Take two for Newport Beach Film Festival
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- Call it The Newport Beach International Film Festival,
take two.
Six weeks after festival founder Jeffrey S. Conner filed for bankruptcy,
a new group of local business people and educators has announced that it
intends to make sure the show goes on -- though not in exactly the same
form.
Gregg Schwenk, leader of the newly formed Newport Beach Film Festival
Board of Directors and a member of the Newport Beach Economic Development
Committee, said the event will differ from the one run by Conner.
“This is a completely different organization,” he said. “We’re looking to
put on a smaller, yet still high-quality festival.”
Schwenk said the exact nature of the festival’s programming and operation
had not yet been determined, but thought it would probably run for about
a week at a time and would feature films selected by the board of
directors.
The nine-member board includes local business people, members of the
Newport Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau, UCI faculty and Bob
Bassett, dean of Chapman University’s film school.
“My feeling is that we’ve brought together really the brightest and best
of the community,” Schwenk said of the group. “Our initial board of
directors is a reflection of that.”
Board member Rosalind Williams, the president of the Conference and
Visitors Bureau, emphasized the professionalism of the preparations that
have gone into the new project.
“It’s almost like a group of people have come together to form a new
business,” she said. “They’re laying the proper groundwork from the
beginning so that the pitfalls that have occurred previously will not
occur this time around.”
Schwenk said the idea for the new group’s involvement is inspired in part
by the community’s support for the previous festival.
“If you look at the demographics of Orange County and particularly
Newport Beach, these are ones that lend themselves to [a festival],”
Schwenk said. “We plan to capitalize on that.”
He pointed out that despite the apparent financial difficulties
encountered by the former festival, it was an event beloved by area
residents.
“We’re trying to step up and create a new organization and building on
the success of the idea of that festival and grow from there,” Schwenk
said.
The former incarnation of the event had been steadily growing for four
years -- drawing large crowds and an international cast of film scene
characters -- before Conner unexpectedly declared bankruptcy on Sept. 1.
In sharp contrast to the glamour that was associated with the festival,
Conner listed his assets at that time as nothing but an inoperable 1984
Porsche and a few hundred dollars’ worth of household items.
Conner appeared in federal bankruptcy court last week to face creditors,
who claim he owes more than $200,000.
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