Elite NYC school with superstar alums cuts theater program as vendor and city point fingers

The curtain is coming down on a much-lauded theater program at a prestigious performing arts school in Manhattan, leaving the city and a vendor pointing fingers at one another.

The news at the Professional Performing Arts School in Hell’s Kitchen — which counts actors Claire Danes, Jesse Eisenberg, and Jeremy Allen White and musicians Alicia Keys and Britney Spears among its alumni — has sparked outrage and lingering questions.

“We go to a performing high school, not a school for academics. The entire reason everybody is here is because of the arts. When that gets cut, what’s the point?,” asked one fired-up 6-year-old girl who wakes up early and commutes to the school from Coney Island for its “stellar arts education.”

A friend chimed in “I’m really gonna feel it.”

“Our creative liberty, that’s the reason we come to this school so that we can be young artists,” the fellow 16-year-old said. “Now it’s been revoked which feels incredibly heartbreaking.”

The program was run in partnership with the performing art group Waterwell, which announced the end of the program in an email to parents and students blaming a “devastating” and “unprecedented 20% budget cut.”

Students enter Professional Performing Arts School, located at 328 W 48th St., on Thursday morning. Robert Miller

“It is with an incredibly heavy heart that I am writing with an important update about the remainder of the school year and our Middle School and High School Performing Arts Classes,” Heather Lanza, Waterwell director of education and artistic director, wrote.

Lanza’s missive announced that the program would be halted on April 12 and the school’s Drama One Showcase, High School Juries, and Middle School Spring Concert were to be canceled.

“As you all know, the city budgets have been incredibly stretched since the pandemic and the impacts on the school budgets continue to have ripple effects,” the letter said. “Because of this, Waterwell was notified by Principal Dyer that we would be receiving an unprecedented 20% budget cut from our original work plan for the 2023-2024 school year.

“This is a devastating amount of money for our small organization, and because of this cut, we are left with no choice than to end the program early for this school year.”

The news prompted one teacher to tell The Post, “Budget cuts are a b—h” but school officials blamed proposed changes to the group’s contract.

“There was a contract in place with this partner for the school,” Superintendent Gary Beidleman said during a Thursday morning press conference. “They have been a partner for a long time. And the price of the services changed during the school year.

“It wasn’t a budget cut that occurred, it was a change in the contract or a proposed change in the contract,” he went on.

“So the school had funds to partner with the organization and services were delivered throughout the school year and then mid-year the partner needed additional funds to continue the service.”

Outside the school on Thursday morning, a 14-year-old drama student lamented the news and the unknown future of his dramatic career.

“To me it’s really unfortunate because it’s my first year here and now I don’t get to perform my juries which are part of our final performances of the year where we get to showcase all work to like families and a bunch of audience and it’s just like really sad that we don’t get a chance to perform for like other people,” the student said.

“We are just not gonna have PA, unfortunately,” he added. “After April 12, they are not completely sure what they are gonna do.”

A 15-year-old freshman who was hoping to study acting said that without the program, the school would no longer be a top performing arts destination.

“It’s very frustrating,” she said. If the program is cut “it will be just another performing arts school. I could go to a good academic nearby me without arts. I commute every day like an hour to come here to be a part of this program.

“After the 12th what’s the point of coming to this school if there is no good acting program. It’s acting, you know, you can’t have musical theater without theater.”

A middle school student who was on a Zoom call Wednesday night with parents and Lanza recalled that it was “chaotic to say the least.”

“There was a bunch of controversies and there was a bunch of parents asking questions; they’re like ‘Why weren’t we informed of this sooner,’ and she literally said ‘We didn’t know until we told you,’” the girl claimed.


white
Actor Jeremy Allen White has shared a fundraiser aiming to salvage the program. AFP via Getty Images

Students had launched a fundraising page that had raised some $36,000 by Thursday morning, a third of its goal.

The effort got a publicity boost when White, known for his TV roles on “The Bear” and “Shameless” shared the link on Instagram after texting a former teacher to make sure it was legit, according to Chalkbeat.

“We are the 7th-grade students at The Professional Performing Arts School in NYC. Due to unfortunate budget cuts our performing arts program was cut short and will be ending early in April for both middle school and high school!” the page read.

“This affects hundreds of students and we are heartbroken to have such a horrible thing happen. Please help donate to bring back our program that brought so many students joy, and made their dreams come true!”

Department of Education officials tried to assure the community that things would continue without or without Waterwell.

“We have great teachers at the school who can deliver that service and who have been working with the partner over a number of years,” Superintendent Beidleman said.

“The former principal at the school has been working with the new principal at the school. They identified those teachers, identified the curriculum, they’re definitely prepared to move forward with students.

“There is a plan in place and students will continue to receive those services and we’ll see some Oscar winners in the next 10 years.”

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