Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Denver Post editorial this morning 

A requiem for the symphony?

For the struggling Colorado Symphony to survive, it will need leadership, imagination and a healthy measure of philanthropy.


Read more: Editorial: A requiem for the symphony? - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_18982262#ixzz1ZAm9scxD
Read The Denver Post's Terms of Use of its content: http://www.denverpost.com/termsofuse

My comment, just posted at the bottom of the editorial:

In my opinion, Denver would be better off losing the Broncos than the Colorado Symphony. Of course I’m biased.

I first learned to love good music listening to Gene Amole on KVOD when I got dressed each morning to go to Denver’s Thomas Jefferson High School, although going to concerts never became a habit. Still hasn’t.

In a way, my love of the music and not being a concert goer made me the perfect spokesman for the Symphony, I loved the music but was never figured out how to participate. Still haven’t.

When I was desperate for a job the Denver Symphony, which now calls itself the Colorado Symphony, was desperate enough to hire me as their marketing.  (For the story of how I got from my desperate moment to a job offer in two days on the podcast “How to find a good job fast,” on http://www.JohnWren.com)

They were in very bad financial shape back then, for a while it was as if I owned the Symphony. What we learned was that Denver loves what one of our really good board members, and there were and I’m sure are still many, called “Denver’s biggest band.” It was just that most of the people in Denver didn’t know when the concerts were held or how to buy a ticket.

We brightened up and increased the advertising, got the support of the local newspapers to run more stories, did a few promotions, and the result was that we had more sell outs than ever before or since.

My ego got the best of me, and I left. My replacement was Barry Fay, and I’m not sure how the story went from there to bankruptcy.

I’d be glad to share what happened in more detail if anyone wants to hear it, just give me a call. I’m still trying to figure out how I can participate, and I think lots of other people in Denver are, too.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

   TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, an adaptation of Harper Lee’s American classic, will play the Denver Center Theatre Company’s Stage Theatre September 30-October 30 (opening night Thursday, October 6.)   Tickets are on sale now, by calling 303.893.4100 or www.denvercenter.org.

 
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD is the story of Atticus Finch, an attorney in the segregated South of the 1930s, who courageously defends a black man accused of rape. Directed by Sabin Epstein with indelible characters and gripping suspense, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD examines the loss of innocence and acts of extraordinary personal courage in a time of fear.

Special Events for TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD
Perspectives on the Play | September 30 at 6pm
The DCTC’s creative team gives audiences a unique viewpoint about the play they are about to see, which makes the stage experience even more rewarding. In the Jones Theatre.
Town Hall Meetings | October 1
National and local leaders, authorities and academia unite in conversation with the Denver community. Join fellow citizens and be a part of the discussion.
Talkback hosted by the Higher Education Advisory Council | October 9, post-show
Join the cast for a post-show discussion led by members of our academic community.
General Talkbacks | October 16, post-show
Join us for a post-show discussion with the actors from the show
Theatre & Theology | October 18, post-show
In a continued partnership with Pastor Dan Bollman with the Rocky Mountain Evangelical Lutheran Synod and cast members, this discussion examines the relevant connections to the productions through the theological lens. Post-show.
Fourth Wall | October 26 at 5:30pm
Join other 20 and 30-somethings at Fourth Wall, which includes tickets to the play and pre- and post-show parties that expand the theatrical world. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD event includes a light dinner, a ticket to the show and a drink at the after-party.
For more information on these special events, please visit http://www.denvercenter.org/education/EducationResources.aspx





Saturday, June 11, 2011

June 10, 2011 Draft


THIS IS A TEST. The mission of your new, free Small Business Chamber of Commerce is to strengthen the grassroots in business and politics. The final version of this, perhaps expanded into a book, will become the handbook for your Small Business Chamber of Commerce, Your feedback on this would be very much appreciated. Contact me at (303)861-1447 or John@JohnWren.com Thanks! John



Connect to Win:
How to teach, learn, and serve for fun and profit!
Don’t just network, connect!

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.” President Theodore Roosevelt

Since the fall of 1727 when young Ben Franklin first met with a group of friends, Americans have been having a conversation to help us each answer the question: What’s my next step towards the first day on my next new job or with my next new client?

Before we start, we recover. In football recovery is getting back up, players are taught to hit and recover. If we are totally stuck and don’t know where to go for help with some big problem, especially if we have a medical problem and no doctor to call, we call 211, or 911 if it is an emergency. In Denver, help is just a phone call away when we really want to get back on our feet.

Longer term, we get more rest and exercise, eat better, read more, take more time for prayer and meditation, and when needed we take an hour or a day or longer to recharge.

