they’ve obviously got their work cut out for them. I would say
that, for the Games to be relying on pulling in crowds of that size,
it’s perhaps optimistic given [Mardi Gras’] recent experience,”
Regan told the Star.
However,
Gay Games co-chair Peter Bailey defended the organization's decision
to concentrate their financial focus on the parties, pointing to the
fact that the organization has based its budget on ticket sales of
only around 60 percent.
“Look,
I have to admit that we’re very mindful of the recent history of
community dance parties.
“But
you have to remember that we’re trying to appeal to a broader
audience with our parties than perhaps other parties have in the past
… We’re confident the approach will prove successful.”
Both
Lange and Bailey pointed to the 14,500 participants and the additional
25,000 visitors who were expected for the Games as a unique marketing
pool for event sales.
Controversy
over the extent to which the Games should rely on party revenue is not
a new issue. It was first raised last year by former International
Federation of Gay Games co-president and Sydney 2002 critic Bill
Wassmer.
“Sydney
is just not getting it – they think it’s Mardi Gras times seven.
It is not.” Wassmer told the Star in July last year.
“If
you win a game, that means your event’s in the next round. You’re
not going to go to an all-night party – you’re going to have
dinner and go to bed and get ready for your game the next day.
“All
the promoters that lost their fortune in Amsterdam with all these
all-night parties that nobody went to – they thought it was Mardi
Gras times eight, and it’s not gonna be. Ever. No one is going to
spend $5,000 to play one game and lose in the first round. These
people that are getting on these planes are goddamn serious. Are the
people of Sydney getting this or are they not getting this?”
Bailey
was unmoved by the point, asserting that the lack of success of the
Amsterdam dance parties was due to competition from outside party
operators.
“There
will be a lot of people attracted to the Games that will not be
necessarily participating and it is those people that we will have to
target in coming months,” Bailey said.
Despite
their concerns, both Regan and Lind expressed support for the Gay
Games party initiative, stressing that it is important that Sydney’s
gay and lesbian community rally behind the Games in order to assure
its success.
ACON’s
Hand In Hand party director David Wilkins offered a more cryptic
comment on the road ahead for the Games parties:
“All
I can say is, best of luck to them … I think that says enough.”
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