Yo-Yo Ma was available for just one night.
When Minnesota Orchestra leaders learned they had the chance to bring the superstar cellist to Orchestra Hall — for the first time in 15 years — they gasped, said Dianne Brennan, the orchestra's vice president of advancement. "And then they looked at me."
Bringing Ma to Minnesota would be pricey. So Brennan called her contact at Ameriprise Financial. On a Tuesday night in June, Yo-Yo Ma took the stage. Inside the program, a message from Ameriprise: "We are honored to sponsor this exceptional event ... "
Corporate sponsorships help Minnesota orchestras, theater companies and museums in big and small ways, backing entire seasons and single concerts, performers' flights and backstage supplies. Delta Air Lines sponsored the Guthrie Theater's summer musical "Sunday in the Park With George." Minneapolis-based U.S. Bank is backing artist-designed minigolf at the Walker Art Center. Bremer Bank was behind the recent production of "West Side Story" at Ordway Center.
Which is why this summer's controversy over Delta and Bank of America pulling their funding from the Public Theater in New York caused angst among Twin Cities arts watchers. These corporate sponsors distanced themselves in June from the theater's production of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" amid fierce criticism about the President Trump-like portrayal of the title character.
Shakespeare, of all things! "It's even more ironic," because sponsors tend to love Shakespeare, a classic audience-pleaser, said Scott Mayer, founder of the Ivey Awards, whose work has straddled both sides of the arts sponsorship world.
At first, "I thought, oh boy, this is going to make corporations even more hesitant to fund performing arts," Mayer said. "But the reality is, there are risks with sponsoring any kind of organization."
At the time, Guthrie artistic director Joseph Haj worried that the episode would have a broader, chilling effect on the theater community because sponsors "have been vitally important to the health of the American theater." In interviews this month, leaders of Minnesota arts organizations said that so far, they've seen little change. But the controversy spotlights the growing importance of companies' marketing dollars to art institutions' bottom lines.