Once on our feet (which might be now for you, or it may take a while), we make four considerations and perhaps write a simple one-page game plan. Then we share our plan to clarify our own thinking as we either A) Share this with a good friend with a suggestion that we help each other; or if we need more help we B) Ask 5 close friends to be supporters and include the elements of a WRAP plan in what we share. http://www.mentalhealthrecovery.com/
1. Join. None of us can do much in isolation. We each connect and reconnect with institutions that are important to us. We completely commit ourselves to our church, temple, or synagogue and/or our 12-step recovery program. We join or become more active in a service club, chamber of commerce, trade association, or other group that is important to us. We go back to school or become more active in our alumni group. We join or start a peer advisory group or book discussion group. We make amends and restore good relations as best we can with our family. We marry well and/or create a healthy community. “First we make our institutions, and then our institutions make us.” Robert Hutchins
2. Work. We connect with good work that allows us to be good neighbors and citizens. Business owners and managers often recruit an intern, an assistant, or a professional who will create free time. Those who are unemployed or underemployed in a job that makes life all business look for an opportunity to become that assistant or some other good job.
Or we start our own business. Thousands of people have found startup help since 1994 at an IDEA Café Startup Workshop, now sponsored by the new, free Small Business Chamber of Commerce, where free help is also offered to help you start or join a Franklin Circle peer advisory/ self-directed learning group.
3. Participate. As good citizens we connect with our community. We join our neighborhood association, and we run for elected public office or just help other good people get elected. Google the political party of your choice and your ZIP code, make a phone call, and volunteer to help in your neighborhood. Then start a neighborhood Franklin Circle to share what you’ve done and encourage others to do the same. By the next election you’ll be able to make a real difference.
4. Grow. We connect with this great American conversation as life-long learners, adults learn best by being teachers. Many have found our local library to be a great resource for this.
As we grow we build on our strengths. Mickey Mantle didn’t stay at short stop. Some have found it helpful to take the free strength finder quiz on http://www.authentichappiness.com/. Others just ask a close friend, sponsor, mentor, CPA, attorney, or banker who knows us well for his or her frank assessment. Or we just take an honest look at our self: each evening for a week or more, we make a list of what went well for during that day (at least 3 things), and then analyze why they went well; once recognized, these strengths become our foundation for positive growth.
These words are the result of our shared experience with getting knocked down, stretching back to 1727 and now, we hope, from you, your feedback would be very much appreciated. We are in the process of expanding this into a handbook for the Small Business Chamber, and we are particularly interested in any good result you achieve as you advance towards your American Dream.
"The American Dream is "that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately, and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable, and be recognized by others for what they are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position." The first usage of the term “The American Dream,” in James Truslow Adams’s, The Epic of America, 1931
Secretary for this Small Business Chamber of Commerce Code/Handbook project is John S. Wren, MBA+ “I’m a recovering MBA. Much of what I learned in graduate business school I’ve had to overcome to be truly helpful to people starting in a new direction.” Wren is a Denver resident and long-time community activist, business consultant, and adult educator. He is the founder of the Small Business Chamber of Commerce http://Facebook.com/Small.Business.Chamber. For more contact him at John@JohnWren.com, (303)861-1447 or http://Facebook.com/John.S.Wren Your comments, suggestions and questions are encouraged. John says to you: “Since 1727 people have found starting or joining a Franklin Circle helpful, it helped Ben Franklin, maybe it can help you, too. Contact me for more information about the group that is forming here now, sponsored by the new, free Small Business Chamber of Commerce. And please send me your suggestions for making this more helpful to others.”

Motto of the Small Business Chamber of Commerce:
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Golden_Rule

Friday, April 22, 2011

FOUR-TIME TONY AWARD® NOMINATED


PLAYS THE BUELL THEATRE APRIL 26-MAY 8

DENVER — 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL, direct from Broadway, based on the hit movie featuring Dolly Parton's original hit title song along with her new Tony Award® and Grammy-nominated score, plays the Buell Theatre April 26 through May 8. Single tickets are now on sale at www.denvercenter.org.

Nominated for four 2009 Tony Awards including Original Score and receiving a record breaking 15 Drama Desk nominations including Outstanding Musical, 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL is a hilarious story of friendship and revenge in the Rolodex era. This is the story of three unlikely friends who conspire to take control of their company and learn there's nothing they can't do -- even in a man's world. Outrageous, thought-provoking and even a little romantic, 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL is about teaming up and taking care of business... it's about getting credit and getting even.

9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL marked the Broadway debut for seven-time Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter and musician Dolly Parton as composer and lyricist. ―I couldn’t have asked for a better experience on my first Broadway show,‖ said Dolly Parton. ―I’ve had the privilege of working with an amazing group of people who have become like family to me. I can’t wait for this show to hit the road so people across the country can see why I’m so proud of everyone involved.‖

Tony nominee Jeff Calhoun, director and choreographer of the touring production says, ―I met Dolly Parton as a chorus kid dancing in the film The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas only a few years after 9 to 5 was already a hit movie. It was a thrill to work with her then and an honor and privilege to be entrusted to direct and choreograph this exciting new tour of 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL.‖

Dee Hoty will play the role of Violet. She has earned three Tony nominations for her starring roles in Footloose, The Best Little Whorehouse Goes Public and The Will Rogers Follies. Dee starred on Broadway and in eight major U.S. cities as Donna Sheridan in Mamma Mia! Performing on and off-Broadway, she toured the country and has been involved in many pre-Broadway workshops. She has appeared in ―Law & Order‖, ―Law & Order: Criminal Intent‖ and numerous television and film appearances.

