Playwright Robert Anderson famously said, "You go into show business to make a killing, not a living." But Cynthia von Buhler can say, quite literally, that she has done one by staging the other.
"These are very elaborate and expensive shows to produce," von Buhler said, adding that the costliest part of every production has been the show's venue, even more so than paying her cast and various forms of insurance. "They are very lavish and expensive, and we spare no cost. It's very important for me to have a stunning, gorgeous venue. Sometimes I'll find a venue and write my story about it. Finding a disused space and bringing it back to life is something I really enjoy doing. However, it does involve cost.""We like to put [the profits] back into investment and grow the business," she said adding that she does a great amount of self-promotion, drawing upon her background as a public relations director. "In the short time, we've been making the money and putting it back into other shows, and each time we can do something a little bit bigger. I think if we did have an investor, I think we'd just go even bigger and make bigger profits, because the model is working. We're already selling tickets, we’re not losing money. We can keep growing and keep doing bigger things."That would be bigger than an approximately 60-member cast and 25-person production team that von Buhler leads. It's a position that requires a strong sense of adventure.
"We're doing thousand-person shows in very intense venues,” she said. "We're talking large sums of money going out the door and coming in the door. I don't know any other company doing that at that level. It requires a very high level of risk-taking. I am definitely confident enough in my skills and my team: 'OK, we can do this. This is going to cost us $100,000 [per night] to put on this show but we can do it.' Those kind of numbers for many people would be scary, but for me, I just see it as a challenge and exciting." And von Buhler has no plans of slowing down. Following The Illuminati Ball, the next theatrical production, Speakeasy Dollhouse: The Girl Who Handcuffed Houdini, adapted from the Hard Case Crime/Titan Comics book Minky Woodcock: The Girl Who Handcuffed Houdini, will open October 2018 at The Connelly Theater. She also has plans to adapt The Illuminati Ball into a graphic novel.Sourcehttps://www.forbes.com/sites/careypurcell/2018/02/19/how-cynthia-von-buhler-turned-a-kickstarter-one-night-only-party-into-a-lavish-illuminati-ball/2/#7b4ab10457de
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