Entertainment
Performing Arts Center marks 100 $1M donors
ARTS FUNDING: Officials called the milestone unprecedented for a U.S. cultural institution11:20 AM CDT on Friday, August 17, 2007
See below for a list of the 100 $1 million-donors
Only two years from completion, the Dallas Center for the Performing Arts crested a fundraising benchmark this week: 100 donors have given at least $1 million or more toward construction of the $275 million facility in the Arts District.
Center officials identified the 100th donor of $1 million or more as the family of the late Texas congressman James M. Collins, who represented Dallas in the House of Representatives from the 1960s to the 1980s. Officials called the milestone unprecedented, saying that no other capital campaign benefiting a U.S. cultural institution has received "this number of gifts of this size."
"Reaching the 100th donor threshold is truly extraordinary," Bill Lively, president and CEO of the Dallas Center for the Performing Arts, said Thursday, "when you realize that Dallas has done what no other city in the country has done, and it's done it for culture. The fact that our 100th donor was the James M. Collins family is really fortuitous and special. Congressman Collins was a great American and a great Dallasite."
The center remains $23 million short of its goal – provided the cost doesn't exceed the $275 million budget. The only way the cost would go higher, contends Mr. Lively, "is if we decide to build more. At the moment, we're on schedule and on budget."
Mr. Lively says he's encouraged by the fact that most of the 100 donors "are not, historically, supporters of the Dallas arts community. More than half, I would say, made their gifts purely as an investment in the future of our city."
Dorothy Collins Weaver, a daughter of Rep. Collins who lives in Coral Gables, Fla., says that she and her brother, Michael Collins; her sister, Nancy Collins Fisher; and their mother, Dee Collins Torbert, the congressman's widow, made the donation for the very reason Mr. Lively outlined – as an investment in the future of Dallas.
"We were happy to push them over the top," said Ms. Weaver.
When it's finished, the complex will include the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House, the Dee and Charles Wyly Theatre, Annette Strauss Artist Square and city-funded City Performance Hall, all of which will be unified by a 10-acre Performance Park. Construction of the opera house and the Wyly Theatre has already begun and are expected to be completed in October 2009.
Mr. Lively says universities may have benefited from having 100 or more donors contribute at least $1 million each to a capital campaign, but he knows of no cultural endeavor that has had that many people giving that much money.
He's supported in that assessment by David Resnicow, who co-owns the New York firm Resnicow Schroeder Associates in New York, and who has worked as a consultant to various arts organizations in Dallas, as well as the center.
"We've worked with more than 100 cultural institutions across the U.S.," says Mr. Resnicow. "And we don't know of another example anywhere where there have been such a large number of donors at this level – $1 million-plus."
Fund-raisers in New York and Los Angeles often have the benefit, he says, of pulling donors from across the country and around the world, but "even to the best of their knowledge, they know of no instance in which this many people have given this much money – collectively."
Ms. Weaver says that she and her family were impressed by "the broad visionary plans" of the center, but gave their gift knowing it's something their father would have wanted them to do.
"My father was a very committed civic leader in Dallas," says Ms. Weaver, who has "always maintained my ties to Dallas. As Dad always told us, it has no ocean, no major rivers, but Dallas is great for its people. There's no reason for Dallas to exist, really, but it has great people, pride and vision and a willingness to roll up its sleeves and turn its dreams into reality."
Kenneth and Ruth Sharp Altshuler
Harry W. Bass Jr. Foundation
Boeckman family, through Boeckman Family Foundation and JFM Foundation
Christine and Eric Brauss
Diane and Hal Brierley
Toni and Norman Brinker
Nancy and Clint Carlson
Mary Anne and Richard Cree
Linda and Bill Custard and Frank Pitts
Arlene and John Dayton
The Bradbury Dyer III Foundation
The Rosemary and Roger Enrico family
Amy and Vernon Faulconer
Candice and Robert Haas
Fanchon and Howard Hallam
Gene and Jerry Jones
Kim Hiett Jordan
Mark L. and Barbara Thomas Lemmon
Joy and Ronald Mankoff
Nancy Cain Marcus
Phyllis and Tom H. McCasland Jr.
Mrs. Eugene McDermott
Juanita and Henry S. Miller Jr. and the Miller family (Vance Charles Miller, Patricia Miller Donosky, Henry S. Miller III, Jacqueline Miller Stewart)
Dana and Charles Nearburg
Paulos Foundation, honoring Angela D. Paulos
Sarah and Ross Perot Jr.
Nelda Cain Pickens
The Vin and Caren Prothro Foundation
Emily Frances and John Raymond
Edward W. and Deedie Potter Rose
Sarah M. and Charles E. Seay
Stemmons Foundation
The Theodore H. Strauss family
Margaret and Jack Sweet
Debbie and John C. Tolleson
Ellen and J. McDonald Williams
Jean D. Wilson
Margot and Bill Winspear
Mary and Bob Wright
Cheryl and Sam Wyly
Dee and Charles Wyly
Anonymous (three)
Jane and Ron Beneke family
The Robert H. Dedman family
Leah and Jerry Fullinwider
Hegi Family Foundation
Cinda and Tom Hicks
J.L. and Sydney Thweatt Huffines
The Jerry R. Junkins Family Foundation
The Irvin L. Levy and Kenneth L. Schnitzer families
Nancy and Kenton McGee, Alexandra and Robert Lavie and the McGee Foundation
The Murchison family
Virginia and Robert Payne family
Margot and Ross Perot
Boone Pickens
Caren Prothro
Cindy and Howard Rachofsky
Jan and Trevor Rees-Jones
Peggy and Leonard Riggs
Sue Gill Rose in honor of Margaret McDermott
Peggy and Carl Sewell
Annette and Harold Simmons
Jane and Bud Smith
Gayle and Paul Stoffel
Bea and Ray Wallace
Donna M. Wilhelm
Kathy and Rodney Woods
Anonymous (two)
The Alberts family
The James M. Collins family
Marguerite Steed Hoffman in memory of Edmund Hoffman and in honor of Margaret McDermott
Carole and John Ridings Lee
Anonymous (two)
Alon USA
American Airlines
Bank of America
Brinker International
Communities Foundation of Texas
Dallas Leadership Banking Partnership
The Dallas Opera Landmark Fund
Dean Foods
EDS
Elsa Von Seggern Foundation
Eugene McDermott Foundation
Flagship Corporate Alliance
Hoblitzelle Foundation
JPMorgan Chase – Dallas
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Landmark Partnership
The Meadows Foundation
Nokia
Once Upon a Time
Perkins-Prothro Foundation
The Rosewood Foundation
Texas Instruments
TXU Energy
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