The role of Judy will be played by Mamie Parris whose Broadway credits include the Tony-nominated revival of Ragtime, 110 In the Shade and the Tony-winning musical The Drowsy Chaperone. She turned the road pink in the First National Tour of Legally Blonde the Musical, has sung with the Radio City Rockettes, toured with country music icon Kenny Rogers, and participated in over a dozen readings with students of the BMI-Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop.

Joseph Mahowald is the unsuspecting Franklin Hart, Jr. Joseph has appeared on Broadway in title roles in Jekyll & Hyde, Javert in Les MisĂ©rables and Chiefton O’Flaherty in The Pirate Queen. He has performed off-Broadway and in several national tours, was a soloist with major symphonies around the world and has been on all the NY soaps. Some of his extensive regional credits include being a founding member of the artistic company of Tennessee Repertory and appeared in leading roles in numerous productions.

Comic, actress and cabaret performer Kristine Zbornik has been cast for the role of Roz. Kristine performed on Broadway in A Catered Affair and off-Broadway in Forbidden Broadway, Mamma Mia and Man of La Mancha.

―American Idol‖ finalist Diana DeGarmo has been cast in the role of Doralee Rhodes, made famous by the queen of country music and iconic songwriter, musician, movie star and entrepreneur Dolly Parton. Diana gained overnight fame at age 16 as a runner-up on the third season of television’s No. 1 series, ―American Idol‖. Broadway credits include Hair, Hairspray and Brooklyn: The Musical and starred in the off-Broadway musical The Toxic Avenger. DeGarmo was born in Birmingham, AL, raised in Snellville, GA, and currently has a home and resides in Nashville where she continues to co-write and perform in and around the area.

Rounding out the cast is Randy Aaron, Brian Beach, Jane Blass, Paul Castree, Sarah Dacey Charles, Janet Dickinson, Natalie Charles Ellis, Marjorie Failoni, Gregg Goodbrod, Autumn Guzzardi, K.J. Hippensteel, Jesse J.P. Johnson, Michelle Marmolejo, April Nixon, Ryah Nixon, Rick Pessagno, Mark Raumaker, Wayne Schroder, Micah Shepard and Travis Waldschmidt.

9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL written by Patricia Resnick (co-writer of the original screenplay), includes scenic design by Ken Foy, costume design by five-time Tony Award winner William Ivey Long, lighting design by Tony Award and Drama Desk Award winner Ken Billington, music supervision by Stephen Oremus, co–choreographed by Lisa Stevens and casting by Telsey + Company.

Single tickets for 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL start at just $20. To charge by phone, call Denver Center Ticket Services at 303.893.4100. TTY (for Deaf and hard-of-hearing patrons): 303.893.9582. Groups of 10 or more, please call 303.446.4829. Tickets may also be purchased at the Denver Center Ticket Office, located at the Helen Bonfils Theatre Complex Lobby. Buy and print online at www.denvercenter.org.

9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL is sponsored by HealthOne, the Westin Denver Downtown and Comcast. 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL is part of the Denver Center Attractions 2011 season, which is generously supported by United Airlines and Vectra Bank. Media sponsorship for DCA is provided by The Denver Post, CBS4 and Denver Magazine. The Denver Center for the Performing Arts is supported in part by the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District. Please visit our website at www.denvercenter.org.

For more information on 9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL visit www.9to5themusical.com

PERFORMANCE DATES April 26-May 8

Tuesday-Saturday 8pm Saturday & Sunday 2pm Sunday 7:30pm Thursday, May 5 2pm

Friday, January 7, 2011

Mark Skousen and Ev Sequeira will be our speakers this afternoon at the Denver IDEA Cafe, the Phil Perington will share with us at the combined Community Room College and No Labels Meetup at 4:30 p.m. Join us for either or both!

We have a great Franklin Circle Alpha Group coming together. If you want to make continuous learning part of your life, this is a good way to do that in a very enjoyable and effective way.

We are looking for leaders for the IDEA Cafes, Franklin Circles, and Big Events the new, free Small Business Chamber is starting this year across the state. Let me know if you'd like more information.

No Labels is having a meeting with Dottie Lamm here in Denver next week, see it listed December 13 under the "Events" on http://nolabels.org/

Life's too short for any of us to learn from just our own experience! Hope to see you soon, or just call me and let's catch up on the telephone.

John

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

"next to normal" opens this week here in Denver at the DCPA features the actress who starred on Broadway. I'm going tomorrow (Wed, Jan 6) and will let you know what I think after that. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=8wexiZ8zUxg