MINNEAPOLIS — The Minneapolis theater community was dealt a huge blow Friday after it was announced a popular improv performance space will close next month.
Managing director of Uptown's HUGE Improv Theater, Sean Dillon, confirmed the news to KARE 11 Friday afternoon. Dillon said performances and classes will cease with the theater's closure at the end of October. A Facebook post published by the theater chalked up the reasons for the decision as "complex, but they ultimately boil down to money."
"The Board has concluded that, after a series of expected and unexpected challenges, cash flow just cannot sustain the work HUGE was set out to accomplish," the post reads.
But while the theater maintains the closure comes amid financial troubles, some members of the community believe the closure is related to the resignation of the theater's co-founder Butch Roy and artistic director Becky Hauser last month. The resignations came after it was alleged the theater whitewashed casting for an upcoming show. The theater's co-executive and inclusion director, John Gebretatose, went on to write an open letter, questioning the theater's commitment to diversity among its performers.
Following the resignations, the board released a statement on its website, saying it was "in the process of developing a plan to ensure we reflect our ideal that improv is for everyone."
The HUGE Improv Theater Board also denied the rumors in its social media post Friday.
"We want to be emphatically clear: the open letter raising concerns about diversity on HUGE’s stage is not the reason for this closure," the post said. "HUGE was already in a precarious financial situation, and there simply isn't a viable way forward.
"Our struggle to find sufficient stable funding in no way diminishes the amazing work that HUGE has produced and supported over the years, and more importantly the diverse and enthusiastic community it has fostered.
"We know work still lies ahead to ensure that improv in the Twin Cities is truly a space for everyone, and we look to our community to continue these vital and challenging conversations."
Co-founder Jill Bernard, who began improv in 1993, is grateful to have helped take the Minneapolis improv scene to new heights.
"When I started improv in 1993, there were very few women, there were very BIPOC performers, and we’ve sort of changed everything that’s possible for people to really hear and use their own voices on stage," Bernard said. "And I feel like HUGE was a big part of that."
The theater said it plans to run its shows through October as planned, as well as its fall term classes. The board encouraged the community to support performers and "participate in the life of the theater to the fullest extent you can."
"There will be more to share as we move forward, but for now: thank you all for everything you have given to this place, and for always being the beating heart of what makes HUGE HUGE."