The Lehman Center for the Performing Arts has received a major boost ahead of its planned and much anticipated Oct. 2 reopening, having secured more than $1.1 million in public and nonprofit funding for fiscal year 2021-2022, which marks the center’s first season since the pandemic dimmed its lights.
The center, currently the Bronx’s largest entertainment venue, received $760,095 from the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant, a $16 billion federal fund that helps independent live venues, museums, theaters, and arts organizations bounce back from economic losses suffered during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The center’s executive director, Eva Bornstein, said she applied for the fund, run by the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), as part of a multi-layered effort to help the center open its doors once again to the public. The Lehman Center for the Performing Arts canceled its 40th anniversary season in March 2020 after COVID-19 forced the campus and the city to shut down.
Crediting U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer and U.S. Rep. Nydia Velázquez, both of New York, with championing the federal initiative, Bornstein said the aid “would breathe new life into thousands of venues, including Lehman’s.” The center was notified of the award in July.
Under Bornstein, the Lehman Center for the Performing Arts has also received $354,800 in grant awards and discretionary spending from other government agencies and nonprofits to help with the coming season’s operating expenses. The funding includes:
- a $202,300 annual discretionary grant from the New York City Council administered by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs;
- an $80,000 New York State Legislature allocation secured by Assemblyman José Rivera, who represents the Bronx’s Assembly District 78;
- a $22,500 grant from the New York State Council on the Arts;
- and a $50,000 City Council allocation to produce the annual Albanian Festival this fall, secured by Councilman Mark Gjonaj, who represents City Council District 13 in the East Bronx.
Gjonaj underscored the value of the center’s programs, saying the funding he secured would help develop and establish new artists that texture the local community intangibly. “I’m proud to allocate resources to the Lehman Center for the Performing Arts toward critical programs to help serve our community,” Gjonaj said. “The arts center has been a cornerstone for the cultural and artistic education of the Bronx for over four decades.”
Among other initiatives, Bornstein said the center would use the Shuttered Venue’s aid and additional operating grants to invest in marketing, and secure acts. The center will resume in-person operations on Oct. 2 with a concert featuring salsa star, Andy Montañez, the Mambo Legends Orchestra, and singer Patty Padilla. Tickets will be available online on Sept. 1.
Built in 1980, according to representatives of the center, its 2,276-seat concert hall has been lauded as “acoustically perfect” by critics, and has presented hundreds of classical, popular, and folk/ethnic dance, music, and theatre companies and acts from around the world.
A $15.4 million renovation was completed in 2019, bringing the center a new, visually impressive glass-enclosed main entrance and lobby, brand-new theater seating, new walkway ramps that make the venue entirely ADA compliant, a redesigned box office, an elevator to the balcony, and additional event space and restrooms.
For more on upcoming 2021-22 events, visit www.lehmancenter.org.