Is Life Still A Carabet?
“Come to the cabaret!” belted Liza Minnelli in the famous musical. But she forgot to say “please.”
Gotham cabarets – and the buoyant singers who perform in them – are becoming a hard sell.
With admission and drink minimums at New York niteries adding up to nearly as much as a Broadway ducat, audiences are getting scarcer – and more finicky. Spiraling production costs and fewer papers and critics are making the cabaret keylight a less enviable spot. Club owners are straining to stay in the black, and many performers are beginning to wonder if it’s worth the trouble.
Related Stories

What Film Fund From AI Startup Runway Means for Content’s Future

'Secret Level' Director Tim Miller and Epic Games Execs Talk Hollywood's Relationship With Unreal Engine as Version 5.5 Launches
Popular on Variety
“In the early ’70s, you got up and did some songs, and that was it,” says the performer Lee Roy Reams. Now, he says, “audiences expect almost a theatrical event from a cabaret act.”
That takes money – more than ever, thanks in part to union pay scales for musicians and less willingness on the part of club owners to help foot the bill.
“In the late ’50s and ’60s, clubs gave you more fringe benefits,” says veteran chanteuse Julie Wilson. “Any good venue had its own band. You just brought in your charts and worked with them. And many times they were nonunion.”
Now, most performers pick up the music tab themselves. Union scale varies from club to club, but a side musician at Michael’s Pub costs at least $500 a week, with the best players commanding much more. Anyone hiring a musician also must contribute to the union’s health and pension funds.
Add to the bill the cost of a musical director, arrangements and publicity, and a cabaret engagement becomes a major investment. Longtime nitery star Sylvia Syms spent $10,000 to produce her recent show at Michael’s Pub – not counting running expenses of $6,000 a week.
For her gig at the 175-seat Ballroom two years ago, Claiborne Cary spent close to $12,000. “But that engagement got me cast in an Off Broadway play and later in the Goodspeed Opera production of ‘Arthur, The Musical,'” she notes.
More often, a performer’s efforts go unnoticed. In 1960, New York City had seven major dailies covering the cabaret scene; today there are only four newspapers, counting the ailing Daily News.
Not surprisingly, 30 years ago “there were many more rooms around,” says Wilson. “You could run from one to another and build your following. Now, the choice is limited.”
Forced to connect
At stake is more than the art form itself; most cabaret performers say the grueling work provides a vital training ground for the legit stage. “Cabaret performing is so difficult because it’s so ephemeral and personal,” says David Staller, a legit actor who was seen on Broadway last year in the revival of “Cabaret.” “It forces a performer to connect with each person in the room.”
Partly for that reason, the cabaret beat goes on, in one form or another. “If you’re not in a show, then cabaret is the place to be,” says 26-year-old singer Marieann Meringolo. “You don’t make any money, but you learn your craft, build up an audience and a mailing list, and maybe get seen by agents and people who can make a difference.”
No built-in auds
But these days, she adds, “cabarets don’t have built-in audiences. You really have to hustle to build up a following.”
Reams, who was featured for over seven years in the Broadway production of “42nd Street,” candidly admits that “I’d starve if I depended on cabaret for a living.” He says it costs about $1,000 to arrange and copy a song. “If you want 15 new arrangements, well, you figure the arithmetic.”
An established name like Marilyn Sokol can at least break even for most engagements but relies on legit stages to turn a profit. Sokol has taken her new one-woman show, “Guilt Without Sex,” to the Off Broadway Theater Arielle. She’s managed to profit by making seats available through the reduced-price structure of Theater Development Fund and by selling tickets in the 75-seat house for $8.50. “It’s a small nut,” she says. “If the reviews are good, maybe we’ll move it.”
Besides four bare walls, clubs generally provide only a sound and light man. New acts can expect at best a percentage of the music cover; some venues, like J’s, pay performers guarantees of about $500 per night. “I’m here to encourage artists,” says owner Judy Barnett, who is also a performer.
“We’ll never be millionaires,” says Eighty-Eight’s owner Erv Raible, a former Cincinnati school teacher who moved to New York 12 years ago and has opened four clubs in that time. He provides performers with inhouse press and pays them the door, less $1 per admission. “It’s a good system,” he says. “If the artist fills the house, they can rack up. If not, the club doesn’t lose.”
A similar system is used by Rick Panson, owner of the Duplex, a 55-seat club once owned by Raible. Panson is considering making performers responsible for a minimum number of drinks. If that guarantee is not met, the difference comes out of the artists’ door take. Most of Panson’s profits come from the active piano bar on the venue’s first floor. “I have to remember that this is a business,” he says.
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety
Australia Proposing to Ban Children From Social Media, Joins Wave of Asian Government Crackdowns on Platforms
Netflix vs. YouTube: The Post-Streaming Wars Era’s Archrivalry
Meta Announces Ban on Russian State Media, Citing Deceptive Influence Operations
Virtual Production Growth in Focus at IBC Event
Most Popular
Luke Bryan Reacts to Beyoncé’s CMA Awards Snub: ‘If You’re Gonna Make Country Albums, Come Into Our World and Be Country With…
Donald Glover Cancels 2024 Childish Gambino Tour Dates After Hospitalization: ‘I Have Surgery Scheduled and Need Time Out to Heal’
‘Joker 2’ Ending: Was That a ‘Dark Knight’ Connection? Explaining What’s Next for Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker
‘Love Is Blind' Creator Reveals Why They Didn’t Follow Leo and Brittany After Pods, if They'll Be at Reunion (EXCLUSIVE)
Rosie O'Donnell on Becoming a 'Big Sister' to the Menendez Brothers, Believes They Could Be Released From Prison in the ‘Next 30 Days’
‘That ’90s Show’ Canceled After Two Seasons on Netflix, Kurtwood Smith Says: ‘We Will Shop the Show’
Coldplay’s Chris Martin Says Playing With Michael J. Fox at Glastonbury Was ‘So Trippy’: ‘Like Being 7 and Being in Heaven…
Why Critically Panned ‘Joker 2’ Could Still Be in the Awards Race for Lady Gaga and Joaquin Phoenix
Dakota Fanning Got Asked ‘Super-Inappropriate Questions’ as a Child Actor Like ‘How Could You Have Any Friends?’ and Can ‘You Avoid Being a Tabloid…
Charli XCX Reveals Features for ‘Brat’ Remix Album Include Ariana Grande, Julian Casablancas, Tinashe and More
Must Read
- Film
COVER | Sebastian Stan Tells All: Becoming Donald Trump and Starring in 2024’s Most Controversial Movie
By Andrew Wallenstein 2 weeks
- TV
Menendez Family Slams Netflix’s ‘Monsters’ as ‘Grotesque’ and ‘Riddled With Mistruths’: ‘The Character Assassination of Erik and Lyke Is Repulsive…
- TV
‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Part 2 to Air on CBS After Paramount Network Debut
- TV
50 Cent Sets Diddy Abuse Allegations Docuseries at Netflix: ‘It’s a Complex Narrative Spanning Decades’ (EXCLUSIVE)
- Shopping
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Sets Digital and Blu-ray/DVD Release Dates
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9mhnp9jqamq51fo7K4v46iqmakmZuybr%2FToqOlZZFisKK%2BwJucrWVpbn5zgZhrcGg%3D