Council OKs $30K for film festival
Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- The new Newport Beach Film Festival received a major pat
on the back Tuesday from the City Council, which granted the event
$30,000 -- 10 times the amount awarded to the former festival.
The council approved the grant in a 7-0 vote with little or no
deliberation.
The now-defunct Newport Beach International Film Festival only once
received $3,000 from the city during its four-year run. The original
festival folded when founder Jeffrey S. Conner declared bankruptcy last
fall.
“I think [former festival organizers] asked every year, but were never
able to provide me with as much information as I needed to make a
recommendation to the council,” said Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood,
adding that the current group of local business people, members of the
Newport Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau and UC Irvine and Chapman
University faculty, is much more organized.
Wood said that because the new festival board was able to give her basic
information -- such as a budget and how many screenings would be featured
in Newport Beach, city staff was able to recommend the grant to the
council.
However, festival spokesman Todd Quartararo pointed out that the $30,000
is still a fraction of what most comparable festivals, in cities like
Palm Springs and San Francisco, request from their local government.
Last winter, the council gave the festival $7,000 to help with start-up
costs. Council members at the time agreed to consider chipping in more if
all the screenings took place in Newport Beach and after supporters
recruited other sources of funding.
Organizers were able to attract more than $540,000 in sponsorships, but
could only secure $56,000 in cash. That prompted them to approach the
city just weeks before the event’s start date.
The festival begins with a gala reception March 30.
Indeed, the biggest difference between this year’s festival and those in
the past is that the new event will center entirely in Newport Beach.
The eight-day event will feature 137 shorts and 45 feature films. There
will also be a two-day seminar series for the community April 1-2,
Quartararo said.
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